Ch. 19 Review Flashcards
Explain what happened during the 1893 Coup of the Kingdom of Hawaii.
Jan 16, 1893: 13 American Businessmen and lawyers, calling themselves “the Committee of Safety” with assistance from the US military to overthrew the Queen Liliuokalani of Hawaii. President Cleveland criticized the involvement of American troops who had been used in the coup as a misuse of power by the United States.
In 1893, the stock market suffered a collapse similar to the one in 1873 when railroad overbuilding led to bank failures. How did President Cleveland address the depression that ensued?
Believing that the depression was caused by the free coinage of silver and a shortage of gold, Cleveland convinced Congress to repeal the Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890, and to reduce the McKinley Tariff’s rate. Although reducing the tariff rate helped only a little bit, by repealing the Sherman Silver Purchase Act, Cleveland made the Panic of 1893 much worse, since it restricted the flow of money. Less money available meant Banks were less likely to loan money, which restricted the growth of business and jobs.
Coxey’s Army
A group of thousands of unemployed men ed by Populist James A. Coxey who marched on Washington in 1894 as a result of the depression. Demanded a public works program, but following their leader’s arrest, the group disbanded.
The Atlanta Compromise
During an 1895 speech at the Atlanta Exposition, Booker T. Washington announced that an agreement had been reached between Southern whites and Blacks. Under the agreement, Blacks agreed to submit to white political rule, while whites guaranteed that blacks would receive basic education in trades and due process in law.
Jose Marti
Smuggled in from the United States into Cuba in 1995 to begin a revolution against the Spanish rule.
Yellow Journalism
Sensationalized journalism to gain public support for war in Cuba. Both Hearst’s Journal and Pulitzer’s World covered Martí’s revolution and atrocities committed by the Spanish government in suppressing it, such as the decision to concentrate suspected revolutionaries in camps. Both newspapers urged American intervention.
Separate but Equal
The South used “Separate but Equal” to justify segregation under the Constitution. The Supreme Court condoned Separate but Equal in Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), holding that racial segregation was legal, so long as the facilities offered to blacks were roughly equal to those offered to whites. In reality, the separate bathrooms, drinking fountains, schools, railroad cars, and myriad other separate facilities were never equal. In 1954, the Court overturned Plessy in Brown v. Board of Education.
How did William Jennings Bryan secure the 1896 Democrat nomination for President?
Bryan endorsed free silver in his famous “Cross of Gold” speech.
Who won the election of 1896?
William McKinley crushed William Jennings Bryan in one of the most lopsided presidential elections in history.
In 1897, early in President McKinley’s first term, gold was discovered in _____, bringing the U.S. out of the depression which followed the Panic of 1893.
Alaska. The Alaskan Gold Strike also increased the amount of gold in circulation, lessening the appeal of candidates who supported silver coinage.
The first newspaper to reach 1,000,000 in circulation
The New York World, published by Joseph Pulitzer, reached the 1,000,000 mark in the 1890s. Unlike the more staid papers of the day, Pulitzer’s World emphasized sensationalism with lurid tales of love gone wrong, murder, and corruption in high places.
Who led the New York Journal, a rival to Pulitzer’s New York World?
William Randolph Hearst. Hearst and Pulitzer engaged in a newspaper war fighting for subscribers with ever-escalating sensationalism. Critics dubbed their conduct “yellow journalism.” The term “yellow journalism” stems from the Yellow Kid comic strip, which was published in both the Journal and the World.
Jingoism
A belligerent nationalist foreign policy. The term was used in the 1890s to describe those who supported continued American expansion, by diplomatic means if possible, but by war if necessary.
Imperialism
a policy of extending a country’s power, territory, or influence by diplomacy, force, or a combination of both.
What political group opposed continued U.S. imperialism in the early 20th century?
the Anti-Imperialist League. Guided by William Jennings Bryan, the Anti-Imperialist League opposed the U.S. annexation of the Philippines in the aftermath of the Spanish-American War. The League contended that annexation was against the wishes of the Filipinos, and thus contrary to the American principle of the “consent of the governed.”