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Chapter 20 Becoming a World Power. The American People , 6 th ed. I. Steps Toward Empire. America as a Model Society. Persistent expansion marked the first century of America’s history.
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Chapter 20Becoming a World Power The American People, 6th ed.
America as a Model Society • Persistent expansion marked the first century of America’s history. • After the Civil War, America purchased Alaska from Russia in 1867 for $7.2 million and acquired a naval coaling station on Midway Island near the Hawaiian chain which was eventually annexed in 1898. • Attempts to annex Santo Domingo failed.
Profits: Searching for Overseas Markets • Understanding the accepted model of national expansion, big business supported the building of a stronger navy and widespread coaling stations. • The tremendous growth in American production saddled with the depression forced American business to seek markets overseas.
Patriotism: Asserting National Power • Most Americans of the age saw expansion as an expression of national glory and greatness. • Piety also came into play: there existed a missionary impulse to carry Western ideals to Christian lands around the globe. • Politics also played a role: public opinion was emerging as a driving force in shaping political policy thanks to a highly competitive press.
The Road to War • The Cuban struggle against Spain’s Gen. Weyler appealed to a country determined to avenge the weak. • Sugar plantations also sparked national interest. • When the U.S. Battleship Maine was sent to Havana and subsequently blown to bits, America had an excuse to wage war against Spain.
The most crucial battle of the Spanish-American war occurred in Manila Bay when the U.S. fleet destroyed the Spanish navy. • A subsequent Treaty of Paris granted the 7,000 islands of the Philippines to America in return for a $20 million payment to Spain. • The ratification of the treaty led to intense national debate over the nature of expansion on a global scale.
Foreign Policy as Darwinian Struggle • Reading the theories of Charles Darwin as a young man, Theodore Roosevelt became convinced that life was a constant struggle for survival. • To be militarily prepared and able to fight well were both tests of racial superiority and national greatness. • In practical application, this meant maintaining large navies and the conviction to use them in the negotiations of diplomacy.
Taking the Panama Canal • 1850 treaty designating the joint administration of the U.S. and England in building the canal nullified in 1901 by the British in exchange for assurances of global usage • Where specifically to dig the canal and how to administrate the zone solved by U.S. sponsored revolution of Panama, then a province of Columbia • Panamanian independence and the Hay and Bunau-Varilla treaty created Canal Zone to be controlled by America
Policing the Caribbean • After Cuban independence, the U.S. forced the signing of the Platt Amendment which granted America many economic rights in Cuba and the naval base at Guantanamo Bay. • This pattern was repeated throughout the Caribbean in a policy that became known as the Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe doctrine.