Read this text about the period from wartime into the age of prosperity and decadence that followed in the 1920s. It also covers some different takes on social attitudes of the time. Feel free to read selectively for those.
American Isolationism and the European Origins of War
Unlike his immediate predecessors, President Woodrow Wilson had planned to shrink the role of the United States in foreign affairs. He believed that the nation needed to intervene in international events only when there was a moral imperative to do so. But as Europe's political situation grew dire, it became increasingly difficult for Wilson to insist that the conflict growing overseas was not America's responsibility. Germany's war tactics struck most observers as morally reprehensible, while also putting American free trade with the Entente at risk. Despite campaign promises and diplomatic efforts, Wilson could only postpone American involvement in the war.
Woodrow Wilson's New Freedom
When
Woodrow Wilson took over the White House in March 1913, he promised a
less expansionist approach to American foreign policy than Theodore
Roosevelt and William Howard Taft had pursued. Wilson did share the
commonly held view that American values were superior to those of the
rest of the world, that democracy was the best system to promote peace
and stability, and that the United States should continue to actively
pursue economic markets abroad. But he proposed an idealistic foreign
policy based on morality, rather than American self-interest, and felt
that American interference in another nation's affairs should occur only
when the circumstances rose to the level of a moral imperative.
Wilson
appointed former presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan, a noted
anti-imperialist and proponent of world peace, as his Secretary of
State. Bryan undertook his new assignment with great vigor, encouraging
nations around the world to sign "cooling off treaties," under which
they agreed to resolve international disputes through talks, not war,
and to submit any grievances to an international commission. Bryan also
negotiated friendly relations with Colombia, including a $25 million
apology for Roosevelt's actions during the Panamanian Revolution, and
worked to establish effective self-government in the Philippines in
preparation for the eventual American withdrawal. Even with Bryan's
support, however, Wilson found that it was much harder than he
anticipated to keep the United States out of world affairs. In reality,
the United States was interventionist in areas where its interests -
direct or indirect - were threatened.
Wilson's greatest break
from his predecessors occurred in Asia, where he abandoned Taft's
"dollar diplomacy," a foreign policy that essentially used the power of
U.S. economic dominance as a threat to gain favorable terms. Instead,
Wilson revived diplomatic efforts to keep Japanese interference there at
a minimum. But as World War I, also known as the Great War, began to
unfold, and European nations largely abandoned their imperialistic
interests in order to marshal their forces for self-defense, Japan
demanded that China succumb to a Japanese protectorate over their entire
nation. In 1917, William Jennings Bryan's successor as Secretary of
State, Robert Lansing, signed the Lansing-Ishii Agreement, which
recognized Japanese control over the Manchurian region of China in
exchange for Japan's promise not to exploit the war to gain a greater
foothold in the rest of the country.
Furthering his goal of
reducing overseas interventions, Wilson had promised not to rely on the
Roosevelt Corollary, Theodore Roosevelt's explicit policy that the
United States could involve itself in Latin American politics whenever
it felt that the countries in the Western Hemisphere needed policing.
Once president, however, Wilson again found that it was more difficult
to avoid American interventionism in practice than in rhetoric. Indeed,
Wilson intervened more in Western Hemisphere affairs than either Taft or
Roosevelt.
In 1915, when a revolution in Haiti resulted in the
murder of the Haitian president and threatened the safety of New York
banking interests in the country, Wilson sent over three hundred U.S.
Marines to establish order.
Subsequently, the United States
assumed control over the island's foreign policy as well as its
financial administration. One year later, in 1916, Wilson again sent
marines to Hispaniola, this time to the Dominican Republic, to ensure
prompt payment of a debt that nation owed. In 1917, Wilson sent troops
to Cuba to protect American-owned sugar plantations from attacks by
Cuban rebels; this time, the troops remained for four years.
Wilson's
most noted foreign policy foray prior to World War I focused on Mexico,
where rebel general Victoriano Huerta had seized control from a
previous rebel government just weeks before Wilson's inauguration.
Wilson refused to recognize Huerta's government, instead choosing to
make an example of Mexico by demanding that they hold democratic
elections and establish laws based on the moral principles he espoused.
