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Quiz: Chapter 29 • You know the drill! Tuesday February 7, 2017 Unit 5: Struggling for Justice at Home and Abroad 1901-1945 • Chapter 28: Progressivism and the Republican Roosevelt, 1901-1912 • Chapter 29: Wilsonian Progressivism in Peace and War, 1913-1920 • Exam: Chapters 28-29, Friday, February 10th • Chapter 30: American Life in the “Roaring Twenties”, 1920-1929 • Chapter 31: The Politics of Boom and Bust, 1920-1932 • Chapter 32: The Great Depression and the New Deal, 1933-1939 • Exam: Chapters 30-32, Friday, March 3rd • Chapter 33: Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Shadow of War, 1933-1941 • Chapter 34: America in World War II, 1941-1945 • Exam: Chapters 33-34, Wednesday, March 15th • Unit Essay: Progressive Era Chapter 29 Wilsonian Progressivism in Peace and War, 1913–1920 “American enterprise is not free; the man with only a little capital is finding it harder and harder to get into the field, more and more impossible to compete with the big fellow. Why? Because the laws of this country do not prevent the strong from crushing the weak.” -Woodrow Wilson, The New Freedom, 1913 I. Wilson: The Idealist in Politics • Woodrow Wilson was only the second Democratic president since 1861 – and he was a southerner! • WHO WAS WILSON? • His ideal of self-determination was inspired by his sympathy for southern independence. • His ideal of faith in the masses—if they were properly informed—came from Jeffersonian democracy. • Believed the chief executive should play a dynamic leadership role (among the masses & Congress). • Standoffish in public, academic elitist, very stubborn, tactless. • Wilson’s idealism was very black and white, all or nothing. Wilson w/Andrew Carnegie II. Wilson Tackles the Tariff III. Wilson Battles the Bankers IV. Wilson Tames the Trusts V. Wilson at the Peak • Wilson: reform tariffs, banking, and the trusts while considering elasticity & centralization – WHAT CHANGES OCCURRED AS A RESULT OF THIS? • Underwood Tariff (1913): lower tariff pass over lobbyist objections. • Sixteenth Amendment (1913) helped lower tariffs with income tax. • Federal Reserve Act (1913) – independently controls printing of paper money. • Amount of money in circulation could be swiftly increased as needed. • Federal Trade Commission Act (1914) • Presidential commission could look into industry involvement in interstate commerce. • Crush monopolies before they can become too powerful by attacking: unlawful competition, false advertising, mislabeling, and bribery. • The Clayton Anti-Trust (1914) increased the list of objectionable practices (price discrimination & interlocking directorates) & protected union rights. • Many other acts were passed to protect the worker, farmers, infrastructure. Reading the Death Warrant This cartoon appeared in a New York newspaper soon after Woodrow Wilson called for dramatic reform of the banking system before both houses of Congress. With the “money trust” of bankers and businessmen cowed, Wilson was able to win popular and congressional support for the Federal Reserve Act of 1913. Compare the trusts from Wilson’s era to the earlier cartoon above. VI. New Directions in Foreign Policy VII. Moralistic Diplomacy in Mexico • Wilson on Foreign Policy: TR was a bully & Wall Street is corrupt. • Philippines became a territory (1916) and were promised independence (very long-term). • Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan convinced CA to allow some land ownership by Japanese (1913). • Wilson the Bully: Haiti, Dominican Republic, Mexico • Mexico continued to struggle with stability which endangered American interests. • Hearst led the cry for intervention. • Tampico Incident (1914): • Wilson sent arms to (dictator) Victoriano Huerta’s rivals: Venustiano Carranza and Francisco (“Pancho”) Villa. • Small party of American sailors were arrested and released. • Open conflict was narrowly avoided. • Chaos would continue in Mexico for some time. • General John J. Pershing was ordered to bring chaos under control. Wednesday February 8, 2017 Mexico’s major players: Huerta, Carranza, Villa The United States in the Caribbean, 1898–1941 VIII. Thunder Across the Sea • Europe’s situation: chain reaction followed murder of Austro-Hungarian heir by a Serb in 1914 • Central Powers: Germany, Austria-Hungary, later Turkey and Bulgaria. • Allies: France, Britain, and Russia, later Japan and Italy. • President Wilson: maintain neutrality! • Most Americans hoped to stay out of WWI. • Could the U.S. truly remain neutral? • Britain: cultural/economic ties, naval supremacy. • Germany: many German immigrants in the U.S. • Most Americans were anti-German (antiKaiser) from the start. IX. America Earns Blood Money X. Wilson Wins Reelection in 1916 • CP complained, but Allied demand for arms helped American economy. • Unrestricted Submarine Warfare • Germany needed to break stranglehold of British blockade. • Wilson warned Germany against attacks on American ships, but the U-boats sank 90 ships, including the Lusitania (1915), Arabic, and Sussex. • The German Sussex pledge brought temporary relief. • Wilson won re-election with the slogan: “He kept us out of war.” British Military Area (declared November 3, 1914) and German Submarine War Zone (declared February 4, 1915) “Here’s Money for Your Americans. I May Drown Some More.” A German U-boat XI. War by Act of Germany • WHAT EVENTS HELPED PUSH THE U.S. TO WAR? • Wilson asked Congress for authority to arm American merchant ships – NO! • Zimmermann Note was intercepted and published on March 1, 1917. • Secretly proposed a German-Mexican alliance by German foreign secretary Arthur Zimmerman • Russian Revolution (1917) removed czars which allowed Allies to claim they were fighting for Democracy. • Germany resumed unrestricted submarine warfare in 1917. • Wilson, on