American Imperialism Mrs. Dorinda L. Robinson HIS 204 Professor Steven Brownson March 29‚ 2009 [pic] Introduction During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries‚ the United States pursued an aggressive policy of expansionism‚ extending its political and economic influence around the globe. It was the age of imperialism‚ a pivotal era in the history of the United States. Imperialism is defined as the acquisition of control over the government and the economy of another nation
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All American women in the 19th to early 20th century faced social and legal disabilities that forbade women to have the same equal rights as men. Through all the obstacles that made women’s rights achievable were the hardships that influenced historians such as Harriet Tubman‚ Elizabeth Cady Stanton‚ and Susan B. Anthony to overcome the inequality in property rights‚ family law‚ and education to allow women fulfill the same opportunities as men that is seen in society today. Women protested and
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In the early 19th century the United States faced a time of internal expansion. This internal expansion was mainly due to the Louisiana Purchase when the United States acquired the Louisiana Territory to become part of the United States. This event marked the beginning of expansion within the United States‚ which sparked other events that helped increase the acquisition of the Western lands of the United States. In the 1840s Manifest Destiny was a popular idea that the United States was destined
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The United States changed from a largely rural‚ agrarian civilization to an industrial economy focused on big cities in the course of a few decades in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. During this period‚ the number of native-born people migrating from rural to urban areas increased‚ but the influx of immigrants into cities far outstripped the speed of domestic migration. The population of foreign-born people rose from about 7 million to just under 14 million between 1880 and 1920. However
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mostly traders and manufacturers. They believed that slavery was wrong and relied on American workers to work in the factories and businesses. However‚ this did lead to harsh working conditions and both women and child laborers. This also saw the expansion of the middle class. Trading within the United States was also encouraged. The different regions would trade with each other what they had in excess for what they needed. The south traded a lot with Europe. These are some major factors that attributes
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Reform Movements When the United States was founded‚ neither women nor African Americans had civil rights. This all began to change in 1800’s when people began to fight for equality. The Women’s Rights Movement and the Abolitionist Movement‚ although different in leadership and protest‚ were similar in their motivation and spread of ideas. One key differentiation between the fight for women’s rights and for African Americans rights is the methods of protest and gathering. While women held conventions
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Women in the Early Republic Women played a big part in their husband’s roles in government‚ although they were not allowed to vote at this time. Women like Dolley Madison made their husband’s presidency more successful. Women also became more involved with the churches‚ and education. They believed that it was important for women to be as educated as men. Women made up most of the church congregants‚ as they had for a while. In New England colonies‚ they started to let women work alongside men
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The challenges Americans faced in the late 19th Century and early 20th Century. The progressives were urban Northeast college educated middle-class protestants that wanted to solve some problems. To do this they started to form groups named unions. They also started to make strikes in order for them to get the new rights that they wanted. Some of the issues that they were trying to solve were women suffrage‚ income inequality‚ child labor and safer workplace conditions.
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There were many changes that occurred in the early nineteenth century. America was a relatively new country that people wanted to explore and find more about. In the 1800’s there was visible change in the economy such as the Irish and German immigrants‚ the inequalities of women‚ and the Second Great Awakening. Immigrants in the 19th century played an important role in society. Many Europeans were coming over to America for the main reason that Europe was just too crowded. A driving force that caused
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The Constitution is the living document of the well-known American rights. It starts the long list of all the respectable rules with the famous line “We the People”. What some people may not know‚ is that “We the People” didn’t apply to 69% of the country. The Constitution gives “the people” their rights and their power which means that the people that are left out of it‚ don’t have rights in America. In this case‚ women. Women were vital parts of America. They could do jobs and work in the workforce
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