Officially, Wilson supported Venustiano Carranza, who opposed Huerta's
military control of the country. When American intelligence learned of a
German ship allegedly preparing to deliver weapons to Huerta's forces,
Wilson ordered the U.S. Navy to land forces at Veracruz to stop the
shipment.
On April 22, 1914, a fight erupted between the U.S.
Navy and Mexican troops, resulting in nearly 150 deaths, nineteen of
them American. Although Carranza's faction managed to overthrow Huerta
in the summer of 1914, most Mexicans - including Carranza - had come to
resent American intervention in their affairs. Carranza refused to work
with Wilson and the U.S. government, and instead threatened to defend
Mexico's mineral rights against all American oil companies established
there. Wilson then turned to support rebel forces who opposed Carranza,
most notably Pancho Villa. However, Villa lacked the strength in number
or weapons to overtake Carranza; in 1915, Wilson reluctantly authorized
official U.S. recognition of Carranza's government.
As a
postscript, an irate Pancho Villa turned against Wilson, and on March 9,
1916, led a fifteen-hundred-man force across the border into New
Mexico, where they attacked and burned the town of Columbus. Over one
hundred people died in the attack, seventeen of them American. Wilson
responded by sending General John Pershing into Mexico to capture Villa
and return him to the United States for trial. With over eleven thousand
troops at his disposal, Pershing marched three hundred miles into
Mexico before an angry Carranza ordered U.S. troops to withdraw from the
nation. Although reelected in 1916, Wilson reluctantly ordered the
withdrawal of U.S. troops from Mexico in 1917, avoiding war with Mexico
and enabling preparations for American intervention in Europe. Again, as
in China, Wilson's attempt to impose a moral foreign policy had failed
in light of economic and political realities.
War Erupts in Europe
When
a Serbian nationalist murdered the Archduke Franz Ferdinand of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire on June 29, 1914, the underlying forces that led
to World War I had already long been in motion and seemed, at first, to
have little to do with the United States. At the time, the events that
pushed Europe from ongoing tensions into war seemed very far away from
U.S. interests. For nearly a century, nations had negotiated a series of
mutual defense alliance treaties to secure themselves against their
imperialistic rivals. Among the largest European powers, the Triple
Entente included an alliance of France, Great Britain, and Russia.
Opposite them, the Central powers, also known as the Triple Alliance,
included Germany, Austria-Hungary, the Ottoman Empire, and initially
Italy. A series of "side treaties" likewise entangled the larger
European powers to protect several smaller ones should war break out.
At
the same time that European nations committed each other to defense
pacts, they jockeyed for power over empires overseas and invested
heavily in large, modern militaries. Dreams of empire and military
supremacy fueled an era of nationalism that was particularly pronounced
in the newer nations of Germany and Italy, but also provoked separatist
movements among Europeans. The Irish rose up in rebellion against
British rule, for example. And in Bosnia's capital of Sarajevo, Gavrilo
Princip and his accomplices assassinated the Austro-Hungarian archduke
in their fight for a pan-Slavic nation. Thus, when Serbia failed to
accede to Austro-Hungarian demands in the wake of the archduke's murder,
Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia with the confidence that it had
the backing of Germany. This action, in turn, brought Russia into the
conflict, due to a treaty in which they had agreed to defend Serbia.
Germany followed suit by declaring war on Russia, fearing that Russia
and France would seize this opportunity to move on Germany if it did not
take the offensive. The eventual German invasion of Belgium drew Great
Britain into the war, followed by the attack of the Ottoman Empire on
Russia. By the end of August 1914, it seemed as if Europe had dragged
the entire world into war.
