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American Foreign Policy
• 1. defend the Western Hemisphere
against the intervention of European
powers (continuation of the Monroe
Doctrine) and extend United States
territory through purchase, annexation,
or conquest.
• 2. Commercial Business Interests:
create new economic opportunities for
American trade in other countries
• 3. Social Darwinism
• 4. Religious/Missionary Interests
1. Military/Strategic Interests
Alfred T. Mahan  The Influence of Sea
Power on History: 1660-1783
2. Commercial/Business
Interests
U. S. Foreign Investments: 1869-1908
2. Commercial/Business
Interests
American Foreign Trade:
1870-1914
3. Social Darwinist Thinking
The Hierarchy
of Race
The White Man’s
Burden
Charles Darwin
• Origin of Species (1859)
• Existing species, including humanity,
evolve through a long process of
“natural selection” from less complex
forms of life.
• Contradicted the Genesis creation story
Social Darwinism
• Developed by Herbert Spencer
• Argued that human society and
institutions passed through the process
of natural selection “survival of the
fittest”
• Social evolution implied progress
• No governmental regulation because it
would help the “unfit” survive and
thereby impede progress
Reform Darwinism
Supported by Lester Frank Ward
Humanity could improve its situation by
reflecting upon it and then acting on it.
People had reached a stage where they
could control the process of evolution.
Cooperation not competition, would better
promote progress
Government could
a. Get rid of poverty
b. Promote education of masses
4. Religious/Missionary Interests
American
Missionaries
in China, 1905
U. S. Missionaries in Hawaii
Imiola Church – first built in the late 1820s
U. S. View of Hawaiians
Hawaii becomes a U. S. Protectorate in 1849
by virtue of economic treaties.
Hawaiian Queen Liliuokalani
1891: Liliuokalani
attempted to give control
back to native Hawaiians
U. S. Business Interests In Hawaii
1893 – American
businessmen backed an
uprising against Queen
Liliuokalani.
Sanford Ballard Dole
proclaims the Republic
of Hawaii in 1894.
To The Victor Belongs the Spoils
Hawaiian
Annexed by
U.S., 1898
Commodore Matthew Perry
Opens Up Japan: 1853
The Japanese View
of Commodore
Perry
Treaty of Kanagawa: 1854:
Trade agreement with Japan
“Seward’s Folly”: 1867
$7.2 million
“Seward’s Icebox”: 1867
Cuba
• Sense of outrage over Spanish
imperialism
• Since 1850, Cubans had periodically
revolted against Spanish rule
• American investments in sugar and
mining were rising
• Americans began to support the Cuban
Revolutionary Party led by its organizer
Jose Marti
The Imperialist Tailor
Spanish Misrule in Cuba
Valeriano Weyler’s
“Reconcentration” Policy: gathered up Cubans
so they could not join the rebels
“Yellow Journalism” & Jingoism
Joseph Pulitzer
William Randolph Hearst
Hearst to Frederick Remington:
You furnish the pictures,
and I’ll furnish the war!
De Lôme Letter: stolen by a Cuban
spy
Dupuy de Lôme, Spanish
Ambassador to the U.S.
Criticized President
McKinley as weak and a
bidder for the admiration
of the crowd, besides
being a would-be politician
who tries to leave a door
open behind himself while
keeping on good terms
with the jingoes of his
party.
Remember the Maine
and to Hell with Spain!
Funeral for Maine
victims in Havana
USS Maine
• February 15, 1898, the battleship
exploded in Havana Harbor
• 266 men were lost
• 1976 report (accidental sinking which
was the result of an internal explosion
triggered by a fire in its coal bunker)
Theodore Roosevelt
Assistant Secretary
of the Navy in the
McKinley
administration.
Imperialist and
American nationalist.
Criticized President
McKinley as having
the backbone of a
chocolate éclair!
Resigns his position to
fight in Cuba.
The
“Rough
Riders”
The Spanish-American War (1898):
“That Splendid Little War”
How prepared was the US for war?
The Spanish-American War (1898):
“That Splendid Little War”
Dewey Captures Manila!
Is He To Be a Despot?
Emilio Aguinaldo
Leader of the Filipino
Uprising.
July 4, 1946:
Philippine independence
Our “Sphere of Influence”
The Treaty of Paris: 1898
Cuba was freed from Spanish rule.
Spain gave up Puerto Rico and the island of
Guam.
The U. S. paid Spain
$20 mil. for the
Philippines.
The U. S. becomes
an imperial power!
The American Anti-Imperialist
League
Founded in 1899.
Mark Twain, Andrew
Carnegie, William
James, and William
Jennings Bryan among
the leaders.
Campaigned against
the annexation of the
Philippines and other
acts of imperialism.
1899:The Open Door Policy
Secretary of State John Hay.
Give all nations equal
access to trade in China.
Guaranteed that China would NOT be taken
over by any one foreign power.
The
Open Door
Policy
The Boxer Rebellion: 1900
Anti-foreign backlash in China
“55 Days at Peking.”
America as a Pacific Power
The Great White Fleet: 1907
U. S. Interventions in
Latin America: 1898-1920s