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NOTE-TAKING GUIDE: Of the People: A History of the United States CHAPTER 22 “A Global Power: 1914–1919” COMMON THREADS As a progressive, Wilson was committed to order, efficiency, and gradual reform. How did his policies toward Mexico and Europe reflect this commitment? Both the Philippine-American War of 1899 and US involvement in World War I in 1917 provoked dissent at home. Why did the government tolerate opposition in the first case but suppress it in the second? How did the repression of the war years set the stage for the Red Scare? OUTLINE The Challenge of Revolution The Mexican Revolution Bringing Order to the Caribbean A One-Sided Neutrality The Lusitania’s Last Voyage The Drift to War The Election of 1916 American Landscape: Plattsburg Training Camp The Last Attempts at Peace War Aims The Fight in Congress Mobilizing the Nation and the Economy Enforcing Patriotism Regimenting the Economy The Great Migration Reforms Become “War Measures” Over There Citizens into Soldiers The Fourteen Points The Final Offensive Revolutionary Anxieties Wilson in Paris The Senate Rejects the League America and the World: The Influenza Pandemic of 1918 Red ScareConclusion WHO? Bernard Baruch Carrie Chapman Catt George Creel Porfirio Díaz Langston Hughes John J. Pershing REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. Wilson encouraged Americans to fight a war for democracy, but what other goals did US intervention serve? 2. How did mobilization for war advance the progressive agenda? In what ways did it set progressives back? 3. Where were the main battles in which US troops fought? 4. Allied commanders wanted to use American troops as a reserve, but Pershing wanted his soldiers to enter the battle as an army. Why was that so important to him? 5. Why did Senate Republicans reject the League of Nations? Did they want the United States to withdraw from the world, or did they want to deal with the world in a different way? 6. Managing the pace of change posed a tricky problem for leaders in the early twentieth century. How did Wilson try to control the dynamic of social and political change? What methods of change were he unwilling to accept? 7. Why were American leaders so much more concerned about sedition and dissent during World War I than they were during the Civil War or World War II? NOTES: TO FOLLOW UP / QUESTIONS TO ASK IN CLASS WHAT? Cost-plus contract Neutrality Propaganda Red Scare Suffrage NOTE-TAKING GUIDE: Of the People: A History of the United States CHAPTER 22 “A Global Power: 1914–1919”