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Empire, Tradition, And Ideologies: The Anti-Imperialist League Of Empire, Tradition, And Ideologies: The Anti-Imperialist League Of
The United States 1898-1920 The United States 1898-1920
Andrew Faber Larson
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EMPIRE, TRADITION, AND IDEOLOGIES:
THE ANTI-IMPERIALIST LEAGUE OF THE UNITED STATES 1898-1920.
By
Andrew Faber Larson
Bachelor of Science, University of South Dakota, 2013.
A Thesis
Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of
The University of North Dakota
in partial fulfillment of the requirements
for the degree of
Master of Arts
Grand Forks, North Dakota
December
2015
ii
Copyright 2015 Andrew Larson
iv
PERMISSION
Title Empire, Tradition, and Ideologies: The Anti-Imperialist League of the
United States, 1898-1920.
Department History
Degree Master of Arts
In presenting this thesis in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a graduate
degree from the University of North Dakota, I agree that the library of this University
shall make it freely available for inspection. I further agree that permission for extensive
copying for scholarly purposes may be granted by the professor who supervised my
thesis work or, in his absence, by the Chairperson of the department or the dean of the
School of Graduate Studies. It is understood that any copying or publication or other use
of this thesis or part thereof for financial gain shall not be allowed without my written
permission. It is also understood that due recognition shall be given to me and to the
University of North Dakota in any scholarly use which may be made of any material in
my thesis
Andrew Faber Larson
9 December 2015
v
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ..........................................................................................vi
ABSTRACT.................................................................................................................vii
CHAPTER
I. INTRODUCTION …….....………………….……………………………, 1
II. TRADITIONAL ARGUMENTS................................................................ 21
III. SECONDARY ARGUMENTS.................................................................. 47
IV. CONCLUSIONS........................................................................................ 86
BIBLIOGRAPHY………………………..................................................................... 97
vi
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I wish to express my sincere appreciation to the members of my advisory
committee, Drs. Ty Reese, James Mochoruk, and Cynthia Prescott for their guidance and
support during my time in the Master’s program at the University of North Dakota.
I also wish to express my sincere appreciation to my family members, friends, and
colleagues here at UND for all of their advice and support throughout this process.
vii
ABSTRACT
The American Anti-Imperialist League began in Boston in 1898 and shortly
thereafter worked to consolidate other anti-imperialist organizations in an attempt to
prevent the United States from creating its first overseas empire. The League was united
in its opposition to empire yet its organizational structure prevented it from becoming a
truly national, and thus unified, special interest group. Early on in 1898, the League’s
unity came from its appeals to preserve the traditional American foreign policies of
George Washington, ideas surrounding isolation from the affairs of Europe and its focus
upon the Americas in particular. The League also advocated for the preservation of the
Monroe Doctrine. Thus, in the early fight against empire, the League appeared to be a
cohesive unit, in that its traditional based arguments against Empire were broadly
appealing to all anti-imperialists and presented the appearance of a focused nationalist
organization. This seeming cohesion led to the league supporting a presidential candidate
but upon his defeat, and the initial establishment of an American empire, the façade of
league unity and centralization fall part. When the main argument that drew everyone
together began to fail, the league lost focus. This is most clearly seen in the rise in
secondary arguments that the different factions within the League started to make against
empire during a period when the establishment of the American empire seemed eminent .
When the League had an opportunity to show that in many ways their arguments were
vindicated, they lacked the internal unity and appropriate structure to do so. This study of
the League demonstrates that while it was a national organization and while it had a
convincing, at least to them, appeal to American traditions, its disparate nature caused its
internal structure to deteriorate thereby causing a lack of organization and ultimate
failure.
1
Chapter 1:
Introduction
At the end of the nineteenth century, the United States found itself in a world
filled with global empires. European nations such as England, Spain, and France were
imposing their sovereignty over large regions of the globe. The creation of these empires
changed international relations while disrupting what was, in regards to American
diplomacy and international affairs, a relatively peaceful century. These changes forced
the United States, which over the 19
th
century held on to its traditional policies defined by
the Monroe Doctrine, Manifest Destiny and isolationism, to react to these rapidly
changing global affairs. American- European relations throughout the nineteenth century
changed greatly, from open war , during the War of 1812, to close political and economic
alliances. American relations with Spain, a traditional European imperial state, began to
deteriorate over Spain's treatment of its Caribbean colony, Cuba. Relations with Spain
reached a fever pitch with the sinking of the USS Maine and, as the USA became
involved in this crisis, it too quickly confronted the pressures of empire.
On the evening of 15 February, 1898, a small explosion in the magazine of the
USS Maine, moored in Havana harbor, ignited the large on-board ammunition magazine
resulting in a catastrophic explosion that killed the majority of the crew; only 89 of the
350 sailors aboard survived
1
. When the news of the Maine’s destruction reached the
1
US Navy Department, "The Destruction of USS Maine" Naval History & Heritage Command, 13 August
2003, accessed 17 March 2015, http://www.history.navy.mil/browse-by-topic/disasters-and-
phenomena/destruction-of-uss-maine.html.
2
United States, many Americans began to clamor for war. Yellow journalists quickly
blamed the tragedy of the Maine on Spanish aggression thereby igniting such an uproar
amongst the American people that full scale war was nearly unavoidable. The Spanish
American War commenced on 25 April 1898, two months after the sinking of the USS
Maine, and lasted until August of 1898. This short-lived war saw few American combat
causalities, indeed far more Americans died due to disease than to combat itself. The
United States won a series of quick victories in Cuba as well as the South Pacific, notably
the Battle of Manila Harbor and the Battle of San Juan Hill, and soon after the fighting
drew to a stalemate and devolved into siege style warfare around the city of Santiago. It
was at this point that Spain initiated peace negotiations and the 1898 Treaty of Paris
officially concluded the Spanish-American War. The treaty gave the United States
dominion over many of the former Spanish colonies, including the Philippines, Puerto
Rico, and Guam. The treaty also granted Cuba independence. The treaty brought with it a
whole new set of questions. Most importantly, what was the United States going to do
with all of the territory that comprised Spain's former colonies? Ultimately, the United
States was left with the choice of retaining the colonies for themselves, and by extension
founding the first American empire, or to give them their independence.