The Great War was unlike any war that
came before it. Whereas in previous European conflicts, troops typically
faced each other on open battlefields, World War I saw new military
technologies that turned war into a conflict of prolonged trench
warfare. Both sides used new artillery, tanks, airplanes, machine guns,
barbed wire, and, eventually, poison gas: weapons that strengthened
defenses and turned each military offense into barbarous sacrifices of
thousands of lives with minimal territorial advances in return. By the
end of the war, the total military death toll was ten million, as well
as another million civilian deaths attributed to military action, and
another six million civilian deaths caused by famine, disease, or other
related factors.
aOne terrifying new piece of technological
warfare was the German unterseeboot - an "undersea boat" or U-boat. By
early 1915, in an effort to break the British naval blockade of Germany
and turn the tide of the war, the Germans dispatched a fleet of these
submarines around Great Britain to attack both merchant and military
ships. The U-boats acted in direct violation of international law,
attacking without warning from beneath the water instead of surfacing
and permitting the surrender of civilians or crew. By 1918, German
U-boats had sunk nearly five thousand vessels.
Of greatest
historical note was the attack on the British passenger ship, RMS
Lusitania, on its way from New York to Liverpool on May 7, 1915. The
German Embassy in the United States had announced that this ship would
be subject to attack for its cargo of ammunition: an allegation that
later proved accurate. Nonetheless, almost 1,200 civilians died in the
attack, including 128 Americans. The attack horrified the world,
galvanizing support in England and beyond for the war. This attack, more
than any other event, would test President Wilson's desire to stay out
of what had been a largely European conflict.
Figure 6-1: Lusitania sunk 8 May 1915 by Unknown is in the Public Domain . Newspaper headlines from the day after the sinking of the Lusitania reveal the shock and confusion felt at the time.
The Challenge of Neutrality
Despite the loss of American lives on the Lusitania, President Wilson stuck to his path of neutrality in Europe's escalating war: in part out of moral principle, in part as a matter of practical necessity, and in part for political reasons. Few Americans wished to participate in the devastating battles that ravaged Europe, and Wilson did not want to risk losing his reelection by ordering an unpopular military intervention. Wilson's "neutrality" did not mean isolation from all warring factions, but rather open markets for the United States and continued commercial ties with all belligerents.
For Wilson, the conflict did not reach the
threshold of a moral imperative for U.S. involvement; it was largely a
European affair involving numerous countries with whom the United States
wished to maintain working relations. In his message to Congress in
1914, the president noted that "Every man who really loves America will
act and speak in the true spirit of neutrality, which is the spirit of
impartiality and fairness and friendliness to all concerned".
Wilson
understood that he was already looking at a difficult reelection bid.
He had only won the 1912 election with 42 percent of the popular vote,
and likely would not have been elected at all had Roosevelt not come
back as a third-party candidate to run against his former protégée Taft.
Wilson felt pressure from all different political constituents to take a
position on the war, yet he knew that elections were seldom won with a
campaign promise of "If elected, I will send your sons to war!"
Facing
pressure from some businessmen and other government officials who felt
that the protection of America's best interests required a stronger
position in defense of the Allied forces, Wilson agreed to a
"preparedness campaign" in the year prior to the election. This campaign
included the passage of the National Defense Act of 1916, which more
than doubled the size of the army to nearly 225,000, and the Naval
Appropriations Act of 1916, which called for the expansion of the U.S.
fleet, including battleships, destroyers, submarines, and other ships.
As
the 1916 election approached, the Republican Party hoped to capitalize
on the fact that Wilson was making promises that he would not be able to
keep. They nominated Charles Evans Hughes, a former governor of New
York and sitting U.S. Supreme Court justice at the time of his
nomination. Hughes focused his campaign on what he considered Wilson's
foreign policy failures, but even as he did so, he himself tried to walk
a fine line between neutrality and belligerence, depending on his
audience.
In contrast, Wilson and the Democrats capitalized on
neutrality and campaigned under the slogan "Wilson - he kept us out of
war". The election itself remained too close to call on election night.
Only when a tight race in California was decided two days later could
Wilson claim victory in his reelection bid, again with less than 50
percent of the popular vote. Despite his victory based upon a policy of
neutrality, Wilson would find true neutrality a difficult challenge.
Several different factors pushed Wilson, however reluctantly, toward the
inevitability of American involvement.
A key factor driving U.S.
engagement was economics. Great Britain was the country's most
important trading partner, and the Allies as a whole relied heavily on
American imports from the earliest days of the war forward.
