Toward an Empire in Latin America 589
RUSSIAN EMPIRE
CHINA
ALASKA
1867
BRITISH
INDIA
JAPAN
TIBET
TAIWAN
Guam
1898
Wake
1899
1899
Midway
1867 Hawaiian
Islands
BURMA 1898
KOREA
DUTCH INDIES
SIAM
FRENCH
INDOCHINA
PHILIPPINES
1898
Hong Kong
Foochow
Beijing
Shanghai
Tokyo
Canton
HI
MA
LA
YAS
Russian
British
Japanese
French
German
United States
The Netherlands
Date of U.S. acquisition
Area of U.S. Protestant missionary activity
U.S. expansion
U.S. influence
Colonial
possessions
Spheres of
influence
Huan
gH
e
South
China
Sea
INDIAN
OCEAN
PACIFIC
OCEAN
Ya
ngz
iR.
Sea
of
Japan
Bay of
Bengal
The Course of Empire, 1867–1901China was the focus of American imperial visions: Missionaries, most of them women, flocked into China,
and American manufacturers craved access to the huge China market.
the head of a “Hawaii for the Hawaiians” movement,
she abolished the existing constitution under which
the white minority had pretty much controlled the
islands and attempted to rule as an absolute
monarch. The resident Americans then staged a coup.
In January 1893, with the connivance of the U.S.
minister, John L. Stevens, who ordered 150 marines
from the cruiserBostoninto Honolulu, they deposed
Queen Liliuokalani and set up a provisional govern-
ment. Stevens recognized their regime at once, and
the new government sent a delegation to Washington
to seek a treaty of annexation.
In the closing days of the Harrison administration
such a treaty was negotiated and sent to the Senate,
but when Cleveland took office in March, he withdrew
it. The new president disapproved of the way American
troops had been used to overthrow the monarchy and
attempted to restore Queen Liluokalani. But by now
the new regime, backed by American businessmen, was
firmly entrenched. Cleveland found himself unable to
do anything.
Finally, in July 1898, after the outbreak of the
Spanish-American War, Congress annexed the islands
by joint resolution, a procedure requiring only a sim-
ple majority vote.
Iolani Palace, Hawaiiatwww.myhistorylab.com
Toward an Empire in Latin America
Most of the arguments for extending American influ-
ence in the Pacific applied more strongly to Central
and South America, where the United States had
much larger economic interests and where the strate-
gic importance of the region was clear. Furthermore,
the Monroe Doctrine had long conditioned the
American people to the idea of acting to protect
national interests in the Western Hemisphere.
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