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Our “ Sphere of Influence ”

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!.

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Our “ Sphere of Influence ”

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  1. Our “Sphere of Influence”

  2. The Treaty of Paris: 1898 • Cuba was freed from Spanish rule. • Spain gave up Puerto Rico and the island ofGuam. • The U. S. paid Spain$20 mil. for thePhilippines. • The U. S. becomesan imperial power!

  3. The American Anti-Imperialist League • Founded in 1899. • Mark Twain, Andrew Carnegie, WilliamJames, and WilliamJennings Bryan & even Wm. Randolph Hearst among the leaders. • Campaigned against the annexation of thePhilippines and otheracts of imperialism.

  4. Cuban Independence? • Teller Amendment (1898) • Platt Amendment (1903) • Cuba was not to enter into any agreements with foreign powers that would endanger its independence. • The U.S. could intervene in Cuban affairs if necessary to maintain an efficient, independent govt. • Cuba must lease Guantanamo Bay to the U.S. for naval and coaling station. • Cuba must not build up an excessive public debt. Senator Orville Platt

  5. DILEMMA-Did U. S. citizenship follow the flag?

  6. Puerto Rico

  7. Puerto Rico: 1898 • 1900 Foraker Act. • Puerto Rico became an “unincorporated territory.” • Citizens of PR, not of the US. • Import duties on PR goods • 1901-1903 the Insular Cases. • Constitutional rights were not automatically extended to territorial possessions. • Congress had the power to decide these rights. • Import duties laid down by the Foraker Act were legal!

  8. Puerto Rico: 1898 • 1917 – Jones Act. • Gave full territorial status to Puerto Rico. (PRs citizens) • Removed tariff duties on PR goods coming into the US. • PRs elected theirown legislators &governor to enforcelocal laws. • PRs could NOT votein US presidentialelections. • A resident commissioner was sent to Washington to vote for PR in the House.

  9. America as a Pacific Power

  10. U.S. Imperial Expansion

  11. China & the “Open Door” • British victory in the 1st Opium War 1842 resulted in the Treaty of Nanking (gave them HK & ports). The U.S. was afraid that it would be denied access to Chinese markets. Pres. Tyler sends Rep. Cushing.

  12. China & the “Open Door” • Mass. Representative Caleb Cushing is appointed as ambassador to China, where he negotiates the first treaty between the two countries: The Treaty of Wanghia, or Wang Hiya1844. Its provisions: • Extraterritoriality • Fixed tariffs in treaty ports • Right to buy land in 5 treaty ports • Right to learn Chinese • MFN status • In return, the U.S. declared the opium trade illegal.

  13. China & the “Open Door” • Following this new era of relations, missionaries from Britain & the U.S. responding to the 2nd Great Awakening, left for China, including J. Hudson Taylor (left), considered one of the most significant figures in 19th century China. • Resentment over foreign incursions into the city of Peking, Britain’s legalizing the opium trade (settlement from 2nd Opium War 1860) and cultural changes builds over the last half of the 19th century, giving rise to the “Society of Righteous and Harmonious Fists”, aka the “Boxers.”

  14. China & the “Open Door” • While European powers were becoming increasingly imperialistic in China, the U.S. worked to establish stronger ties with the Qing Dynasty. Pres. Lincoln appointed Rep. Anson Burlingame (left) as ambassador to China. • In 1868, The Burlingame Treaty was signed. • It espoused the idea the China have eminent domain over ALL of its territory. • It gave China MFN status with the US • It mutually promised civil and human rights to both Chinese and American citizens in each others respective countries. • While work was plentiful (railroads & mining) the Chinese were tolerated, but after the Depression of 1873, animosity and poor treatment followed, leading to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882

  15. Stereotypes of the Chinese Immigrant Chinese Exclusion Act 1882

  16. China & the “Open Door” • Nationalistic resentment boiled over in 1899, when the “Boxers” revolted for many reasons: • Lack of control over their own economic development and imperial demands • Being forced to import opium and the growing problem with addition. • Peasant reforms moving slowly • Foreigners importing new customs and beliefs • Foreign built railroads violating fengshui • Even poor treatment of Chinese in other countries • The Boxers attacked Chinese and foreign Christians mercilessly killing over 200 • An eight-nation coalition crushed the rebellion.