After the 1898 Treaty of Paris was signed, it was clear that a majority of
Americans, who became known as imperialists, wanted to retain the former Spanish
colonies. Their reasons for maintaining control of these territories varied, but most
imperialists agreed that they could serve as overseas marketplaces for domestic goods.
The Imperialists also believed that colonies epitomized American Exceptionalist
sentiments. Imperialists also played on American fears regarding European empires and
3
the expansion of European power further into the Pacific. The ranks of the Imperialists
were further swollen as a result of prominent Americans who stood in support of, and
actively campaigned for Imperialistic arguments.
Some of these Americans, such as Theodore Roosevelt, Alfred Thayer Mahan,
William Randolph Hearst, and Joseph Pulitzer used their celebrity and their media
connections to influence the masses of Americans by swaying their opinions and
spreading imperialism's goals. Newspaper owners William Randolph Hearst and Joseph
Pulitzer both used their newspapers as places to spread their pro-imperial opinions. They
both wrote numerous editorials whose sole purpose was to enflame the opinion of many
Americans against the Spanish empire, and drum up support for imperialism. These
journalists quickly became known as yellow journalists, which was a subtle jab at their
truthfulness and the quality of their writing. Yellow Journalism is characterized as a way
of providing stories in which the writers provided little factual information and sought to
enflame the public toward their points of view. The Yellow Journalists used their
positions of power to sway the American public toward imperialistic viewpoints. Other
prominent Americans such as the assistant secretary of the Navy, Theodore Roosevelt,
influential naval theorist Alfred Thayer Mahan, and many well-known politicians in
Washington supported Imperialism as the Spanish American War drew to a close.
Through yellow journalism, and support from prominent Americans, the arguments of
imperialism grew in popularity amongst the American people. At the war’s conclusion,
the majority of Americans clamored for an American empire.
Yet, even as the yellow journalists fanned the flames of an American empire,
some opposed it. While in the minority, those in opposition to the creation of an
4
American empire started to make their voices heard as they began to coalesce into groups
that eventually became known as the Anti-Imperialist League (AIL). The AIL began in
1898 as a small grassroots movement; however it quickly grew into a large nationwide
political movement. The Anti-Imperialists in early 1898 consisted of many disorganized,
loosely affiliated, small local groups. However, these groups grew in popularity in many
of the large metropolitan areas on the Eastern seaboard, and eventually spread to other
locations around the United States.
Prior to 1898 and the foundation of the Anti-Imperialist League, Anti-Imperialist
sentiments were popular throughout the nineteenth century. The early nineteenth century
saw anti imperialist arguments in regards to every American expansion. Notably the
purchase of the Louisiana territory garnered a great deal of Anti-Expansionist backlash.
2
Expansion into native American land holdings in the western United States also created
Anti-Expansionist arguments. Later, in the nineteenth century the American push to take
control of Hawaii created a large amount of push back from Anti-Imperialists who argued
that the annexation of Hawaii would create an American empire.
3
Anti-Imperialist
sentiments were not confined to the last decade of the nineteenth century, rather they
were popular throughout the nineteenth century.
The Anti-Imperialist League (AIL) began on a small scale and, despite the large
amount of support that the AIL gained, it was always in the minority. The small local
chapters of the Anti-Imperialist League were the heart and soul of the movement, and
were solely responsible for its longevity. These local chapters were strewn across the
2
Walter Nugent, Habits of Empire: A History of American Expansion, (New York: Knopf Publishing,
2008), 65-67.
3
Sidney Lens, The Forging of the American Empire From the Revolution to Vietnam: a History of U.S.
Imperialism, (New York: Haymarket Books, 2003.)
5
United States in small towns and large cities. The AIL's local chapters consisted of
ordinary Americans who were ideologically opposed to McKinley's foreign policies and
the establishment of an American empire. The Anti-Imperialist movement became
increasingly popular amongst Americans as the Spanish American war loomed on the
national horizon. Very quickly, these smaller groups began to coalesce into larger entities
and larger regional leagues arose in large metropolitan areas concentrated on the eastern
seaboard. With the Spanish-American War underway, the Anti-Imperialist League
continued to grow in popularity, and the larger cities' leagues became extremely
influential. These larger leagues' influence allowed for the founding of a national Anti-
Imperialist League on 15 June 1898.
4
The eastern seaboard of the United States was the center of AIL influence. The
larger regional leagues on the east coast had proximity to the lawmakers of the United
States, manufacturing centers, and populations centers of the eastern seaboard. However,
the AIL was also present in larger west coast cities, such as Los Angeles and Seattle. The
leagues in those cities were central to the AIL's efforts on the western seaboard. Despite
this, the west coast AIL chapters were much less influential, and not nearly as active on a
national scale. The mid-western region of the United States was not without larger
prominent regional leagues as well. Chicago, Minneapolis, St. Louis and Kansas City all
played host to larger regional league organizations with large memberships.
5
The League
office based out of Chicago quickly became one of the most influential regional leagues
in the entire country due to its centralized location. The Chicago regional league called
4
Fred H Harrington, "Literary Aspects of American Anti-Imperialism 1898-1902," New England
Quarterly, 10, No. 4 (1937), 650.
5
E. Berkeley Tompkins, Anti-Imperialism in the United States: The Great Debate, 1890-1920,
(Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1970), 133.
6
itself the Central Anti-Imperialist League, and had thousands of members.
