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Clio’s Notes: American Foreign Policy in the Progressive Era, 1890-1919 The Period’s Noteworthy Trends Three big trends helped shape American foreign policy choices around the turn of the 20th century. These trends contributed to an expansionist or imperialist foreign policy mindset among many Americans. 1. Growing industry produced a need for foreign markets, friendly ports, and expanded sources of raw materials for factories. 2. The Progressive reform movement at home contributed to a popular view that the U.S. could not only reform itself but also reform the world—to make the world more democratic and civilized. 3. And the end of the frontier—declared by the Director of the U.S. Census in 1890--concerned Americans who were accustomed to the idea of free land and a place to be independent and free. Historian Frederick Jackson Turner wondered, like many Americans, what would happen to American ideals like democracy, equal opportunity, or individualism with no frontier outlet. These three trends contributed to a growing belief among many Americans that the U.S. needed to expand beyond North America, that it needed to copy the European model for success and acquire colonies, that it needed to build an American empire. The Spanish American War: 1898 Events in Cuba in the 1890s intersected with these trends and precipitated a war—the Spanish American War, in 1898. Cuba had long been a Spanish colony, but Spain’s hold on Cuba was weak by this time because of an active Cuban independence movement led by the father of Cuban independence, Jose Marti, an accomplished writer. Just 90 miles from Florida, Cuba appeared a natural place for American expansion, and helping Cubans achieve independence seemed a neighborly and American thing to do. When the American battleship Maine exploded in Havana, Cuba and 265 Americans died, calls for American military intervention grew shrill. President William McKinley wanted to avoid war, but members of Congress would not allow it. Passions for war were fed by the yellow press— sensationalized news reports—about Spanish atrocities against the people of Cuba. Newspaper publishers like William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer fueled the war fever even as they increased their own newspaper’s sales. War was declared and American troops were sent to Cuba. A key player in the Spanish American War was Teddy Roosevelt. As Assistant Secretary of the Navy, Roosevelt had ordered Admiral George Dewey to prepare for an attack on the Philippines, another Spanish colony, in the event of hostilities. Indeed, the first shots of the war were fired in the Philippines. Later, Roosevelt organized a regiment of men to lead into war. Known as the Rough Riders, they became famous for their victory in the Battle for San Juan Hill that earned Americans the high ground near Havana and helped secure an American victory in the war. After just 113 days and about 5,000 American dead, the war was over, and Americans had gained control of four Spanish colonies: Cuba, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines. Secretary of State John Hay called it a “splendid little war.” Each of the former Spanish colonies received different treatment from the Americans after the war. Cubans had reason to expect their independence. As a part of the declaration of war against Spain, Congress had passed the Teller Amendment, which called for complete Cuban independence. However, after the war, Congress passed the Platt Amendment, which gave the U.S. the right to intervene in Cuban affairs and to lease land for naval bases (one is still there today at Guantanamo Bay). Guam and Puerto Rico became American territories, with their peoples eventually gaining American citizenship. Filipinos who helped the U.S. defeat the Spanish in the Philippines were deemed “unfit for self-rule” by President McKinley. The American military turned the guns it had pointed at the Spanish toward the Filipino independence fighters led by Emilio Aginaldo. After three years of fighting, the U.S. won. Filpinos did not gain complete independence until 1946. Foreign Policy Under the Progressives: Roosevelt, Taft, and Wilson Three Progressive presidents dictated foreign policy between McKinley’s assassination in 1901 and 1920. Each promoted a different approach. Theodore Roosevelt argued for a “big stick” foreign policy, one based on building up the power of the American military so that the U.S. could project its power around the globe. William Howard Taft argued for “Dollar Diplomacy,” a policy in which American economic interests were most important. Woodrow Wilson argued in favor of “moral diplomacy,” a policy where American ideals and morality were the highest priority. These presidents each contributed to an expansion of U.S. global influence. This power became evident in a number places around the globe. In China, Americans promoted the “Open Door” policy, a policy that called for the end of exclusive trading agreements that many European countries had set up in different regions of China. Many Chinese wanted to rid China of foreign influence. Some Chinese, called the Boxers, rose up in violent insurrection against foreigners, but their uprising was put down by American, Japanese, and European troops. In the end, foreign powers abided by the Open Door policy. In Hawaii American planters overthrew the Constitutional monarchy led by Queen