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Crucible of Empire - PBS Online
Crucible of Empire - PBS Online
To understand more about the Spanish-American War and the film, "Crucible of Empire", this site offers a timeline of the major events before, during, and after the war; original 1890s sheet music popular during the War; photographs of the major figures involved; newspaper articles and headlines from 1890s newspapers; classroom activities for teachers and students; historical resources, including recent scholarship concerning the war, bibliographies, and links to other web sites; and a quiz designed to test visitor knowledge about the war and this colorful moment in American history.
·pbs.org·
Crucible of Empire - PBS Online
U.S. Imperialism and Expansion at the Turn of the 19th Century
U.S. Imperialism and Expansion at the Turn of the 19th Century

Entire Unit (including lesson plans) organized in UbD format for 11th grade US History class. The content covers newly acquired U.S. territories, the Spanish-American War, changing U.S. foreign policy through Theodore Roosevelt and John Jay, as well as the historical debate of the time period: the growth of antiimperialists. The unit uses secondary and primary sources, cooperative learning methods, and an emphasis on vocabulary

·digitalcommons.trinity.edu·
U.S. Imperialism and Expansion at the Turn of the 19th Century
ALBERT J. BEVERIDGE, "In Support of an American Empire"
ALBERT J. BEVERIDGE, "In Support of an American Empire"
Senator Beveridge's racism in this speech in support of the war in the Philippines is unabashed and obvious
<p>But, senators, it would be better to abandon this combined garden and Gibraltar of the Pacific, and count our blood and treasure already spent a profitable loss than to apply any academic arrangement of self-government to these children. They are not capable of self-government. How could they be? They are not of a self-governing race. They are Orientals, Malays, instructed by Spaniards in the latter's worst estate. </p> <p>They know nothing of practical government except as they have witnessed the weak, corrupt, cruel, and capricious rule of Spain. What magic will anyone employ to dissolve in their minds and characters those impressions of governors and governed which three centuries of misrule has created? What alchemy will change the Oriental quality of their blood and set the self-governing currents of the American pouring through their Malay veins? How shall they, in the twinkling of an eye, be exalted to the heights of self-governing peoples which required a thousand years for us to reach, Anglo-Saxon though we are? </p> <p>Let men beware how they employ the term "self-government." It is a sacred term. It is the watchword at the door of the inner temple of liberty, for liberty does not always mean self-government. Self-government is a method of liberty - the highest, simplest, best - and it is acquired only after centuries of study and struggle and experiment and instruction and all the elements of the progress of man. Self-government is no base and common thing to be bestowed on the merely audacious. It is the degree which crowns the graduate of liberty, not the name of liberty's infant class, who have not yet mastered the alphabet of freedom. Savage blood, Oriental blood, Malay blood, Spanish example - are these the elements of self-government?</p>
·mtholyoke.edu·
ALBERT J. BEVERIDGE, "In Support of an American Empire"