6
Chicago
played an important role in the AIL, however, the eastern seaboard of the United States
saw the greatest concentration of AIL's efforts and activity.
The cities that had the largest effect on the AIL's membership were centered in the
northern part of the eastern seaboard. Boston and New York were the home of two of the
major regional leagues on the east coast.
7
Before the formation of a national league the
different regional branches all referred to themselves by different names. For example,
The New York branch called itself the Anti-Imperialist League of New York. These
groups demonstrated a certain amount of individuality and remained largely autonomous
even after the establishment of the national Anti-Imperialist League.
8
The AIL saw a
groundswell of support from Americans, and its membership numbers grew very quickly.
Michael Cullinane writes, "By 1898 there were ten regional branches and membership
had swollen to the hundreds of thousands."
9
Eventually, the leaders of the regional groups knew that to achieve their ultimate
goal of halting the growth of the American empire and restoring isolationism as the
dominant political ideology in the United States, the AIL would need to establish a
cohesive national presence. Therefore, on 15 June 1898 saw the foundation of the
national headquarters of the Anti-Imperialist League in Chicago.
10
The New York and
Boston offices eventually became more prominent than even the Chicago office, due to
their proximity to Washington DC, and New England's business interests. As a result the
6
Ibid.
7
Ibid, 134.
8
Ibid, 135.
9
Michael Patrick Cullinane, Liberty and American Anti-Imperialism, (New York: St Martin's Press. 2012),
24-25.
10
Harrington, "Literary Aspects," 650.
7
national office moved to Boston in 1904.
11
With this centralization, the AIL developed a
cohesive ideology that sought to appeal to the American people as a whole; The argument
that the United States ought not establish an empire overseas. This remained the
dominant argument as the AIL challenged imperialism. The Anti-Imperialist League
sought to keep America from deviating from its traditional diplomatic policies,
isolationism being the most important of those. The League wanted to keep the United
States from establishing an empire because it violated the fundamental diplomatic policy
of isolationism. The AIL's appeals to preserve traditional foreign policies was the rallying
point behind which the AIL came together.
However, as it became increasingly apparent that the Imperialists would be
victorious and establish an American empire, the AIL began to fracture, and secondary
arguments became more popular amongst the more prominent members of the AIL. The
presidential election of 1900 saw the AIL's largest triumph as well as its greatest defeat.
The election of 1900 pitted William Jennings Bryan, a Democrat, against incumbent
Republican William McKinley. Bryan was a prominent Anti-Imperialist, and political
activist. The AIL was essential in the nomination of Bryan; however, during his
presidential race his views on Free Silver were a point of contention between prominent
members of the AIL and the democratic party at large. This disparate nature of the
League's upper echelons was further illustrated upon Bryan's stunning defeat at the hands
of McKinley. The AIL began to further fracture after Bryan's defeat and the AIL saw the
rise in secondary arguments further weakening the prominence of the AIL.
1900 also saw a number of other events that were important to the purpose of the
AIL's arguments. 1899 saw the beginning of the Philippine Insurrection, where the
11
Tompkins, Anti-Imperialism, 134.
8
Philippines fell into open revolt against its new imperial masters. However, as the AIL
lost its cohesion it could not mount convincing arguments to support their positions
against empire. During this time, the United States also signed a treaty with the United
Kingdom to build a canal across the Latin American nation of Nicaragua. All of these
things compounded the fracturing of the AIL into a number of smaller groups squabbling
about what was the best way to combat empire.
12
Historians have been looking at the American empire almost from the
moment if its inception. The historiography of the Anti-Imperialist League, while
somewhat distinct, must be understood within the broader historiography that deals with
the establishment of an American empire as a whole. That being said, the historiography
of American imperialism is not one that fits neatly within several well-defined categories.
There are however, certain patterns which emerge in the historiography, patterns which
seem to reflect the concerns and politics of the times in which these analyses were
written.
The earliest historians who looked at the establishments of and American empire
at the close of the nineteenth century were those who are now thought of as the
traditionalist historians a group who argued that the United States began to push for
empire in an effort to placate to popular opinion of Americans at the time. Thomas
Bailey, Fred Harvey Harrington, and Julius Pratt were among them. These historians
were writing in the nineteen thirties and forties, a time when much of the political
discourse was related to foreign policy, was dominated by the debate over isolationism.
Many people were re-examining the nations role as an imperial power and as a player on
12
Lens, 195-203.
9
the world stage; indeed many American politicians and intellectuals were reexamining
the decisions, made decades earlier, which had brought American to such a problematic
place. For the most part, they argued that the government giving in to the popular
demands of the American populous was the purpose for the establishment of an
American empire.
Thomas Bailey is a crucial figure in this form of analysis. His 1938 article argued
that the re-election of President McKinley in 1900 was a referendum on American
imperialism and that McKinley's re-election was proof positive that the majority of
Americans believed in the principals of empire that they supported his imperialistic
policies.
13
Bailey even brought these issues up again in a review of Julius Pratt's 1937
book, Expansionists of 1898: The Acquisition of Hawaii and the Spanish Islands. Bailey
argued that Pratt's examination of the establishment of empire was woefully lacking in
any examination of American popular opinion in the years between the Hawaiian coup
de' etat, and the outset of the Spanish American War from 1893-1898.
14
Similarly, Fred
H. Harrington in his 1935 article, "The Anti-Imperialist Movement in the United States,
1898-1900", focused on the importance of public opinion, arguing that the Anti-
Imperialist League was formed in order to turn back the tide of a growing wave of
imperial sentiment among the American people. Even as he documented the AIL's
earliest attempts at subverting the establishment of an American empire, Harrington also
noted the ramshackle nature and the disunity of the AIL, paying particular attention to the
13
Thomas A Bailey, “Was the Presidential Election of 1900 A Mandate on Imperialism?”, The Mississippi
Valley Historical Review 24, 1. (1937), 4352, http://www.jstor.org/stable/1891336.
