Chapter 22: Seizing an American Empire
Missionaries
Some 18,000 of these were scattered around the world by 1900
El Caney
Spanish village taken by U.S. troops on July 1
Protectorate
Status of Cuba to the United States in 1898
Water Cure
an old technique developed in the Spanish Inquisition during the sixteenth century whereby a captured Filipino insurgent would be placed on his back on the ground. While soldiers stood on his out- stretched arms and feet, they pried his mouth open, holding it in place with a stick. They then poured salt water into the captive's mouth and nose until his stomach was bloated, whereupon the soldiers would stomp on the pris- oner's abdomen, forcing out of his mouth and nose all of the water, now mixed with gastric juices
British Columbia
A originally British-owned piece of land that Seward first sought to acquire but later moved to Alaska
The Maine
Name of the American battleship docked in Havana harbor that exploded on February 15, 1898 as a result of an accidental coal explosion
Lyman Abbott
A prominent Protestant clergyman and editor, said that America was a divine instrument of Christian imperialism. It was, he said, "the function of the Anglo-Saxon race to confer these gifts of civilization, through law, commerce, and education, on the uncivilized people of the world"
William H. Seward
1886 Secretary of State who predicted that the United States must inevitably exercise commercial domination "on the Pacific Ocean, and its islands and continents"
Marcus "Mark" Hanna
A senator from Ohio but still a powerful Republican strategist, had strenuously opposed Roosevelt's nomination at a party caucus: "Don't any of you realize that there's only one life between this madman and the White House?"
The Pacific Advocate
A Protestant magazine that announced that "the cross will follow the flag" as "righteous" American soldiers prepared to liberate Cuba from Spanish control
California Christian Advocate
A Protestant magazine that cheered the declaration of war with Catholic Spain in 1898: "The war is the Kingdom of God coming!"
George Frisbie Hoar
A Republican who was the most vocal of the anti- imperialists. He infuriated President Roosevelt when he claimed on the Senate floor that the war-loving president had "wasted $600 millions of treasure. You have sacrificed nearly 10,000 American lives—the flower of our youth. You have devastated provinces. You have slain uncounted thousands of the people you desire to benefit. Your practical statesmanship has succeeded in converting a people who three years ago were ready to kiss the hem of the garment of the American and to welcome him as liberator . . . into sullen and irreconcilable enemies, possessed of a hatred which centuries cannot eradicate."
John Fiske
A historian and popular lecturer on Darwinism who wrote "American Political Ideas Viewed from the Standpoint of Universal History"
Naval Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan
A leading advocate of sea power and Western imperialism who published "The Influence of Sea Power upon History, 1660-1783" in 1890. He championed America's "destiny" to control the Caribbean, build an isthmian canal to connect the Pacific and the Caribbean, and spread Western civilization in the Pacific
The Herald
A newspaper that reported that Protestant ministers were the most rabid advocates of the new imperialism because it afforded them opportunities for "evangelization of the world"
Sherwood Anderson
A young writer who said fighting backward Spain was like "like robbing an old gypsy woman in a vacant lot at night after the fair"
Josiah Strong
Added religion to theories of racial and national superiority. Wrote "Our Country: Its Possible Future and Its Present Crisis". Said that Americans "are a race of unequaled energy" who represent "the largest liberty, the purest Christianity, the highest civilization" in the world. "Can anyone doubt that this race . . . is destined to dispossess many weaker races, assimilate others, and mold the remainder until . . . it has Anglo-Saxonized mankind?"
The Platt Amendment
Added to an army appropriations bill passed by Congress in 1901, it sharply restricted the new Cuban government's independence. It also required that Cuba never impair its independence by signing a treaty with a third power, that it keep its debt within the government's power to repay it out of ordinary revenues, and that it acknowledge the right of the United States to intervene in Cuba whenever it saw fit. Finally, Cuba had to sell or lease to the United States lands to be used for coaling or naval stations
Spanish Commanding General Valeriano Weyler
Adopted a controversial policy whereby his troops herded Cubans behind Spanish lines, housing them in detention (reconcentrado) centers so that no one could join the insurrections by night and appear peaceful by day
Jones Act
Affirmed America's intention to grant the Philippines independence on an unspecified date and granted Puerto Ricans U.S. citizenship and made both houses of the legislature elective
Insurrectos
Aguinaldo's forces
Senator Albert J. Beveridge
An ardent imperialist senator who declared that "we are God's chosen people." The United States, he added, had a "sacred duty" to bring the blessings of American Christianity to the lands acquired from Spain. Also said "The Philippines are ours forever. And just beyond the Philippines are China's illimitable markets. We will not retreat from either. . . . The power that rules the Pacific is the power that rules the world."
