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Chapter 13: Section 5

Chapter 13: Section 5

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Social Studies

8th Grade

Hard

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Regina Johnson

Used 5+ times

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17 Slides • 0 Questions

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Chapter 13: Section 5

The United States and Latin America

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Main Ideas:

  • The United States build the Panama Canal in the early 1900s.

  • Theodore Roosevelt changed U.S. policy toward Latin America.

  • Presidents Taft and Wilson promoted U.S. interest in Latin America.

  • The Untied States expanded its role in Latin America in the early 1900s.

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Building the Panama Canal

  • Link the Atlantic and Pacific oceans and cut some 8,000 miles of the voyage by ship from the West to the East coasts of the United States.

  • Would allow the U.S. Navy to link its Atlantic and Pacific naval fleets quickly.

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Revolution in Panama

  • President Theodore Roosevelt knew the best spot for the canal was the Isthmus of Panama, which was apart of the nation of Columbia.

  • Roosevelt could not convince the Colombian senate to lease a strip of land across Panama to the U.S.

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Revolution in Panama

  • Roosevelt needed another way: Panamanian revolutionaries were planning a revolt against Columbia.

  • November 2, 1903: U.S. warship arrived outside on Colon, Panama.

  • November 3, 1903 the revolt began.

  • Blocked by U.S. warship, Colombian forces could not reach Panama to stop rebellion.

  • Panama declared itself an independent country.

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Revolution in Panama

  • The new government in Panama supported the idea of a canal across its land.

  • The United States agreed to pay Panama $10 million plus $250,000 a year for 99 year lease on a 10 mile wide strip of land across the isthmus.

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Building the Canal

  • Canal construction began 1904.

  • Tropical disease was an obstacle, forests and swamps full of mosquitoes.

  • Dr. William C. Gorgas, helped Dr. Walter Reed stamp out yellow fever in Cuba and worked to ride the canal route of disease carrying mosquitoes.

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Of the tens of thousands of workers constructing the French canal, over 85% were hospitalized and 22,000 died primarily due to Yellow Fever.

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Building a Canal

  • Dangerous work: Most of the canal had been blasted out of solid rock with explosives.

  • Workers used dozens of steam shovels to cut a narrow, eight mile long channel through the mountains of central Panama.

  • Workers died when their shovel struck explosive charges.

  • Some 6,000 lives were lost during the American construction of the Panama Canal.

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Building a Canal

  • The Panama Canal opened August 15, 1914 linking the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.

  • It took 10 years to complete and cost $375 million.

  • It is known as "the highway between oceans".

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U.S. Policy Toward Latin America

  • Roosevelt believed the U.S. should take an active role in the Western Hemisphere.

  • "Speak softly and carry a big stick; you will go far".

  • The "Big Stick" is the U.S. military force (it would protect U.S. interests in Latin America.)

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U.S. Policy Toward Latin America

  • Monroe Doctrine: warned European nations not to interfere in the Western Hemisphere (U.S. could not enforce this at the time).

  • Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine warned that in cases of "wrongdoing" by Latin America countries, the United States might exercise "international police power".

  • Roosevelt enforced the corollary thought his presidency.

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U.S. Interests in Latin America

  • Dollar Diplomacy: influencing governments through economic, not military intervention (used by Taft).

  • "substituting dollars for bullets. It is directed to the increase of American trade."

  • Keep Europeans out of Latin America by expanding U.S. business interests there.

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U.S. Interests in Latin America

  • Woodrow Wilson: rejected dollar diplomacy and agreed with big stick policy.

  • Wilson was willing to use military force to protect U.S. interests in the region.

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U.S. Interests in Latin America

  • 1910: Mexicans revolted against the harsh rule of Mexican dictator Porfino Diaz.

  • Mexican Revolution: long violent struggle for power in Mexico.

  • War affected U.S. interests because Americans invested more than $1 billion in Mexican land, mining, oil, and railways... Americans were fearful their investment would be lost.

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U.S. Interests in Latin America

  • 1914: Woodrow Wilson learned that a German ship carrying weapons was headed to the port of Veracruz, Mexico.

  • Wilson ordered the navy to seize Veracruz.

  • 1916: John J. Pershing and 15,000 U.S. soldiers into Mexico to catch rebel leader Francisco "Pancho" Villa, who had killed 17 Americans in New Mexico.

  • Pershing failed and Wilson recalled the troops.

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U.S. Interests in Latin America

In 1917 a new constitution began to bring order to Mexico. The violence caused more than 120,000 Mexicans to flee to the United States between 1905-1915.

Chapter 13: Section 5

The United States and Latin America

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