14
Thomas A Bailey, "Review of Expansionists of 1898: The Acquisition of Hawaii and the Spanish
Islands." The American Historical Review, 42, 4 (1937).
10
election of 1900 as a catalyst for profound disagreements among the members and
ultimately the deterioration of the League itself.
15
That being said not every historian of this time period believed that the American
empire was created as a reaction to public outcry. As noted above, Julius Pratt argued that
the Imperialist factions were spurred forward not by public opinion by a desire for
economic gains, as well as certain religious reasons. He argued that these factors were
crucial to the understanding of the establishment of the American empire. Indeed it was
the business, religious and political leaders who desired territorial expansion for their
own reasons who were instrumental in shaping the public opinion. His work also made
explicit parallels between the acquisition of the Hawaiian and the Philippine islands.
These parallels are important when examining this time period.
16
This viewpoint on
American imperialism was quite different than others of the time period and is much
more characteristic of historians who wrote much later.
The second time that American Imperialism was examined in detail by historians
occurred soon after World War II. It was in this period that the United States was no
longer concerned with reverting away from Imperialism, and were re-evaluating their
place in global politics, but this period is characterized by a profound debate between
Americans who were trying to decide exactly where they stood in global politics. That
being said these historians tended to look at the establishment of empire by examining a
broader set of themes, progressivism, race relations, and ideas of national superiority,
15
Fred H. Harrington, “The Anti-imperialist Movement in the United States, 1898-1900”, The Mississippi
Valley Historical Review 22, 2 (1935,) 211230, http://www.jstor.org/stable/1898467.
16
Julius W. Pratt, Expansionists of 1898 The Acquisition of Hawaii and the Spanish Island, (Boston: Johns
Hopkins Press,1938).
11
among them. These historians tended to argue that an American empire was merely a
manifestation of these larger ideas in the realm of foreign affairs.
Historians during this time period examined empire through a number of lenses.
Historians like Christopher Lasch in his article, "The Anti-Imperialists, the Philippines,
and the Inequality of Man." looked at the establishment of an American empire as a
racial issue. He looks at how the ideas of race played into the arguments of the
imperialists and anti-imperialists alike.
17
On the other hand, William Luchtenberg in his
article, "Progressivism and Imperialism: The Progressive Movement and American
Foreign Policy, 1898-1916" looked at the establishment of the American empire through
the notions of popular opinion. He argued that progressives in the United States were
vastly in favor of the establishment of an American empire. He argues that progressive
attitudes were important to the success of and initial establishment of an American
empire, and Luchtenberg also argues that Theodore Roosevelt's ascension to the
presidency was the ultimate expression of these two ideas being undeniably linked.
18
Richard Hofstadter, in his book Age of Reform From Bryan to FDR, also looks at the
importance of the populists on this time period, and argues that the political ideas of the
late nineteenth century were dictated by that movement.
19
All of these historians are arguing that different social aspects of American
society were manifesting themselves in the form of the American empire. The creation of
these studies illustrates the era that they were writing within. The ideological supremacy
17
Christopher Lasch, “The Anti-Imperialists, the Philippines, and the Inequality of Man,” The Journal of
Southern History, Vol XXIV, No. 3 (1958).
18
William E. Leuchtenburg, “Progressivism and Imperialism: The Progressive Movement and American
Foreign Policy, 1898-1916,The Mississippi Valley Historical Review 39, 3 (1952).
19
Richard Hofstadter, Age Of Reform From Bryan to FDR, (New York: Vintage Publishing, 1960).
12
of the United States was recently "proven" in the victory in World War II, and therefore
the political ideologies of the United States were not being examined as vehemently as
previously, instead social aspects of American society were being examined during this
time period.
The nineteen sixties and seventies saw a plethora of studies related to American
imperialism being conducted. This time period, during the Vietnam War, and the height
of the Cold War, saw a resurgence in interest in the formation of America's earliest
imperialist policies. The pushback against imperialism was paramount, and it is no
surprise that it was this period that the Anti-Imperialist League was looked at more
extensively than ever before.
Historians at this time tended to look at ideas of Manifest destiny, and the
importance of the taking of new territory for the United States. Parallels between
America's actions during the height of the Cold War, and the end of the nineteenth
century were not difficult to draw. Richard Welch in his 1979 book, argued that the
uncertainty of the future of America spurned imperialistic attitudes forward in the late
nineteenth century. He argues that an uncertain populous, accustomed to outward growth
was floundering in a time where there was no longer a western frontier. This uncertainty
was solved by the establishment of an American empire.
20
William Appleman Williams,
a member of the Wisconsin revisionist school, in his book, Empire as a Way of Life
argues that an American empire was established in order to satiate American's need for
new territories. He argues that Manifest Destiny and the quest for new territory was
20
Richard E. Welch Jr, Response to Imperialism: The United States and the Philippine-American War,
1899-1902, (Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 1979).
13
inherent in what it meant to be American.
21
His thesis is quite telling of his thoughts on
the time period that he wrote within as well as his perception of the tragedy of American
diplomacy itself.
Other historians focused on the importance of commerce in the establishment of
the American empire as well. Walter LaFeber in his 1963 book The New Empire: An
Interpretation of American Expansion 1860-1898, examines the importance of commerce
on the establishment of an American empire. He argues that while other ideas such as
race, and national security were significant, they were not the most important.
22
Similarly, Lloyd Gardner, in his book Imperial America: American Foreign Policy Since
1898, looks at the economic imperialism that the United States conducted throughout the
early twentieth century, but begins with these ideas being extrapolated backward onto the
initial establishment of an American empire.
