America
Foreign Policies
Chicago
Japan/China
Industry
100

Big Stick Policy

“speak softly and carry a big
stick...”

American foreign policy

Teddy Roosevelt’s

100

Berlin Conference (1884-85)

Multinational meeting held to formalize the so-called “Scramble for Africa” among various
European empires scrabbling for territory in the African interior


100

Haymarket affair (1886)

A bombing – perhaps the first major terrorist bombing in US history – that took place after a
labor union rally in Chicago and which resulted in the deaths of several policemen.

100

Black Ships

Language used by Japanese onlookers to describe Commodore Matthew Perry’s fleet after its
initial visit to Tokyo harbor in 1853

100

Flying Shuttle (1733)

Invented by John Kay in 1733, this device drastically sped up the process of weaving thread into
cloth by automating work normally done by hand.

200

American Colonization Society

encouraging freed people of color to emigrate to West Africa

frailty of “abolitionist” movement

200

Henry Stanley

British explorer who became famous for his expeditions into Central Africa during the late 1800s

“Scramble for Africa,”

200

Hull House

Created by Jane Addams in the late 1880s (date not important), Hull House was a settlement in
metropolitan Chicago that was run entirely by women and designed to facilitate social reform by providing housing and community for working class people.

200

First Sino-Japanese War

Conflict ignited between Japan and China in 1894 (date is not super important in this instance)
by instability on the Korean peninsula.


Westernization

200

James Watt

Inventor, or rather perfecter, of the steam engine, which employed water superheated by coal as a
power source

300

Indian Removal Act

President Andrew Jackson

Significant as an embodiment of the way in
which “frontier” rhetoric enabled the removal of non-European people.

300

Junta

The name for the political committees that formed in Central and South America/New Spain
during the early nineteenth century to serve as stewards of royal power

300

Molly-houses

Circumspect spaces, usually disguised as inns or taverns, that began to appear around London
(especially the West End) in the mid-to-late eighteenth century, in which gay or bisexual men
had the opportunity to practice intimacy with other men in (relative) safety.

300

First Opium War

War between China and a variety of European powers, but mostly Britain, that kicked off when
Chinese administrators objected to the illegal opium trade being facilitated by European
smugglers.

300

Thirteen Factories

Name for the twelve-acre parcel of land outside [this is important] Canton’s walls in which the entirety of Western trade with China was conducted

400

The Liberator

Abolitionist newspaper founded by William Lloyd Garrison in 1831 (although the date isn’t
essential) that ran for more than thirty years and advocated for total, immediate abolition.

400

Meiji Restoration (1868)

Moment in which the Tokugawa Shogunate was overthrown by a new regime that was
committed to adopting Western tools and institutions in order to elevate Japan’s standing on the
world stage without abandoning Japanese culture.

400

Columbian Exposition

it presented a thoroughly Eurocentric, imperialistic view of the world and world history,
including a racialized history of human “progress.”

World’s Fair held in Chicago in 1893

400

The “Great Game”

Long nineteenth-century struggle between the British and Russian empires for control of Central
Asia (i.e. the space separating southern Russia from British India).

400

Luddites

British textiles workers who militated against automation and industrialization during the late
eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.

500

“Frontier thesis”

Promulgated by the historian Frederick Jackson Turner, this theory argued that the experience of
pushing westward across the American frontier

500

Miguel Hidalgo

Mexican priest, academic, and revolutionary who has become known as the “Father of Mexico”
for his role in leading the region’s first great, although tragic, revolution against Spanish
imperialism.

500

Cholera

Disease, spread predominantly by contaminated water, that swept across Britain and other
industrialized, urbanizing parts of Europe and North America recurrently through the nineteenth
century.

500

Unequal treaties

Chinese (later also a Japanese) term for a series of treaties with Western powers that were
universally detrimental to the East Asian signatories because they were negotiated in the face of
European guns.

500

Manchester

center of the new textile industry. Because it
was largely unplanned, Manchester was plagued by filth, disease, and overcrowding even as it
made the industrial capitalists who owned its factories enormously wealthy.

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