Lilikualani with the help of American troops in 1893. In Mexico, Woodrow Wilson attempted to install a democratic government after the Mexican Revolution ended the dictatorship of Porfirio Diaz. Wilson sent troops to keep arms out of the hands of another dictator Victoriano Huerta in an attempt to help another Mexican he hoped would promote democracy. Wilson sent troops a second time, after Pancho Villa led Mexican rebels into New Mexico and 17 Americans were killed. The U.S. hoped to build a canal through the Isthmus of Panama to significantly decrease travel time from the Eastern states to Pacific locations like Hawaii or Asia. Theodore Roosevelt attempted to lease the isthmus from Colombia, but his offer was refused. Roosevelt encouraged Panamanians to revolt and declare independence from Colombia. The American navy supported the rebellion, Panama became a nation, and Panamanian leaders granted the U.S. the right to build a canal that Panamanians would not control for nearly 100 years. The government of the Dominican Republic was unable to pays its debtors. Theodore Roosevelt argued that where Latin America is concerned, the United States has the right to strengthen or support nations too weak to care for themselves. This policy, called the Roosevelt Corollary, was related to the Monroe Doctrine (1823) which warned European powers to stay out of Latin America. In short, the Roosevelt Corollary asserted U.S. police powers in the region. In the Dominican, the U.S. assumed the debts and worked out payments to debtors. World War I War broke out in Europe in 1914. Wilson immediately declared neutrality, hoping to stay out of the European conflict. Most Americans agreed in principle to neutrality but American businesses and many Americans rooted for and supported the British and the French in their war against Germany. Germany threatened American shipping to Britain and France with submarines, sinking a number of ships, including the British passenger liner, the Lusitania, which held American passengers and possibly American ammunition in 1915. Calls for war did not move Congress to action until the interception of the Zimmerman Telegram which revealed an offer of an alliance between Germany and Mexico that would regain the American Southwest for Mexico and keep the U.S. out of the war in Europe. Wilson asked for and received a Declaration of War in 1917. American armed forces helped turn the tide in WWI. They fought in bloody battles such as the Meuse-Argonne and Chatteau-Thierry, resulting in 116,000 American dead. Led by John J. Blackjack Pershing, the “Dough Boys,” as American soldiers were called, helped the French and British defeat German forces by 11/11/17 at 11:00. WWII produced a number of social, political, economic effects on the American homefront. The actions of the government produced many of these effects. For example, to sell the war, the government created the Committee on Public Information (CPI), led by George Creel. The CPI produced movies, newsreels, posters, and press releases to sell the war. 75,000 Americans became 4 Minute Men and gave pro-war speeches. To fund the war, the government sold Liberty Bonds and millions of Americans purchased them. To reorganize industry, the government created the War Industries Board (WIB), under the direction of Bernard Baruch. The WIB could tell factories what goods to produce. The government also set labor conditions such as wages and hours. Labor unrest largely vanished during the war. The government also promoted conservation of food. Americans had Meatless Mondays and Wheatless Wednesdays and planted Victory Gardens to save food for soldiers “over there.” The war created a booming economy. Wages and prices of products (especially farm products) went up. Most industrial growth occurred in the North, and many Americans flocked to Northern cities to take new jobs. African Americans moved in large numbers. Over a million blacks moved to cities like New York, Chicago, and Cleveland. This mass movement was called the Great Migration. Racial tensions sometimes grew with the surging black population. The summer of 1919 was named the Red Summer because of racial violence. Racial tensions weren’t the only problems on the homefront. The government’s attempts to secure wartime loyalty resulted in unrest, as well. Congress passed the Espionage Act in 1917. The law made it a crime to interfere with the draft or obstruct the war effort. In 1918 the Sedition Act made it illegal to voice “disloyal, profane, scurrilous, or abusive” statements about the government. 1,500 people were arrested, including Eugene Debs a leading Socialist, and many members of the International Workers of the World (Wobblies). One man, Charles Schenk was jailed for handing out anti-war leaflets to recent draftees. His case Schenck v. United States was decided in the Supreme Court where his conviction was upheld because, as Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes stated, his actions had created a “clear and present danger.” Woodrow Wilson helped negotiate the Treaty of Versailles after WWI that laid out the terms of peace. The treaty established a League of Nations to meet and solve international conflicts. The Treaty was defeated by a group of Republicans in the U.S. Senate called the “irreconcilables.” Led by Henry Cabot Lodge, they defeated the treaty and helped break Wilson, who suffered a stroke while campaigning to gain its passage.