23
These historians looked at the importance
of commerce in the establishment of empire, drawing an important parallel to the time
period that they lived in. The nineteen sixties and seventies saw the closing of Asian
marketplaces due to the spread of communism, and the comparison between the late
nineteenth century and the mid twentieth was not a difficult intellectual leap. In fact it
came up in several works such as Sydney Lens' book, The Forging of the American
Empire, which draws a direct correlation between the establishment of an American
empire and the war in Vietnam.
24
21
William Appleman Williams, Empire as a Way of Life (New York: Oxford University Press, 1980).
22
Walter LaFeber, The New Empire: An Interpretation of American Expansion 1890-1898, (Ithaca: Cornell
University Press, 1998).
23
Lloyd C. Gardner, Imperial America: American Foreign Policy Since 1898, (New York: Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich Inc., 1976).
24
Sidney Lens. The Forging of the American Empire: From the Revolution to Vietnam: A History of U.S.
Imperialism, (New York: Haymarket Books, 2003.)
14
The Anti-Imperialist League also got a great deal of attention during this time
period. The parallels between the Anti-War movement of the nineteen sixties and
seventies and the AIL are undeniable, which caused a number of historians to look at the
AIL through this lens. Historians like E Berkley Tomkins examined the AIL in his book,
Anti Imperialism in the United States: The Great Debate 1890-1920. In his book he
examines the AIL as a group of people. He argued that the AIL was formed from a
disparate group of people, and that the diverse nature of these people was the primary
strength of the AIL. He continues to argue that the AIL could appeal to a large number of
Americans, and in doing so could offer legitimate alternatives to the establishment of
empire.
25
He also highlighted these arguments in an earlier article entitled " The Old
Guard: A Study of Anti-Imperialist Leadership." Tomkin's arguments all hinged on his
idea that the AIL's strength is drawn from their diversity.
26
Another historian Robert
Beisner also looked at the upper echelons of the AIL's leadership in his book Twelve
Against Empire. Beisner examines twelve different members of the AIL's leadership and
their individual arguments against Imperialism. He notes that all of these people, while
from different socio-political backgrounds united behind the individual idea that empire
was a mistake for America.
27
Alternatively, Daniel Schrimer, author of Republic or
Empire: American Resistance to the Philippine War, examines the ideas that the AIL was
promoting, and the way that they were being put forth. He argues that the arguments of
the AIL were crucial to the understanding of the AIL's successes and failures; however,
25
E. Berkeley Tompkins, Anti-Imperialism in the United States: The Great Debate, 1890-1920,
(Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1970).
26
E. Berkeley Tompkins, "The Old Guard: A Study of Anti-Imperialist Leadership," The Historian,
Volume 30, Issue 30, May 1968. 366388, Accessed 5 November 2015,
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1540-6563.1968.tb00325.x/full.
27
Robert J, Beisner, Twelve Against Empire The Anti-Imperialists 1898-1900, (New York: McGraw Hill,
1968).
15
he focuses on the racial and economic issues regarding the creation of the American
empire.
28
The period of the nineteen sixties and seventies in the history of the United States
was a tumultuous one. America was at war, for what many considered to be imperialistic
goals, and it is no surprise that in this period there would be a great deal of renewed
interest in the period which witnessed the United States emergence as an imperial power,
and particularly the people who opposed that development. It was also during this time
period that James Field, in his article "American Imperialism: The Worst Chapter in
Almost Any Book" argues that historians have a very difficult time dealing with the topic
of American imperialism because of this lack of any true unity within the historiography.
He argues that the poorest chapter in any book on American diplomacy is the one that
deals with American imperialism because of the lack of America's want to truly examine
its empire building. He also argues that more modern historians are far too focused on the
notions of traditional historians, and attacks historians who wish to seat a discussion of
American imperialism into a broader framework.
29
After this brief explosion of interest in the establishment of the American empire
in the late nineteen sixties and seventies, there was a dearth of studies. It was not until the
late nineteen nineties and into the twenty-first century that investigations of American
imperialism began again in earnest. The historians who examined imperialism during this
time period examined it from a number of different viewpoints. They tend to look again
at more of the social and cultural issues related to empire. Race, ethnicity, class, and
28
Daniel Schrimer, Republic or Empire: American Resistance to the Philippine War, (Rochester VT:
Schenkman Books Inc, 1972).
29
James A. Field, “American Imperialism: The Worst Chapter in Almost Any Book,” The American
Historical Review,83, 3 (1978)
16
gender, and similar categories of analysis are important to those historians. The dawn of
the twenty-first century was defined by social equality movements, as well as a new
found importance of the study of social history/ cultural, or subaltern history, and these
viewpoints are illustrated in the writings of the various historians who write during this
time.
Historians began to look at the ways that empire was allowed to be established
again in this time period. Michael Hunt's book Ideology and US Foreign Policy looks at
the ideas which American foreign policy was rooted, and how those impacted
Imperialism. He argues that racial superiority, ideas of liberty and the support of
revolutionary ideas were the cornerstones of American foreign policy, and briefly
examines the ramifications these ideas had on the establishment of the American empire.
Hunt argues that as the nineteenth century drew to a close all of these different ideas
informed the Americans who advocated for the establishment of empire, and what pushed
America toward its status as a great nation.
30
Walter Nugent's book The Habits of
Empire, examines the ways that the American republic became an American empire. His
argument that the United States established not one but three empires is an interesting
examination of this overarching idea. How the United States transitioned from its initial
borders into the political and economic powerhouse that it is today is the major focus of
Nugent's work. His analysis focuses on the traditions that created the first American
empire, how those traditions were used to justify the second empire established in 1898,
and the use of these precedents of foreign policy in the post World War II political
30
Michael Hunt, Ideology and U.S. Foreign Policy, (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2009).
17
atmosphere.
31
These historians looked primarily at how the United States was
ideologically prepared for the acceptance of empire, rather than the establishment of the
empire as a whole. They examine how the notions of empire were able to grow rather
than how it grew specifically.
