wednesday 11/4 rap what were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? what are some...

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Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today? Today Reading like a historian—Chinese exclusion—15 minutes Read Reaching for an Empire; 7.4-pages 218-223—20 minutes Note check Objective: Understand similarities between the protesters of the 1800s with protesters today. Describe the desire to expand US interests to areas in the western hemisphere.

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Page 1: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Wednesday 11/4RAP

• What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s?

• What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Today– Reading like a historian—Chinese exclusion—15 minutes– Read Reaching for an Empire; 7.4-pages 218-223—20 minutes– Note check

Objective:– Understand similarities between the protesters of the 1800s with protesters

today.– Describe the desire to expand US interests to areas in the western hemisphere.– Understand how the idea of Manifest Destiny related to the expansion of the

country’s boundaries.

Page 2: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Open your textbook to page 218• Objective:

– Understand the reasons for U.S. expansion into the western hemisphere.

– Describe the acquiring of Hawaii, Philippines, and Alaska.

• As a class we will read page 218.

• Please read pages 218-223 and answer the questions on the board.

Title: Ch. 7.4—Reaching for Empire

Due Thursday.

ANSWER COMPLETELY!!!!

Page 3: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Thursday 11/5• RAP

– After the Spanish American War, what did the US receive from Spain in the treaty…for $20 million?

• Today:– Review Ch. 7.4– Quiz on Ch. 7– Begin reading Ch. 8.1—Due Friday

Page 4: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Ch. 7.4 Vocabulary to know• Expansionism-the process of increasing the

territory of the U.S. The US felt threatened by European countries and wanted to protect their interests in the western hemisphere.

• Missionary-religious teachers who went to foreign countries to convert native peoples to Christianity. Western Hemisphere

• Armistice-cease fire; ending the war with Spain.

Page 5: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Ch. 7.4 Notes

• Monroe Doctrine– 1823-message to European powers: no more

European colonies in the Western Hemisphere.– Foreign military would be seen as a threat to the

U.S.– “police force” protecting emerging nations in the

entire hemisphere.– Polk implemented the Monroe Doctrine 20 years

later.

Page 6: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Polk and Manifest Destiny #1• Sea to shining sea

– Settlers moving into foreign owned areas—Oregon, Texas, and California.

– Polk supported expansionism (process of increasing the territory of the U.S)

– Americans supported Manifest Destiny-U.S. superior country and had the right to invade, conquer, and occupy.

– 1846, land above the forty-ninth parallel went to Great Britain and the U.S. would retain what is south.

– 1848, U.S. acquire parts of Mexico with the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo and Gadsden purchase.

Page 7: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Police the Hemisphere #2• Spain, Britain and France all sent troops

into our hemisphere when the U.S was busy with the Civil War.

• U.S. troops after the Civil War went to the Mexican border to help push French troops out…by 1867 France left.

Page 8: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Worldwide Ambitions #3• Why expand?

– Some felt it would increase our glory and prestige around the world.

– U.S. was a model country and felt a moral obligation.

– Spread democracy and Protestant Christian values. Missionaries sent out.

– Biggest reason---New economic markets.

Page 9: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Japan and China

• Treaties with China in 1844 opened up export of cloth, iron, and fur in exchange for tea, silk, porcelain, and jade.

• Commodore Matthew Perry opened up Japan in 1854.– Japan had coal…we needed coal for

transportation and machinery.

• Korea was opened to the U.S. in the 1880s.

Page 10: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

New Lands #4

• Secretary of State William Seward– 1867, U.S. seize Midway islands in the

Pacific… it is strategically located along the trade route to China and Japan.

– Also, buys Alaska from Russia for 7.2 million.• Newspapers mocked him…calling Alaska

“Seward’s folly”• Later riches like gold, copper, and oil stopped that.

Page 11: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Pacific #5

• 1878, U.S. acquire naval rights to a naval station in Somoa.– Trade route to Australia.

• Hawaii, sugar entered the U.S. duty free after American planters were allowed there in 1875.

• By 1887, pressure on the King granted the U.S. rights to build a naval base at Pearl Harbor to protect American interests in the Pacific.

• Queen Liliuokalani did not like this…”Hawaii for the Hawaiians.”

• Marines surrounded the palace, and missionaries took control of the islands.

• Took five years for congress to official annex the islands.

Page 12: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

War with Spain #6

• 1895, Cuban rebels fought for independence from Spain.– Spanish forced some 300,000 rebels into

concentration camps where tens of thousands died.– Battleship Maine blows up in the waters near Cuba. – Headlines scream “Remember the Maine! To Hell

with Spain!” This is an example of yellow journalism.• Later came out that it was an accident.

– Rough riders go into fight. (Teddy Roosevelt)– By July 17th of 1898, the U.S had secured Cuba.– On August 12, Spain signed an armistice.

• Spain granted independence to Cuba, and ceded Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines to the U.S for $20 million.

Page 13: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Philippines #7• U.S. was claiming to fight to liberate the

Philippines.– Wanted independence!– President McKinley felt it would be “cowardly and

dishonorable” to return the island to the Spanish.• Also, argued that the Filippinos were unfit for self

government.• Americans should keep because they needed to uplift

and Christianize the people.

– Philippines were really wanted for resources, markets in the Orient, and close to areas in S.E. Asia.

Page 14: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Quiz Ch. 7

• Title: Ch. 7 Quiz

• Your Name

• Period in class– Capital letters– Form letter

• When you are done—grab the handout on the podium—Ch. 8.1—complete for Friday

Page 15: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Study guide for unit 2 test

• Please work quietly on the study guide for unit 2 test

Page 16: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Review Ch. 7—New Frontiers• Northwest Ordinance• Mary Harris Jones• John D. Rockefeller• Andrew Carnegie• James K. Polk• Social Darwinism• National Market• Strikes• Midway Islands• Spain's treaty after

Spanish-American War.

• Resources in the west• Vertical Integration• Horizontal Integration• Dawes Severalty Act• First land rush• Homestead Act• Philippines

Independence

Page 17: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Unit 2 Test

• Get out a piece of paper.– Title: Unit 2 Test

• Name• Period• Test ID– A or B• Number 1-

Page 18: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Thursday• Begin reading Ch. 8.1; pages 234-239—take

notes on – Shame of the Cities--what was it?

• immigration• social problems• political corruption

– industrial disorder--hurting small businesses and workers-what happened?

Page 19: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Review—Ch. 5• Lewis and Clark• Louisiana Purchase• Manifest Destiny• Henry Clay• Andrew Jackson• William Lloyd Garrison• Frederick Douglass• War with Mexico

Page 20: Wednesday 11/4 RAP What were the concerns of labor protesters during the late 1800s? What are some concerns of protesters, in major cities in the US, today?

Review Ch. 6 Civil War• Advantages of the North• Sharecropping• Gerrymandering• Enslaved life• Why sectionalism developed• Poll taxes• Underground railroad• exodusters