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Published byHerbert Hines Modified over 8 years ago
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Mexican Americans in World War I 1914-1918
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Vladimir Lenin, Imperialism: The Highest Stage of Capitalism European Background
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Balkans Powder keg Ottoman Empire Austro-Hungarian Empire German Empire Alliances in Europe Allied Powers Central Powers
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World War I Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand Modern Trench Warfare
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President Wilson’s Neutrality Continued trade and financing of warring nations Why was neutrality important? Positive economic impact on the U.S. “We are all making more money out of this war than the average human being ought to.” - A Steel Executive U.S. Response
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Issues of International Law Germany and submarine warfare Britain and blockade of non-contraband goods Sinking of the Lusitania, May 1915 Zimmerman Telegram, 1917 Bolshevik Revolution U.S. Response
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Wilson wins the 1916 Presidential election “He kept us out of war” U.S. Response
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Wilson asks Congress for a declaration of war to “make the world safe for democracy” He later states: “Think of what it was they were applauding. My message of today was a message of death for our young men. How strange it seems to applaud that.”
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The Homefront Opposition to the war Eugene V. Debs, “Let the capitalists do their own fighting and furnish their own corpses.” Espionage Act (1917), Sedition Act (1918) Selective Service Act, 1917 Able-bodied men between 21 – 31 100,000 – 200,000 Latinos serve
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Increased demand for labor African American migration to the north Mexican & Mexican American migration National War Labor Board Propaganda & Anti-German sentiment Hollywood films & Songs produced Images of bigotry & hysteria “Liberty cabbage” The Homefront
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El Plan de San Diego “…to proclaim the liberty of blacks from the ‘Yankee tyranny’ that had held them in ‘iniquitous slavery since remote times’” Revolt orchestrated by Tejanos in South Texas, 1915 Establishment of independent republic ruled by non-whites Called for an army of Mexican Americans, black citizens, and Japanese Restoration of tribal Indian land Violence against white men over the age of 16
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Plan de San Diego Consequences Mass-hysteria across South Texas Texas Rangers responsible for ending rebellion “License to Kill” Over 5,000 people killed
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America at War ● Role of Women in the war ● African Americans in WWI o Camp Logan Riots, 1917 ● War in the air ● Issues of sex & STDs
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Fourteen Points President Wilson, January 1918 Outlined aims of postwar Self-determination Freedom of the Seas Freedom of Trade Readjustment of colonial claims League of Nations
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Treaty of Versailles June 1919 Creation of Nation States Punishment of Germany League of Nations David Lloyd George, Orlando Vittorio, Georges Clemenceau, Woodrow Wilson
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Post WWI Creation of Nation States
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Post WWI Punishment of Germany $33 billion in reparations Limits on Germany’s military French occupation of the Rhineland “If I were Germany, I think I should not sign it…” - Woodrow Wilson
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Post WWI League of Nations Idea of collective security Republicans in the U.S. opposed
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U.S. fought the Red Army Funding given to the White Army U.S. Military exits in 1920 Fear of communist spread The Bolsheviks
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The First Red Scare Fear of labor becoming Soviet- style revolution Palmer Raids, 1919-20 J. Edgar Hoover & investigations of Americans American Protective League Crushing the IWW
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