Scholars have begun to look at the AIL again as well. Erin Murphy, in her article
"Women's Anti-Imperialism: The White Man's Burden and the Philippine American
War" argues that Anti-Imperialism was not just for white males. She argues that the AIL
was filled with women whose ideas and arguments were prominent, and that these
women played an important role in the AIL. She argues that the importance of women in
the movement has been underestimated up to this point in the historiography.
32
Eric T
Love, in his book Race over Empire, argues that ideas of race were not taken into account
by imperialists, but it was the Anti-Imperialists who argued that race was an enormous
issue to be taken into account when studying the establishment of an American empire.
33
Michael Patrick Cullinane in his book, Liberty and American Anti-Imperialism, argues
that the various individual AIL member's arguments are important to understand the
AIL's grander narrative as a whole.
34
Jim Zwick has prepared a number of different books
containing primary source material, as well as a website that archives this material for
scholars to access.
35
These scholars of the AIL expand on their predecessors look at the
31
Walter Nugent, Habits of Empire: A History of American Expansion, (New York: Knopf Publishing,
2008).
32
Erin L Murphy, “Women's Anti-Imperialism, the White Man's Burden, and the Philippine-American
War: Theorizing Masculinist Ambivalence in Protest,” Gender and Society, 23 (Sage Publications,
Inc. 2009 ), 244270, http://www.jstor.org/stable/20676773.
33
Eric. T Love, Race Over Empire: Racism and US Imperialism. 1865-1900, (Chapel Hill: University of
North Carolina Press, 2004).
34
Michael Patrick, Cullinane, Liberty and American Anti-Imperialism, (New York: St Martin's Press,
2012),
35
Jim Zwick, "Anti-Imperialism in the United States, 1898-1935." Accessed 10 November 2015,
http://chnm.gmu.edu/worldhistorysources/d/192.html.
18
AIL as a whole. They look at individual people or groups of people and how they
translated their ideas into the rhetoric of the AIL.
This is specifically where this author enters into the historiography. While each
individual group of historians, their individual arguments and viewpoints are significant,
it is important to examine how these various ideas effected the AIL's overarching
arguments as a whole. This work challenges the conclusions of Tomkins in particular,
who saw a great amount of strength in the movements diversity. This author argues that
the diversity of the members of the AIL was the ultimate cause of its demise. This thesis
looks at as the primary cause of the AIL's founding, the preservation of American
traditions. As the ultimate failure of this primary goal began to loom, the Anti-Imperialist
League began to fracture at its highest levels. As this work shall demonstrate, in the
aftermath of the election of 1900 it was the diversity of opinion on several related but
secondary issues to empire that weakened the AIL and ultimately fractured its unity and
brought about its demise. Not to put too fine a point upon the matter, the widely varying
interests and arguments of these different individuals and sub-groupings destroyed the
unity and effectiveness of the Anti-Imperialist League, and in so doing hindered their
ability to subvert the establishment of the American empire.
The AIL is an important example of an American oppositional group at the turn of
the twentieth century. This time was a transitional period for the United States from
moving from the dominance of the western hemisphere, and moving onto the world stage
as a major force. With the victory over the Spanish empire, the United States became a
legitimate player in world politics, and the dawn of the twentieth century saw an
19
opportunity for America to determine its own destiny from a favorable position.
Imperialists, and their arguments, sought to assist the United States in this endeavor.
During this time, the AIL served as a check to the popular opinion of imperialists,
they attempted to preserve the traditions that the United States abided to throughout the
nineteenth century. These arguments were put forward by Washington and continued
under his successors, with minor changes piling up over time. The Anti-Imperialist
League was a group of Americans that came from all walks of life, social strata, and
political points of view. This large variance in personages united behind one argument, to
halt the march of imperialists, and stop the creation of an American empire. This
variation of people coming together under one banner, was largely unprecedented in
American history.
It was only when it became obvious that the AIL's appeals to traditional
arguments were not working, that the high ranking members of the AIL began to fracture
along alternate lines. These secondary arguments drove wedges between the leaders of
the League and the effectiveness of the AIL began to wane. The election of 1900 served
as a further contention point between the members of the League it brought forward
fundamental disagreements between high ranking members of the AIL which facilitated
the League's further fracturing. Afterward, secondary arguments became even more and
more influential amongst the upper echelons of the AIL and the divisions in the League's.
These complex arguments, and the variety of the members of the AIL all with their own
opinions about what was the most important reason for avoiding empire, makes the AIL a
difficult aspect of American diplomatic history to examine.
20
All of these aspects of the AIL, and the influence of their arguments on their
efforts are an important facet to understanding the AIL and American diplomatic history
at the turn of the twentieth century. One cannot do a full examination of the AIL without
looking at the AIL's arguments against the establishment of empire. Countless Historians
examine the establishment of the American empire at the turn of the twentieth century,
but many of them largely ignore the AIL as an influential force on that important episode
in American Diplomatic history.
The subsequent chapters will look at the arguments of the Anti-Imperialist
League. The first will look at the more traditional arguments of the AIL, those based
upon traditional foreign policies such as isolationism, and the Constitution, that were the
driving force behind the unification of the AIL. The second will examine the fracturing of
the AIL due to the rise in secondary arguments and the further fracturing of the AIL after
the election of 1900. Which demonstrates the AIL's fragility and the effects of disunity on
the AIL.