  17. The Boxer Rebellion: 1900 • Righteous and Harmonious Fists. BAM! • Aka the “55 Days at Peking.”

  18. China & the “Open Door” • European nations began to carve up China, without the inclusion of the US. • Sec. State under McKinley, John Hay, sent diplomatic letters to each of the nations, called the “Open Door Notes” asking that each: • Respect the territorial integrity of China • Maintain free access to ports • Most nations treated the “note” dismissively, though did not challenge it, except Russia, who wanted territory in Manchuria.

  19. The Open Door Policy • Give all nations equalaccess to trade in China. • Guaranteed that China would NOT be taken over by any one foreign power.

  20. TheOpen Door Policy

  21. Japan

  22. Feudal Japan under the Tokugawa Shogunate • Feudal Japan had remained closed to all but the Dutch for hundreds of years. • Not only did feudal Japan violently protect its isolation from an international presence, but it even refused the re-entry of its own sailors who had had contact with foreigners due to shipwreck. • This fanatical cultural protectiveness prompted Pres. Millard Fillmore to send a powerful message in 1852. Tokugawa Iesada (1853-58)

  23. Commodore Matthew Perry Opens Up Japan: 1853-4 • Perry arrived in Tokyo harbor and threatened force if denied entry. • He presents the representatives with terms of a prospective treaty, promises to return within a year, and withdraws. • The next year, true to his word, he returns and is presented with the terms of the Treaty of Kanagawa, which meets almost all of his original demands. Japanese drawing of the “Black Ships”

  24. Commodore Matthew Perry Opens Up Japan: 1853-4 The Japanese View of Commodore Perry

  25. Treaty of Kanagawa: 1854

  26. Commodore Matthew Perry Opens Up Japan: 1853-4 • The treaty began a period of increased power of the merchant and artisan classes in Japanese feudal society and sparked a period of openness (cf. 1860 photo of Japanese embassy to the US). Coupled with the crippling effects of natural disasters on the peasant farmers, the political and social effects were culminated in the Meiji Restoration of 1867.

  27. Treaty of Portsmouth: 1905 Nobel Peace Prize for Teddy

  28. Gentleman’s Agreement: 1908 • A Japanese note agreeing to deny passports tolaborers entering the U.S. • Japan recognized the U.S.right to exclude Japaneseimmigrants holding passportsissued by other countries. • The U.S. government got theschool board of San Francisco to rescind their order tosegregate Asians in separateschools. • 1908 Root-Takahira Agreement.

  29. Lodge Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine: 1912 • Senator Henry CabotLodge, Sr. (R-MA) • Non-European powers,like Japan, would beexcluded from owningterritory in the WesternHemisphere.

  30. American Intervention • U.S. Intervention in Latin America at the turn of the century: • 1902-03 Venezuelan debt crisis (Roosevelt) • 1903 Panamanian Revolution (Roosevelt) • 1903-24 Dominican Republic • 1903-25 Honduras • 1906 Cuban Occupation (Roosevelt/Taft) • 1909 Nicaraguan incursion for “Dollar Diplomacy” (Taft) • 1914 Mexico • 1915-34 Haiti • 1916 Dominican Republic debt crisis (Wilson) • From the Spanish-American War to 1934 and FDR’s Good Neighbor Policy with Latin America, the U.S. military intervened often in what has often been referred to as “The Banana Wars”

  31. U. S. Interventions in Latin America: 1898-1920s

  32. American Intervention

  33. “Big Stick” Diplomacy

  34. The Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine: 1905 Prompted by Venezuela 1901 & Santo Domingo 1903 TR issues his Corollary: Chronic wrongdoing… may in America, as elsewhere, ultimately require intervention by some civilized nation, and in the Western Hemisphere the adherence of the United States to the Monroe Doctrine may force the United States, however reluctantly, in flagrant cases of such wrongdoing or impotence, to the exercise of an international police power.

