Rationales for Imperialism
Imperialism in Africa & China
American Imperialism in Hawaii
Spanish-American War: Causes
Spanish-American War: Key Figures & Results
100

A policy in which strong nations extend their political, military, and economic control over weaker territories.

Imperialism

100

What are key inventions that enabled African conquest?

Quinine and Steamships

100

By the 1850s, this crop became a central, profitable export for American missionaries and entrepreneurs in Hawaii.

sugar

100

This sensationalist style of reporting on Spanish atrocities and the sinking of the USS Maine helped sway popular American opinion in favor of war.

Yellow Journalism

100

The most famous military unit of the war, officially the First U.S. Volunteer Cavalry, led by Theodore Roosevelt.

Rough Riders

200

Charles Darwin's original scientific theory that explains how plants and animals survive and reproduce based on traits that help them fit their environment.

Natural Selection

200

These conflicts forced China to concede five trade port cities, including Hong Kong, to the British.

Opium Wars

200

White businessmen forced King Kalākaua to sign this document at gunpoint, stripping Native Hawaiians of land and voting rights and diminishing the monarchy's power.

Bayonet Constitution

200

This Cuban revolutionary launched a war for independence against Spain in 1895 and used guerrilla tactics against Spanish forces.

José Martí

200

This U.S. naval leader destroyed the entire Spanish Pacific fleet at the Battle of Manila Bay in the Philippines.

Commodore George Dewey

300

This pseudoscience misapplied Darwin's ideas to human society, claiming the "strong" are naturally superior and the "weak" are meant to fall behind.

Social Darwinism

300

Otto von Bismarck organized this 1884 meeting with the intention of peacefully dividing Africa amongst European powers.

Berlin Conference

300

The last reigning monarch of Hawaii whose main goal was to restore power to the Hawaiian people by writing a new constitution.

Queen Liliʻuokalani

300

The U.S. naval destroyer whose mysterious sinking in Havana Harbor sparked the popular rallying cry, "Remember the Maine, to Hell with Spain".

USS Maine

300

These African American soldiers played a crucial, though often overlooked, role fighting alongside the Rough Riders at the Battle of San Juan Hill.

Buffalo Soldiers

400

This idea argued that Western nations had a duty to "civilize" non-Western peoples, often pairing with Social Darwinist justifications for conquest.

White Man's Burden

400

In the 1890s, European powers and Japan divided China into these exclusive economic zones where they held sole trading rights.

Spheres of Influence

400

This American entrepreneur and head of a fruit company formed the "Committee of Safety" to overthrow the Queen in 1893.

Sanford B. Dole

400

The Spanish placed the rural Cuban population into these camps, where tens of thousands died from disease and starvation.

concentration camps

400

Out of roughly 3,000 American deaths, this was the cause of far more casualties than actual combat.

disease (e.g., yellow fever, malaria)

500

The thinker who first took Charles Darwin’s ideas and misapplied them to human beings, creating the false framework of Social Darwinism.

Herbert Spencer

500

The Belgian ruler who oversaw a notorious private colony in the Congo that included barbaric practices like forced labor, torture, and mutilation.

King Leopold II

500

The strategic importance of Hawaii as a location for this during the Spanish-American War convinced Congress to approve its formal annexation in 1898.

naval base (or Pearl Harbor)

500

Passed before the declaration of war, this promised that the U.S. would not take permanent control of Cuba after the war.

Teller Amendment

500

Passed after the war, this amendment limited Cuba's independence by giving the U.S. the right to intervene in Cuban affairs and securing a permanent naval base at Guantánamo Bay.

Platt Amendment