21
Chapter 2:
Traditional Arguments
In 1898, the United States stood on the brink of acquiring a global empire and
while most Americans were in favor of this, a small minority who formed the Anti-
Imperialist League, spoke out against this by articulating a series of arguments and
political activism through which they expressed their support for traditional isolationist
policies of the United States. The AIL even ran a presidential candidate in the election of
1900. However, in early 1898, when the answer to the question whether or not an
American Empire would be formed was not yet finalized, the AIL argued against the
establishment of empire by appealing to the larger diplomatic traditions of American
history and to the constitution. Members of the AIL saw empire as a deviation from a
well-established American system and identity. The degradation of traditional foreign
policies, the political ramifications that would ensue from that degradation, and the
preservation of the American way of life all served as a solid platform for all of the AIL's
arguments. The AIL also feared the ramifications of the United States becoming
entangled in the affairs of Europe, empires, and world politics at large. In conjunction
with the preservation of traditional foreign policies, the AIL's arguments, which were
established by their prominent members, attempted to dissuade the American people from
supporting the annexation of the former Spanish colonies, the Philippines in particular.
The AIL argued that the deviation from the tradition of isolationism was an arch-
22
hypocrisy against what they believed American greatness was built upon. Indeed, the AIL
asserted that further deviation from isolationist arguments could spell doom for the
republic.
In a January 4, 1899 speech, Carl Shurz, a prominent Civil War veteran,
politician, and Anti-Imperialist, stated that:
According to the solemn proclamation of our government, the [Spanish
American] war had been undertaken solely for the liberation of Cuba as a war of
humanity and not of conquest. But our easy victories had put conquest within our
reach, and when our arms occupied foreign territory, a loud demand arose that,
pledge or no pledge to the contrary, the conquests should be kept, even the
Philippines on the other side of the globe and that as to Cuba herself,
independence would only be a provisional formality. Why not? was the cry.
36
The Anti-Imperialist League disagreed with popular American opinion that clamored for
the annexation of the former Spanish American colonies by arguing for the continuation
and preservation of well-established American traditions. The AIL believed that the
United States did not need to act in a manner similar to the aggressive European imperial
states and that the US ought to tirelessly work to preserve the global status quo through
the preservation of traditional American foreign policies. The AIL held that traditional
American foreign policies must be reinstated, lest the American republic, the American
way of life, and the rights and privileges of every American, be put in harm's way.
37
In 1898, saw the outset of the first phase of the AIL's activism; however, it was
short lived. The League's disparate membership rallied around the influence of the
prominent members and what they believed would be the best arguments against empire;
an appeal to tradition. The central argument that they utilized, and of which the rest were
built upon, was that the aggressive foreign policies put forth by President William
36
Carl Shurz, "American Imperialism," American Imperialism in 1898, (Boston: D.C. Heath and Company,
1955) 71.
37
William Lloyd Garrison, "War and Imperialism Fatal to Self Government," The Advocate of Peace,
(1894-1920), Vol. 60, No. 9 (October 1898), 210.
23
McKinley marked an abandonment of the traditional foreign policies, notably
isolationism. These larger arguments can be illustrated by examining their constituent
parts.
The first method that the AIL used to argue against the abandonment of
traditional ideologies, such as isolationism, was to refute President William McKinley's
foreign policies. The AIL utilized the United States Constitution as the cornerstone of
many of its arguments. The AIL believed that the establishment of an overseas empire
would facilitate the degradation of this important document, which stood at the core of
the American system. The Anti-Imperialist League argued that the United States'
Constitution did not allow for the establishment of overseas colonies, and did not include
any provisions for their governance. The AIL's platform also put forward an argument
against the abandonment of nineteenth century land acquisition tradition because the
Spanish colonies were not destined to become states. They referenced traditional
viewpoints that new territories could not be kept as colonial possessions. The final
traditional argument that the Anti-Imperialist League used was that all former territorial
acquisitions were made under completely different circumstances. All of these arguments
revolved around the preservation of traditional foreign policies and by extension the
American way of life that the AIL felt were being cast aside in favor of the creation of an
American Empire.
It was a combination of all of these beliefs that prompted the League to actively
work to combat the aggressive foreign policies of President McKinley, and subvert
popular Imperialist opinion. These politically motivated protests were the primary way
that the Anti-Imperialist League worked to impede the progress of the establishment of
24
an American Empire. Early in1898 the AIL's membership grew rapidly, and quickly
gained the support of several prominent Americans, politicians, authors, and
entrepreneurs. These individuals served as the purveyors of their arguments and
platforms, and were a major source of growth for the AIL. Early in 1898, the AIL and
their goal of subverting the establishment of an American empire seemed possible.
The basis of a majority of the early Anti-Imperialist League's arguments against
an American empire involved an appeal to tradition; especially in regards to foreign
policy. The League viewed traditional foreign policies, like isolationism and the Monroe
Doctrine, as responsible for the early survival, and consequently, the later success, of the
United States. They saw the movement to a more aggressive, and jingoist, foreign policy
under McKinley as hypocritical and antithetical to the traditional American way, and that
his proposed movement away from isolationism had the potential to cause the decline of
the republic itself.
38
The League used this idea as the cornerstone on which to build their
arguments against imperialism.
The AIL viewed America’s direct conflict with Spain over the island of Cuba as a
blatant disregard of the tenets of the Monroe Doctrine and other traditional isolationist
foreign policies. American involvement in a civil war between the Cuban people and
their Spanish imperial representatives was a violation of the precedent of the United
States' tradition of letting revolutions run their course. Direct involvement in the affairs
of sovereign states, and the jingoist rational for becoming involved, were seen as
hypocritical by the Anti-Imperialist League.
39
38
William Jennings Bryan, "First Speech Against Imperialism," The Savannah Interview, Bryan on
Imperialism. (New York: Arno Press of the New York Times, 1970) 5.
39
Ibid, 6.
25
The Teller amendment, signed in 20 April 1898, bolstered by the arguments of
the AIL, dictated that the United States could not retain Cuba as a part of a larger
overseas empire; therefore, the island of Cuba would be granted its independence. The
Teller Amendment also explicitly forbade the United States from overtly annexing Cuba.
