Unit 4 – Forging an Industrial Society
(last chapter in U4 as part of P7)
Period 7: 1890-1945
Chapter 27–“Empire & Expansion” (1890-1909)
Learning Objectives – After reading this chapter you should be able to:
- …explain why the United States suddenly abandoned its isolationism and turned outward at the' end of the nineteenth century.
- …indicate how the Venezuelanand Hawaiian affairs expressed the new American assertiveness
- …as well as American ambivalence about foreign involvements.
- …describe how America became involved with Cuba and explain why a reluctant President McKinley was forced to go to war with Spain.
- …state the unintended consequences of Dewey's victory at Manila Bay.
- …describe the easy American military conquest of Cuba and Puerto Rico.
- …explain McKinley's decision to keep the Philippines and list the opposing arguments in the debate about imperialism.
- …analyze the long-term consequences and significance of the Spanish-American War
Identify the Historical Significance of the following –
- Alfred T. Mahan
- James G. Blaine
- Richard Olney
- Valeriano Weyler
- Dupuy de Lôme
- Theodore Roosevelt
- William Howard Taft
- George Dewey
- Emilio Aguinaldo
- José Martí
Define the Historical Significance of the following –
- reconcentration
- jingoism
- imperialism
Describe the Historical Significance of the following –
- Pan American Conference
- U.S.S. Maine
- Teller Amendment
- Rough Riders
- Treaty of Paris
- Anti-Imperialist League
- Foraker Act
- insular cases
- Platt Amendment
- “yellow” journalism
- Queen Liliuokalani
- annexation of Hawaii
- Venezuelan boundary dispute
- Russo-Japanese War
- Treaty of Portsmouth
- Open Door Notes/Policy
- Big Stick Policy
- Panama Canal
- Hay-Pauncefote Treaty
- Hay-Bunau-Varilla Treaty
- Gentlemen’s Agreement
- Root-Takahira Agreement
See page 2 for Glossary
To build your social science vocabulary, familiarize yourself with the following terms.
- concession - a privilege granted by a government to another government, private company, or individual
- nation-state - the modern form of political organization in which the government coincides exactly with a single national territory and population having a distinctive culture, language, history, and so on
- reciprocity - an exchange of equal privileges between two governments
- scorched-earth policy - The policy of burning and destroying all the property in a given area so as to deny it to an enemy
- reconcentration - The policy of forcibly removing a population to confined areas in order to deny support to enemy forces
- jingoist - aggressively patriotic and warlike
- atrocity - a specific act of extreme cruelty
- proviso - article or cause in a statute, treaty, or contract establishing a particular stipulation or condition affecting the whole document
- archipelago - a large group of islands within a limited area
- hostage - a person or thing forcibly held in order to obtain certain goals or agreements