April 2, 1917, asked for a declaration of war. President Wilson asks Congress for war, 1917 XII. Wilsonian Idealism Enthroned XIII. Wilson’s Fourteen Potent Points • American isolationism was in danger. • Wilson needed to turn the war into a crusade to foster support. • GOAL: “to make the world safe for democracy” • On January 8, 1918, he delivered to the Congress his famed Fourteen Points: • • • • • 1: abolish secret treaties 2: freedom of the seas 3: a removal of economic barriers among nations 4: arms reduction 5: give native people a voice with regards to colonization • 6-13: self-determination for minority groups throughout the world • 14: League of Nations to provide collective security Thursday February 9, 2017 Just years after TR, Wilson was able to garner the same level of support and patriotism among Americans. The 14 Points as presented by Woodrow Wilson XIV. Manipulating Minds and Stifling Dissent • Bottom line: the U.S. was not ready for war. • George Creel’s Committee on Public Information mobilized public for war. • GOAL: sell America on the war and sell the world on Wilsonian ideals • Methods included speeches, posters, pamphlets, leaflets, movies, songs (Over There) Uncle Sam NOT a real person • Espionage Act of 1917 and the Sedition Act of 1918 • Criticism of the government could be censored and punished. • 19,000 prosecutions of antiwar Socialists (Eugene V. Debs) and members of the radical Industrial Workers of the World. • Schenk v. United States (1919): the Supreme Court affirmed their legality. • Freedom of speech could be revoked when such speech posed a “clear and present danger” to the nation. Eugene V. Debs A real person who was convicted under the Espionage Act Rich Military Sign up today! The United States was not the only propaganda machine of WWI. XV. Forging a War Economy XVI. Workers in Wartime • Big government, previously feared, was essential to the war effort. HOW DID THE GOVERNMENT CARRY OUT THIS TASK? • War Industries Board (1918) took control of economic planning. • Great pressure was used to sell the bonds. • Food Administration pushed for voluntary war effort (victory gardens). • Day-light saving time created to extend the workday/save on fuel. • Overall, labor and government cooperated. • National War Labor Board worked for compromise in the name of the war effort. • AF of L supported the war; the IWW did not. • Black Americans began moving north looking for wartime industrial jobs. XVII. Suffering Until Suffrage • Thousands of women entered the factories and fields in the place of male soldiers. • War split the women’s movement deeply. • Many progressive-era feminists were pacifists – National Woman’s Party • Larger part of the suffrage movement supported the war – National American Woman Suffrage Association • Supporters argued that they had to support democracy abroad if they expected it at home. • Wilson endorsed woman suffrage as “a vitally necessary war measure”. • The Nineteenth Amendment (1920) gave all American women the right to vote. • Women’s wartime economic gains were only temporary. XVIII. Making Plowboys into Doughboys IXX. America Helps Hammer the “Hun” • America’s early role in the war was to help uphold freedom of the seas and loan money/resources to Allies. • American Expeditionary Force was eventually necessary to help finish off the CP. • Even though Wilson did not like it, conscription was the answer. • Required all man between 18 and 45 to register. • Women and black Americans also served. • Germany’s last gasp: drove to within 40 miles of Paris, May 1918. • 30,000 American troops landed at Chateau-Thierry, right in the path of the German advance. • American men participated in a counter-offensive in the Second Battle of the Marne. • Germany was ready to quit, and it looked to Wilson for the best terms – 14 Points. • Armistice: 11:00 on the 11th day of the 11th month, 1918. An American Doughboy What was the war like? Even though Americans lost a fraction of the men of Russia or Germany, American soldiers still experienced the devastation of modern war. Let’s look at some examples. Wilson in Dover, England, 1919 Hailed by many Europeans in early 1919 as the savior of the Western world, Wilson was a fallen idol only a few months later, when Americans repudiated the peace treaty he had helped to craft. XXI. An Idealist Amid the Imperialists • Paris Conference (January 18, 1919) – Treaty of Versailles • Big Four: • Woodrow Wilson—United States • Premier Vittorio Orlando—Italy • Prime Minister David Lloyd George— Britain • Premier Georges Clemenceau—France • Wilson’s GOAL: League Of Nations • Wanted to prevent the vengeful actions by Allies. XX. Wilson Steps Down from Olympus XXII. Wilson’s Battle for Ratification XXIII. The “Solemn Referendum” of 1920 • Wilson’s mistakes: lost control of Congress to Republicans, then took no Republicans to Paris. • Henry Cabot Lodge’s irreconcilables resisted – especially Article X of the Treaty of Versailles. • Europeans wanted revenge – crush Germany, take territory. • Wilson had to compromise at every turn to save the League of Nations. • Wilson could not convince Senate to ratify the treaty. • Wilson collapsed and suffered a stroke while fighting for the treaty. • “Solemn Referendum”— Let the election of 1920 decide the treaty’s fate. • Warren G. Harding (R ) and his “return to normalcy” won the day. Europe – Before and After WWI XXIV. The Betrayal of Great Expectations • Was America’s spurning of the League was tragically short-sighted, as Kennedy/Cohen claim? • Without U.S. membership in the League of Nations: • France undertook to build a powerful military force. • Thus Germany began to rearm illegally. • The United States was not quite ready to take center stage in global affairs. • WWII would forever change this fact. Exam: Chapters 28-29 • 27 multiple choice • 2 short answer