  35. Constable of the World

  36. Speak Softly,But Carry a Big Stick! 1901-1909

  37. Panama

  38. Panama: The King’s Crown • 1850 Clayton-Bulwer Treaty. • Dr. Walter Reed – yellow fever in 1900 • 1901 Hay-Paunceforte Treaty. • Philippe Bunau-Varilla,agent provocateur. • 1903 Hay-Bunau-Varilla Treaty. • Col. G. W. Goethals – engineer & Gaillard Cut

  39. Panama Canal

  40. Panama Canal T. Roosevelt in Panama(Construction begins in 1904)

  41. Cuba 1906-09 • The collapse of the 1st Cuban presidency prompts Roosevelt to intervene. • Protecting US business interests • Preserving stability in accordance with the Platt Amendment. • William Howard Taft is appointed provisional governor until peace restored and new president elected. Tomas Estrada Palma, pres. of Cuba 1902-06

  42. Dollar Diplomacy

  43. Taft’s “Dollar Diplomacy” • In his farewell address to congress in 1912, Taft defines D.D. as… • “The diplomacy of the present administration has sought to respond to modern ideas of commercial intercourse. This policy has been characterized as substituting dollars for bullets. It is one that appeals alike to idealistic humanitarian sentiments, to the dictates of sound policy and strategy, and to legitimate commercial aims.”

  44. Taft’s “Dollar Diplomacy” 1909-13 • By 1910, U.S. exporting more manufactured goods than raw materials. • Use private capital tofurther U. S. interestsoverseas. • “True stability is best established not by military, but by economic and social forces.” Philander Knox, Sec. of State

  45. Manchuria

  46. Created as a result of Treaty of Portsmouth • Operated by Japanese! • TR had seen Japan as… • Greatest power in Far East • Preventer of Russian expansion • Significant threat to U.S. • Thus, TR tried to appease • Taft saw China as future & suggested joint U.S., European & Japanese loan to help China buy back railroads in Manchuria. • Effect was to drive Russia & Japan together to preserve status quo in Manchuria. S. Manchuria Railway Co.

  47. Nicaragua

  48. Nicaragua • Clayton-Bulwer Treaty of 1850 • British possessions in W. Caribbean (i.e. Mosquito Coast, et al.) prompts opposition to US controlled canal • Treaty signed, but never adhered to due to disagreements on wording • 4 Agreements of Treaty • No exclusivity to canal • Neutralization of canal • Protection of other means of communication across isthmus • No occupation, fortification, colonization or dominion to be exercised over any other part of C.A.

  49. Nicaragua • Vanderbilt negotiates a deal with Nicaraguan gov’t in 1849 • Vanderbilt’s company, Accessory Transit Company (ATC), would have 12 years to complete canal • Grenada-Leon Civil War from 1854 to 1856 halts progress • Liberal Léonian presidential candidate, Francisco Castellón, invites William Walker to help steal election from Grenadan, Fruto Chamorro, the rightful winner Cornelius Vanderbilt

  50. Nicaragua Walker is assisted by Vanderbilt in hopes that he will end civil war and stabilize country so canal construction can continue Two of Vanderbilt’s associates prompt Walker to seize ATC holdings Walker seizes power for himself and is elected president of Nicaragua in a farcical election US initially recognizes legitimacy of Walker (1856-57) regime only to pull support under pressure from Vanderbilt Vanderbilt backs Cent. American coalition against Walker, who surrenders under pressure and is ultimately executed in Honduras in 1860 William Walker

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