Essential Question: To what extent did American foreign policy at the turn of the 20th century promote American interests and ideals?
The first five lessons develop scholars’ understanding of American imperialism at the turn of the 20th century and how imperialism transformed the United States into a global power. Lesson 1 introduces scholars to the meaning of imperialism and how U.S. economic growth during the Gilded Age sparked the adoption of interventionist policies to support the growing economy and help turn the United States into a global power. In Lessons 2 through 4, scholars will dive more deeply into one of the first major examples of American interventionist foreign policy: the Spanish-American War. In this DBQ, scholars will be able to explain the conflicting motivations in the war: that of national self-interest, and that of protecting vulnerable nations to promote democracy. In Lesson 5, scholars will explore more broadly the foreign policies of presidents McKinley, Roosevelt, Taft, and Wilson to understand how each president had different means, methods, and motivations in promoting American imperialism. By the end of these lessons, scholars must be able to explain the complex and often contradictory reasons why the United States became an imperial power, and how the United States promoted its imperial interests abroad.
Lesson 1: The Birth of Imperial America (Source Analysis)
- Central Question: Why did the United States adopt imperial policies in the late 19th century?
Lessons 2–4: The Spanish-American War (DBQ Writing)
- Central Question: Why did the United States invade Cuba in 1898?
Lesson 5: Presidential Imperial Policy (Jigsaw)
- Central Question: How did presidents McKinley, Roosevelt, Taft, and Wilson promote American imperialism?
Lesson 6 examines the backlash to imperialism, both at home and abroad. While American leaders pursued imperial policies both for moral and self-interested reasons, the impact of these policies was almost exclusively harmful to the native peoples subjected to American intervention. Thus, many people in Hawaii, the Philippines, Cuba, and around the world passionately fought to end U.S. foreign intervention, often with minimal success. At home, many Americans challenged imperialists’ claims that imperialism promoted American ideals, arguing instead that imperialism defied and threatened democracy and liberty. By the end of this lesson, scholars must be able to articulate why a backlash emerged in response to American imperialism, and how this backlash challenged the notion that imperialism promoted American ideals.
Lesson 6: Anti-Imperialism (Source Analysis)
- Central Question: Why did people at home and abroad oppose American imperialism?
In Lessons 7 through 10, scholars will be introduced to the largest global conflict of the era: World War I. In order to understand the United States’ role in World War I, scholars must understand the global context of imperialism and alliances that gave rise to it. Therefore, scholars will simulate the immediate events leading to the outbreak of World War I globally and the complex system of alliances and imperial rivalries that fueled the conflict. In Lessons 8 through 10, scholars will examine the role of the United States in World War I, and how economic interests coupled with German aggression ultimately brought the decidedly neutral United States into the global conflict. By the end of these lessons, scholars will understand why World War I was a turning point for the United States, affirming its role as a global nation and leader in international affairs. Scholars will also be prepared to consider American responses to the Treaty of Versailles and to compare American imperial and isolationist perspectives.
Lesson 7: World War I (Simulation)
- Central Question: Why did World War I become a global conflict?
Lessons 8–10: The United States and World War I (DBQ Writing)
- Central Question: Why did the United States join World War I?
The final lesson of the unit expresses the national divide over American foreign policy: Following the destruction of World War I, what role should the United States take on the global stage? As scholars debate the Treaty of Versailles, they must understand how American imperialist and anti- imperialist arguments influenced both the globalist perspective of President Wilson as well as the isolationist perspective of many critics of the treaty. While in previous lessons, imperialists argued that foreign intervention was in service of American interests, isolationists argued that intervention actually threatened it. Thus, by the end of this lesson, scholars must be able to articulate the many conflicting viewpoints of the national debate over American foreign intervention and the extent to which intervention promoted American interests and ideals at the turn of the 20th century.
Lesson 11: The Treaty of Versailles (Debate)
- Central Question: Should the United States have signed the Treaty of Versailles?