Specifically, the value of all exports to the Allies quadrupled from
$750 million to $3 billion in the first two years of the war. At the
same time, the British naval blockade meant that exports to Germany all
but ended, dropping from $350 million to $30 million. Likewise, numerous
private banks in the United States made extensive loans – in excess of
$500 million – to England. J. P. Morgan's banking interests were among
the largest lenders, due to his family's connection to the country.
Another
key factor in the decision to go to war were the deep ethnic divisions
between native-born Americans and more recent immigrants. For those of
Anglo-Saxon descent, the nation's historic and ongoing relationship with
Great Britain was paramount, but many Irish-Americans resented British
rule over their place of birth and opposed support for the world's most
expansive empire. Millions of Jewish immigrants had fled anti-Semitic
pogroms in Tsarist Russia and would have supported any nation fighting
that authoritarian state. German Americans saw their nation of origin as
a victim of British and Russian aggression and a French desire to
settle old scores, whereas emigrants from Austria-Hungary and the
Ottoman Empire were mixed in their sympathies for the old monarchies or
ethnic communities that these empires suppressed. For interventionists,
this lack of support for Great Britain and its allies among recent
immigrants only strengthened their conviction.
Germany's use of
submarine warfare also played a role in challenging U.S. neutrality.
After the sinking of the Lusitania, and the subsequent August 30 sinking
of another British liner, the Arabic, Germany had promised to restrict
their use of submarine warfare. Specifically, they promised to surface
and visually identify any ship before they fired, as well as permit
civilians to evacuate targeted ships. Instead, in February 1917, Germany
intensified their use of submarines in an effort to end the war quickly
before Great Britain's naval blockade starved them out of food and
supplies.
The German high command wanted to continue unrestricted
warfare on all Atlantic traffic, including unarmed American freighters,
in order to cripple the British economy and secure a quick and decisive
victory. Their goal: to bring an end to the war before the United
States could intervene and tip the balance in this grueling war of
attrition. In February 1917, a German U-boat sank the American merchant
ship, the Laconia, killing two passengers, and, in late March, quickly
sunk four more American ships. These attacks increased pressure on
Wilson from all sides, as government officials, the general public, and
both Democrats and Republicans urged him to declare war.
The
final element that led to American involvement in World War I was the
so-called Zimmermann telegram. British intelligence intercepted and
decoded a top-secret telegram from German foreign minister Arthur
Zimmermann to the German ambassador to Mexico, instructing the latter to
invite Mexico to join the war effort on the German side, should the
United States declare war on Germany. It further went on to encourage
Mexico to invade the United States if such a declaration came to pass,
as Mexico's invasion would create a diversion and permit Germany a clear
path to victory. In exchange, Zimmermann offered to return to Mexico
land that was previously lost to the United States in the
Mexican-American War, including Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas.
The
likelihood that Mexico, weakened and torn by its own revolution and
civil war, could wage war against the United States and recover
territory lost in the Mexican-American war with Germany's help was
remote at best. But combined with Germany's unrestricted use of
submarine warfare and the sinking of American ships, the Zimmermann
telegram made a powerful argument for a declaration of war. The outbreak
of the Russian Revolution in February and abdication of Tsar Nicholas
II in March raised the prospect of democracy in the Eurasian empire and
removed an important moral objection to entering the war on the side of
the Allies.
On April 2, 1917, Wilson asked Congress to declare war on
Germany. Congress debated for four days, and several senators and
congressmen expressed their concerns that the war was being fought over
U.S. economic interests more than strategic need or democratic ideals.
When Congress voted on April 6, fifty-six voted against the resolution,
including the first woman ever elected to Congress, Representative
Jeannette Rankin. This was the largest "no" vote against a war
resolution in American history.

Figure 6-2 : Zimmerman-telegramm-offen by National Archives is in the Public Domain .This telegram was sent by German Foreign Minister Arthur Zimmermann to the President of Mexico proposing a military alliance against the United States. In return for Mexican support in the war, Germany would help Mexico regain New Mexico, Texas, and Arizona from the United States. The British intercepted the secret message, deciphered it, and turned it over to the U.S. Government.