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The Emergence of a World Power
The U.S. from 1865 to 1914
• Cities were starting to get crowded with poor immigrants, many of
whom could not speak English. These newcomers were a huge
labor force, or supply of workers.
• In Chicago, Jane Addams set up a settlement house, or community
center, for poor immigrants.
• When the United States government passed the Homestead Act in
1862, it gave 160 acres of land to any adult willing to farm it and live
on it for 5 years.
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The U.S. expands beyond its shores.
• In 1867, Secretary of State William Seward arranged for the United States
to buy the territory of Alaska from Russia. In 1898 the United States took
control of Hawaii. In the same year, the United States fought and won the
Spanish-American War, gaining control of the Spanish lands of Cuba,
Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines.
The World at War
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In 1914, World War I broke out in Europe. The U.S. joined the Allied Powers of
Great Britain and France 3 years later. They fought against the Central Powers,
which included Germany, Austria-Hungary and Turkey. With American help, the
Allies won the war in 1918.
In 1929 the world faced an economic disaster called the Great Depression. In
America, factories closed, people lost their jobs, and farmers lost their farms.
In 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt took office and created a plan called the
New Deal. This was a series of government programs to help people get their jobs
back. In the same year Germany turned to Adolf Hitler who became dictator of
Germany. He convinced the Germans they were superior and should take over
Europe.
In 1939 Hitlers armies invaded Poland, which started World War II. He forced
Jews, Gypsies, and Slavs, into prison camps murdering millions of people,
includeing some six million Jews. This mass murder was called the Holocaust.
In May 1945, the Allies defeated the Germans. President Truman dropped 2
atomic bombs on Japan which conviced Japan to give up. Finally, WWII was over
Postwar Responsibilities
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The Soviet Union had been created in 1922 and it adopted a form of government
called communism where the state owns all property, such as farms and factories.
The U.S. Feared that the Soviets were trying to spread communism throughout
the world. As a result the U.S. and the Soviet Union entered the Cold War. This
period of tension lasted more than 40 years.
The economy of the U.S. boomed after WWII but not all citizens shared in the
benefits. Segregation was a way of life. People like Martin Luther King, Jr., led the
civil rights movement to end segregation and win rights for African Americans.
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Settlement, Trade, and Independence
in Canada
The French and the British in Canada
• The fur trade in Canada brought 2 European powers France
and Great Britian into conflict. There was some conflict,
the French wanted beavers for furs, and the British wanted
land for settlement.
• During the American Revolution, Americans who did not
want independence were called British Lyalists. After the
war many Loyalists moved to Canada but most did not want
to live in a French culture.
• Great Britian divided the land into two colonies, Upper and
Lower Canada.
• Upper Canada is now called Ontario
• French Canadians are in Lower Canada now called Quebec
Canada seeks Self-Rule
• In 1837 a French Canadian named Louis Papineau
organized a revolt in Lower Canada. His goal was
to establish the region as a separate country.
• On July 1, 1867, the British Parliament accepted
the plan and passed the British North American
Act. This made Canada “one Dominion under the
name of Canada.” A dominion is a self-governing
area but still subject to Great Britain. But now a
central government would run the country.
Canada had won its “peaceful revolution”
Canada takes its place in the world
• When Britain entered World War I, Canadians
were still British subjects therefore, Canada
entered the war, too. Canada contributed so
much in resources and soldiers to the Allied
victory that the young country became a
world power. Great Britain recognized
Canada’s new strength and granted it more
independence.
Canada: Postwar to the Present
• During the war, Canadians built factories. They
made war supplies and goods like clothes and
shoes. After the wars immigrants poured into
Canada. They came from Asia, Europe, Africa,
and the Caribbean. The newcomers filled jobs in
new factories and other businesses. Soon,
Canada became the world’s fourth-largest
industrial nation.
• Canada and the United States worked together to
clean up industrial pollution and became trading
partners and friends.
Old Conflicts Arise
• Industrialization brought not only new friends but
old conflicts.
• By 1976, some French Canadians were tired of
being part of Canada. Quebec argued that they
should be independent. Instead, new laws made
Canada a bilingual country in English and French.
In addition Canadians could now change their
constitution without Great Britain's permission
and Canada was completely independent.