USA
1919 - 1941
The American Dream
The Roaring Twenties
The Boom
Ku Klux Klan
Prohibition
Isolationism 1
Isolationism 2 - more
depth
Henry Ford
The Wall Street Crash
Causes of the depression
The New Deal
|
Isolationism
When America joined the
Great War in 1917, it tilted the balance against the Central Powers (Germany
and her allies), because of her large population and industrial might.
When the war ended, President Wilson was in a strong position to influence
the peace treaties -the peace settlement was based in fact upon his "Fourteen
Points", e.g. a new international body called the League of Nations
was to be set up to keep the peace between nations.
Sadly the Americans turned their backs on Wilson (he lost the 1920 election)
and on Europe. Many Americans believed that the sacrifices they had made in
the Great War had been a waste of money and men. They were opposed to anything
that might drag America into another European war. So the USA did not ratify
the Treaty of Versailles (officially accept it), nor did she join the League
of Nations or the International Court of Justice. Many Americans simply wanted
to enjoy the prosperity that had developed in the previous decade and felt that
foreign entanglements would threaten it.
During the 1920's and 1930's, America was in isolation, i.e. she kept I herself
to herself and took little part in international relations I (conferences and
treaties between the nations) .In addition America, isolated herself in terms
of trade. Tariffs (import duties) were put on foreign goods to protect American
industry. (Because they could not sell their goods to America, European countries
could not afford to buy agricultural goods (farm produce) from the USA. This
was one of the causes of the Depression.)
America turned its back on Europe in another way. It cut down the number of
immigrants allowed into the USA. America was a nation of immigrants. (The native
peoples being the dwindling number of Indians, who were largely restricted to
remote reservations.) Up until the Great War millions of people, mainly from
Europe, had gone to America to seek their fortune and/or escape poverty and
persecution. British people, especially the Irish, Germans and Jews, particularly
from Russia, were amongst the largest groups. In 1921 the "open door"
policy ended and quotas (a fixed number each year) were introduced. By 1929
only 150,000 immigrants per year were allowed. What was especially unfair was
that the system favoured W.A.S.P.s (White Anglo-Saxon Protestants) from northern
Europe. The people who were most desperate to get to America, e.g. the poor
of Italy and Greece and Adriatics found it difficult to get visas (formal entry
documents).
Things to ask yourself
1) What was "isolationism"?
2) How did the USA turn its back on the rest of the world after the Great War?
and why did she do
this?
|
|