The Phillipine-American War
An armed conflict between the First Philippine Republic and the United States in 1899
Asia
An especially alluring target for American imperialism
Hawaii
Annexed by the United States in the summer of 1959
House of Delegates
Appointed by the president to Puerto Rico, along with a governor and eleven members of an executive council
Cuba
Area in the Caribbean sought for and eventually won by the United States. Up until its revolution, it was owned by Spain
Anti-Imperialists
Argued that acquisition of the Philippines would corrupt the American principle, dating back to the Revolution, that people should be self-governing rather than colonial subjects
Dr. Walter Reed
Head of the Army Yellow Fever Commission in 1900, he proved that mosquitoes carried yellow fever. The commission's experiments led the way to effective control of the disease worldwide
American Anti-Imperialist League
Attracted members representing many shades of opinion. Had members such as former presidents Grover Cleveland and Benjamin Harrison. Andrew Carnegie footed the bills Presidents Charles Eliot of Harvard and David Starr Jordan of Stanford University supported the group, along with the social reformer Jane Addams
Our Country: Its Possible Future and Its Present Crisi
Book written by Josiah Strong that asserted that the "Anglo-Saxon" embodied two great ideas: civil liberty and "a pure spiritual Christianity" and that Anglo-Saxon was "divinely commis- sioned to be, in a peculiar sense, his brother's keeper"
The Influence of Sea Power upon History, 1660-1783
Book written by Naval Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan that argued that national greatness and prosperity flowed from maritime power
American Political Ideas Viewed from the Standpoint of Universal History
Book written by historian John Fiske that stressed the superior character of "Anglo-Saxon" institutions and peoples
Alaska
Bought by Secretary of State John Seward in 1867 for $7.2 million
Clayton-Bulwer Treaty
British agreed to acquire no more Central American territory, and the United States joined them in agreeing to build or fortify a canal only by mutual consent
J. A. Hobson
British economist who said imperialism was "the most powerful factor in the current politics of the Western world"
President Grover Cleveland
Called the Hawaiian Islands "the stepping-stone to the growing trade of the Pacific"
Spanish-American War
Called the War of 1898, it was a conflict in 1898 between Spain and the United States, which was the result of U.S. intervention in the Cuban War of Independence
Commodore George Dewey
Commander of the small U.S. fleet in Asia that won the battle at Manila Bay
Republic of Hawaii
Created on July 4, 1894 and included in its constitution a standing provision for American annexation
William Jennings Bryan
Democrat who argued ending the war would open the way for the future independence of the Philippines
McKinley Tariff
Destroyed Hawaii's favored position in the sugar trade by putting the sugar of all countries on the duty-free list and granting growers in the continental United States a 2¢ subsidy per pound of sugar in 1890
The Teller Amendment
Disclaimed any intention of the U.S. eventually taking control of Cuba
Foraker Act
Established a government on the Puerto Rico
Samoa
Gained by the U.S. with a treaty in 1878 that granted a naval base at Pago Pago and extraterritoriality for Americans, exchanged trade concessions, and called for the United States to help resolve any disputes with other nations
Baker Island
Gained by the United States in 1857
Howland Island
Gained by the United States in 1857
Johnston Atoll
Gained by the United States in 1858
Kingman Reef
Gained by the United States in 1858
Midway Islands
Gained by the United States in 1867
Aleutian Islands
Gained by the United States in 1889
Palmyra Atoll
Gained by the United States in 1898
Pribilor Island
Gained by the United States in 1910
Bidlack Treaty
Guaranteed both Colombia's sovereignty over Panama and the neutrality of the isthmus
Pearl Harbor
Major harbor of Hawaii
Pago Pago
Major harbor of Samoa
Alice
Name of Theodore Roosevelt's wife, who died of kidney failure
First Sino-Japanese War
Japan defeated China
Boxers
Known as the Fists of Righteous Harmony, they rebelled against foreign encroachments on China, especially Christian missionary efforts, and laid siege to foreign embassies in Peking, known as Boxer Rebellion
Wake Island
Land claimed by the U.S. in 1898, located between Guam and the Hawaiian Islands
De Lôme Letter
Letter from the Spanish ambassador Depuy de Lôme to a friend in Havana, who called President McKinley "weak and a bidder for the admiration of the crowd, besides being a would-be politician who tries to leave a door open behind himself while keeping on good terms with the jingoes of his party"
Benevolent Assimilation
McKinley's named "act" of taking the islands in the Phillipines
A Holy Cause
McKinley's reasoning for annexing the Phillipines
Rough Riders
Name given to the First Volunteer Calvary in Tampa Bay, Florida made up of former Ivy League athletes, ex-convicts, Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Pawnee, and Creek Indians, and southwestern sharpshooters, with Lieutenant Colonel Roosevelt leading. The first American troops ever sent overseas
Weary Walkers
Name given to the Rough Riders after their horses and mules were sent elsewhere
"Seward's Folly"
Name given to the purchase of the Alaskan "icebox" by Seward by critics
Little Texas
Name of Theodore Roosevelt's horse
Mittie
Name of Theodore Roosevelt's mother
Theodore Roosevelt
Nicknamed "Mr. Imperialism". Said he "would give anything if President McKinley would order the fleet to Havana tomorrow" and that the sinking was "an act of dirty treachery on the part of the Spaniards". Also said "We will have this war for the freedom of Cuba,in spite of the timidity of the commercial interests" and that McKinley "has no more backbone than a chocolate éclair."
