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Chapter 24 THE NATION AT WAR America Past and Present Eighth Edition Divine  Breen  Fredrickson  Williams  Gross  Brand Copyright 2007, Pearson Education,

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 24 THE NATION AT WAR America Past and Present Eighth Edition Divine  Breen  Fredrickson  Williams  Gross  Brand Copyright 2007, Pearson Education,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 24 THE NATION AT WAR America Past and Present Eighth Edition Divine  Breen  Fredrickson  Williams  Gross  Brand Copyright 2007, Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Longman

2 "I Took the Canal Zone" F 1903: Colombian senate refused to allow U.S. to build Panama Canal F Roosevelt abetted revolution to separate Panama from Colombia F Independent Panama permitted construction F 1914: Panama Canal opened

3 The Panama Canal Zone

4 The Roosevelt Corollary F U.S. treated Latin America as a protectorate F “Roosevelt Corollary”: U.S. would ensure stability of Latin American finance F Roosevelt Corollary spurred intervention in – Dominican Republic – Panama – Cuba

5 Ventures in the Far East F 1905: Roosevelt mediated the Russo- Japanese War F Taft-Katsura Agreement – Korea under Japanese influence – Japan to respect U.S. control of Philippines F 1907: ”Gentleman’s Agreement” Japan promises to stop immigration

6 Taft and Dollar Diplomacy F Taft substituted economic force for military F American bankers replaced Europeans in Caribbean F Taft's support for U.S. economic influence in Manchuria alienated China, Japan, Russia

7 Foreign Policy Under Wilson F Wilson inexperienced in diplomacy F Tried to base foreign policy on moral force

8 Conducting Moral Diplomacy F Wilson negotiated “cooling-off” treaties to try and settle disputes without war F Resorted to military force in Latin America –Intervened there more than Roosevelt or Taft

9 Activities of the United States in the Caribbean, 1898–1930

10 Toward War F 1914: War in Europe – Central Powers headed by Germany – Allied Powers headed by England, France F Wilson sympathized with England, sought U.S. neutrality

11 The Neutrality Policy F Progressives saw war as wasteful, irrational F Suspicion that business sought war for profit F Immigrants prefered U.S. neutrality F A long tradition of U.S. neutrality F Americans saw little national stake in war

12 Freedom of the Seas F England blockade of Germany F U.S. ships to Germany seized F Wilson accepted English promise of reimbursement at war’s end F Germans used U-boats to interrupt trade with Allies F U.S. trade with Allies boomed, but was increasingly financed by loans from American banks F Allies owed U.S. banks $2 billion by 1917

13 The U-Boat Threat F German submarines violated international law by shooting without warning F Bryan advised Wilson to ban travel, Wilson refused F 1915: Lusitania sunk by U-Boat –Wilson demanded Germans protect passenger ships and pay for losses –Bryan resigned, replaced by Robert Lansing, who favored Allies F April, 1916: Wilson issued ultimatum: call off attacks on cargo and passenger ships or U.S.- German relations would be severed F May, 1916: Sussex Pledge—Germany pledges to honor U.S. neutrality

14 Lusitania

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16 "He Kept Us Out of War" F 1916: Wilson campaigned on record of neutrality F Republican Charles Evans Hughes campaigned on tougher line against Germany F Wilson won close election – Won large labor, progressive vote – Won majority of women’s vote

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18 The Final Months of Peace F Feb., 1917: Germany renewed U-Boat attacks F Zimmerman Telegram F Wilson’s response – Ordered U.S. merchant vessels armed – Ordered U.S. Navy to fire on German U- Boats F April 6, 1917: War declared on Germany

19 Over There F U.S. allies were in danger of losing war –Germans sunk 881,000 tons of Allied shipping during April, 1917 –Mutinies in French army –British drive in Flanders stalled –Bolsheviks signd separate peace with Germany; German troops to West –Italian army routed F Allies braced for spring, 1918 offensive

20 U.S. Losses to the German Submarine Campaign, 1916–1918

21 Mobilization F No U.S. contingency plans for war F 200,000 troops at war’s beginning F Selective Service Act created draft – Conscripted 2.8 million by war’s end –African Americans drafted as well

22 European Alliances and Battlefronts, 1914–1917

23 War in the Trenches F Teaming of U.S., English navies halved Allied losses to submarines F June, 1917: U.S. troops arrived in France F Spring, 1918: U.S. forces helped halt final German offensive

24 The Western Front: U.S. Participation, 1918

25 Over Here F Victory on front depends on mobilization at home F Wilson consolidates federal authority to organize war production and distribution F Wilson begins campaign for American emotions

26 Propaganda F The deliberate attempt to influence public opinion by spreading info or ideas favorable to a certain cause, group, or nation

27 World War One Images and Music F Over There, George M. Cohan sung by The American Quartet, 1917 F Sheet Music Art Norman Rockwell

28 I Want You for the U.S. Army James Montgomery Flagg 1917

29 True Sons of Freedom Charles Gustrine, 1918

30 Destroy This Mad Brute H.R. Hopps

31 Over The Top For You Sidney H. Riesenberg 1918

32 Rivets Are Bayonets Drive Them Home! J.E. Sheridan, 1918

33 Fight or Buy Bonds Howard Chandler Christy 1917

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78 The Conquest of Convictions F Wartime laws to repress dissent – Espionage Act: Outlawed acts to aid the enemy, even encouraging disloyalty – Trading with the Enemy Act: Government can censor foreign language press – Sedition Act: Criticism of the war made a crime – 1500 dissenters imprisoned, including Eugene Debs F 1918–1919: “Red Scare” resulted in domestic suppression of “radicals”

79 A Bureaucratic War F War Industries Board and other agencies supervised production, distribution to maximize war effort F Government seized some businesses to keep them running F Business profits from wartime industry

80 Labor in the War F Union membership swells F Labor shortage prompts – Wage increase – Entry of Mexican Americans, women, African Americans to war-related industrial work force

81 African American Migration Northward, 1910–1920

82 Labor in the War F 200,000 blacks served in France – 42,000 combat troops F Great Migration to northern factories – Blacks must adjust industrial work pace – Encounter Northern racism F 1917–1919: Race riots in urban North F Wartime experience prompted new surge of black resistance

83 The Treaty of Versailles F Common concern about Bolshevik revolution F Wilson’s Fourteen Points call for non- punitive settlement F England and France balk at Fourteen Points –Want Germany disarmed and crippled –Want Germany’s colonies –Skeptical of principle of self-determination

84 A Peace at Paris F Wilson failed to deflect Allied punishment of Germany in treaty F Treaty created Wilson’s League of Nations

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86 Europe after The Treaty Versailles, 1919

87 Rejection in the Senate F William Borah (R-ID) led “irreconcibles” who opposed treaty on any ground F Senator Henry Cabot Lodge (R-MA) led “strong reservationists” that demanded major changes, including to Article X F October, 1919: Stroke disables Wilson F November: Treaty fails in Senate F January, 1920: Final defeat of Treaty F July, 1921: U.S. peace declared by joint Congressional resolution

88 Rejection in the Senate F Wilson hopes democratic victory in 1920 election would provide mandate for League of Nations F Landslide for Republican Warren Harding F Defeat of League of Nations brought defeat of Progressive spirit

89 The Election of 1920

90 Postwar Disillusionment F To the next generation the war seemed futile, wasteful F The progressive spirit survived but without enthusiasm or broad based support F Americans welcomed Harding’s return to “normalcy”


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