1 becoming a world power the panama canal president theodore roosevelt

12
1 Becoming a World Power The Panama Canal President Theodore Roosevelt

Upload: theresa-powell

Post on 28-Dec-2015

219 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

1

Becoming a World Power

The Panama Canal

President Theodore Roosevelt

2

•Earlier In his career George Washington followed a policy of expansionism, or extending its national boundaries. Americans further pressed further westward from the Atlantic to the Pacific to settle and this policy is known as Manifest Destiny.

Isolationism

Expansionism

•In his farewell address George Washington had advised the nation to steer clear of permanent alliances. He urged Americans to have as little possible connections with our foreign nations which is a policy known as isolationism. Isolationism is the idea of remaining neutral and having little to do with affairs of other nations.

3

In the 1860’s the Secretary of the State, William Seward wanted the United States to dominate trade in the Pacific in 1867. Russia in the early 1800’s owned Alaska. Seward was playing a card game with the Czar and he offered to sell and Alaska for $7.2 million dollars to the United States. The land cost of 2¢ per acre. Most Americans called this purchase “Seward’s Folly”. They called this land the “icebox.”

The Purchase of Alaska

4

Japan was a small island nation. Fearing outsiders, the Japanese had cut themselves off from the world in the 1600’s. American merchants wanted to open Japan to trade. They also wanted the Japanese to help shipwrecked sailors who washed up on their shores.

President Millard Fillmore sent Commodore Matthew Perry to Japan in the early 1850’s. Paris presented Japanese officials with a letter from President Fillmore. In it, the President asked Japanese to open trading relations with the United States. Perry returned in one year with some warships and a show of power. The Japanese emperor signed the Treaty of Kanagawa. The treaty accepted American demands to help shipwrecks sailors. It also opened Japanese ports for trade.

Commodore Matthew Perry

Opening Trade with Japan

5

The period between 1870 and 1914 has often been called the Age of Imperialism. Imperialism is the policy of powerful countries seeking to control the economic and political affairs of weaker countries or regions. During this period the United States and Japan became the imperial powers. One reason for the growth of imperialism is because industrial nations of Europe want to raw materials from Africa and Asia. Imperialism had other causes. Many Europeans believe they had a duty to spread their religion and culture to people to whom they consider to be less civilized.

6

Captain Alfred Mahan, of the United States Navy, argued that the United States needed a larger navy to protect American merchant ships. A bigger navy would need more bases throughout the world. Congress had begun to enlarge the modernized the navy. New steam hulled ships were being built. The navy ships were called the Great White Fleet because they were painted white.

7

The United States demonstrated they have power in the lands of the Pacific Ocean. Soon afterwards the Americans took the land called Hawaii from the King Kalakaua. When he died his sister, Liliuokalani came to the throne. She resented the Americans that settled in Hawaii. Faced with American guns, Liliuokalani give up her throne. She wrote a protest to the United States government. In 1898 the United States annexed or “added on” the Hawaiian Islands. The islands became a US territory.

8

In 1868, the Cuban people rebelled against Spanish rule. The revolution was crushed. Americans had invested more than $50 million in the island of Cuba. American trade with Cuba was worth about $100,000,000.00 a year.

War With Spain (Spanish American War 1898)

Opinion split over whether the United States should intervene (get involved)in Cuba. Hearst used yellow journalism, or sensational stories that were often biased or untrue. Hearst said, “you supply the pictures we will supply the war.”

9

In 1898, fighting broke out in Havana, the Cuban capital. President McKinley sent the Battleship Maine to Havana to protect the American citizens there. On February 15th , a huge explosion ripped through the ship. The explosion killed at least 260 of the 350 sailors and officers on board.Yellow journalists used the explosion to push the Americans into the war in Cuba. The real cause of the explosion remains a mystery today.

The battleship Maine The battleship Maine sinking

10

On April 25, 1898 President McKinley declared war on Spain. This war was called the Spanish-American War. The Spanish-American war lasted only four months. The navy Secretary, Theodore Roosevelt, felt it was important to attack the Spanish in the Philippines as soon as the war began. George Dewey, commander of the Pacific fleet followed Roosevelt’s instructions immediately after war was declared.

Theodore Roosevelt

George Dewey

11

When Theodore Roosevelt became President in 1901, he was determined to build a canal through the Isthmus of Panama. An Isthmus in a narrow strip of land connecting larger bodies of land. Panama was the perfect place for canal because of its location. Roosevelt knew that a canal would greatly benefit the American commerce (business) and military capability. It would also reduce the cost and shipping goods. A revolution between Columbia and Panama began. The people of Panama revolted against the Columbian’s this made it very hard for Roosevelt to build the isthmus. Soon, Panama won their independence from Columbia. The United States recognized the new nation. Panama and then agreed to let the United States build a canal.

The United States in Latin America

12

In building the Canal, tropical heat at mosquitoes made it very difficult. Two tropical diseases were very common; Yellow Fever and Malaria. Under the supervision of army engineer Colonel George Geothals, more than 40,000 workers struggled to dig the canal. Finally in 1914, the first coach and steamship traveled through the Panama Canal. In 1904, Roosevelt announced an important addition to the Monroe Doctrine. In the Roosevelt Corollary, he claimed the right of the United States to intervene in Latin America to preserve law and order. Over the next twenty years, sell the President’s including Roosevelt, used this police power.

Colonel George Geothals