Catholic Americans
Objected to Protestant plans to evangelize the Catholic Cubans
Autonomy
Offered by Spain to the Cubans in return for ending the rebellion
Tydings-McDuffie Act of 1934
Offered independence after ten more years
Open Door Policy
Proposed to keep China open to trade with all countries on an equal basis. More specifically, it called upon foreign powers, within their spheres of influence, (1) to refrain from interfering with any treaty port (a port open to all by treaty) or any vested interest, (2) to permit Chinese authorities to collect tariffs on an equal basis, and (3) to show no favors to their own nationals in the matter of harbor dues or rail- road charges
John Hay's Open Door Note
Outlined the Open Door Policy
Joseph Pulitzer
Owner of "New York World"
William Randolph Hearst
Owner of the "New York Journal". Called the Spanish Commander the "Butcher Weyler"
The Philippine Government Act
Passed by Congress in 1902, declared the Philippine Islands an "unorganized territory" and made the inhabitants citizens of the Philippines
William James
Philosopher that said the drive for imperialism caused the nation to "puke up its ancient soul"
Yellow Journalism
Practice created by competing newspapers "New York Journal"and "New York World" where the newspapers employed sensationalism as well as intentional efforts to manipulate public opinion
Senator Henry Cabot Lodge
President McKinley's closest friend who eroded his neutrality. Described Jennings efforts to gain approval of the treaty as "the closest, hardest fight" he had witnessed in the Senate. He also admitted that if U.S. troops had not provoked a clash with Filipino insurgents the weekend before, the treaty would have been rejected and the Philippines would have been set free
Commonwealth
Puerto Rico became this in 1952
Woodrow Wilson
Roosevelt's main political opponent. Said that the former "Rough Rider" was "a great big boy" at heart. "You can't resist the man." Roosevelt's glittering spectacles, glistening teeth, and overflowing gusto were a godsend to the cartoonists, who added another trademark when he pronounced the adage "Speak softly, and carry a big stick."
William McKinley
Said "We need Hawaii just as much and a good deal more than we did California. It is manifest destiny"
The Sandwich Islands
Samoa and Hawaii
Kettle Hill
Seized by the Rough Riders while a larger force took San Juan Hill
Reciprocal Trade Agreement
Signed by the U.S. and Hawaii in 1875 that resulted in a boom in sugar production
Armistance
Signed on August 12 and specified that Spain should give up Cuba and that the United States should annex Puerto Rico and occupy Manila pending the transfer of power in the Philippines
Treaty of Paris
Signed on December 10, 1898, ending the war between the two nations. It granted Cuba its independence, but the status of the Philippines remained unresolved
Manila Bay
Site of a U.S. victory led by Commodore George Dewey
Isolationist Mood
Swept across the United States as the country basked in its geographic advantages
Puerto Rico
Taken by the U.S. on July 25
Santiago
Taken by the U.S. on July 7
Backward Peoples
Term used to describe those outside of the U.S. that didn't follow the "norm"
Judge William Howard Taft
The Civil Governor
Liliuokalani
The king's sister, who ascended the throne and tried to eliminate the political power exercised by American planter
Emilio Aguinaldo
The leader of the Filipino nationalist movement, who declared the Philippines independent on June 12
John Hay
The soon to be secretary of state, who wrote in a letter to Theodore Roosevelt that the Spanish-American War was "a splendid little war, begun with the highest motives, carried on with magnificent intelligence and spirit, favored by that fortune that loves the brave."
Leon Czolgosz
Unemployed anarchist that killed McKinley
Congressional medal of Honor
Unsuccessfully (until 2001) awarded to Roosevelt by Congress