The United States hereby disclaims any disposition or intention to exercise
sovereignty, jurisdiction or control over said island except for the pacification
thereof, and asserts, its determination, when that is accomplished, to leave the
government and control of the island to its people.
40
However, despite this early setback, the Imperialists eventually got the chance to exercise
control over Cuba.
George Gray, an Anti-Imperialist and one of the negotiators in Paris in 1898,
argued that the establishment of an American Empire would "reverse accepted
continental policy [and] introduces us into European politics and entangling alliances."
41
Gray argued, along with the Anti-Imperialist League, that the jingoist foreign policies
espoused by McKinley would project the United States into world affairs on a scale that
was unprecedented in American history. The Anti-Imperialist League viewed the
abandonment of traditional foreign policies as hypocritical, and many argued that
McKinley's jingoist policies spelled the doom of the American republic at large.
Anti-Imperialist Elmer Adams, a U.S. District court judge, wrote about the
justifications for empire and the hypocrisy that the United States Government was
perpetrating by deviating from traditional foreign policies in an article from The Yale
Law Journal. In it he noted, that the United States military invasion in Cuba.
had largely to do with bringing the island of Cuba into that condition which
justified, if indeed it did not in honor require, our intervention, to protect Spanish
40
Lloyd C Gardner, Imperial America: American Foreign Policy Since 1898, (New York: Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich, Inc., 1976) 31.
41
Michael Patrick, Cullinane, Liberty and American Anti-Imperialism. (New York: St Martin's Press, 2012)
27.
26
subjects from the weak and degenerate government which such policy had largely
conduced to bring about.
42
Adams commented on the abandonment of the central piece of American traditional
foreign policy, the Monroe Doctrine. The Anti-Imperialist League saw McKinley's
blatant disregard for traditional foreign policy ideologies for a more convenient, self
serving, notion was nothing short of hypocrisy.
This foundational argument allowed the AIL to make numerous secondary
arguments that all related to the AIL’s perceived abandonment of American traditions.
For example, the AIL also looked at the concepts of the consent of the governed, the
establishment of an American empire would be the death of that key belief. Influential
members of the AIL, like William Jennings Bryan and Mark Twain gave outspoken
speeches across the United States that railed against the degradation of a concept that
they believed was central to the preservation of the freedoms given by the Constitution.
43
The tribulations that the Anti-Imperialist League had with President McKinley
and his jingoist foreign policies was evident in their concern for the people of the former
Spanish colonies and the concept of the "consent of the governed." This concept was, and
still is, viewed as pivotal to the survival of any republic. This concept gave the right to
decide what is best for a nation to the people who reside therein.
44
According to the Anti-
Imperialist League, McKinley and his foreign policies violated the right to "consent of
the governed" of the people living on the Pacific islands. Historian Fred Harrington
looked at the AIL's arguments against President McKinley's policies. These arguments
42
Elmer B, Adams, "The Causes and Results of Our War With Spain From a Legal Standpoint," The Yale
Law Journal, Vol. 8, No. 3, (Dec. 1898), 120.
43
Bryan, "First Speech Against Imperialism." 5.
44
Benedict R Anderson, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism
(Revised and extended. ed.), (London: Verso. 1991). Benedict Anderson, an influential historian,
sheds light on these ideas in his book Imagined Communities.
27
took a look at the integral nature of the concept of the consent of the governed to the
United States.
the doctrines which asserted that a government could not rule peoples without
their consent, and that the United States, having been conceived as an instrument
of and for its own people, should not imitate the methods or interfere in the affairs
of the Old World nations in any way. However these doctrines may be regarded
today, there can be no doubt that they had a very real meaning for the citizens
who organized the anti-imperialist movement. Almost to a man the anti-
expansionists sincerely believed that abandonment of these "guiding principles"
would mean the doom of the republic.
45
A similar observation of McKinley's new foreign policy was demonstrated on several
occasions within the Advocate of Peace, an Anti-Imperialist newspaper. The AIL argued
publicly through various publications such as The Advocate of Peace, and various
newspapers from across the nation. The Advocate of Peace, an Anti-Imperialist
newspaper, founded in 1837, was used by the Anti-Imperialist League during the last
several years of the nineteenth century, and into the early years of the twentieth century.
The concept of the "consent of the governed" was central to the League's arguments, and
the AIL's publications expressed this view many times throughout the last several years
of the nineteenth century.
46
The League argued that without consent from the people of
the former Spanish colonies the United States had no right to rule over them. As William
Lloyd Garrison put it, "War is incompatible with free government. It is the handmaid of
despotism. It necessitates the stifling of free discussion."
47
45
Fred H., Harrington, "The Anti-Imperialist Movement in the United States 1898-1900," The Mississippi
Valley Historical Review, Vol. 22, No. 2 (September, 1935).
46
Moorfield Storey, "The Neutralization of the Philippines as a Peace Measure. From the recent Annual
Address of Moorfield Storey, President of the Anti-Imperialist League of Boston," The Advocate
of Peace (1894-1920), Vol. 70, No. 1 (January, 1908), 19-20.
47
William Lloyd, Garrison. "War and Imperialism Fatal to Self Government," The Advocate of Peace
(1894-1920), Vol. 60, No. 9 (October 1898), 210.
28
Garrison, and the Anti-Imperialist League, extended their argument to include the
notion that if the United States government was able to strip the consent of the governed
away from the people of the Pacific islands, what was to stop it from doing the same to
the American people at large. The Anti-Imperialist League believed that this would
ultimately result in the death of the republic as a whole. Jennings Bryan weighed in on
the impact of colonialism on the American people and the "consent of the governed.":
Heretofore greed has perverted the government and used its instrumentalities for
private gains, but now the very foundation principles of our government are
assaulted, Our Nation must give up any intention of enter upon a colonial policy,
such as is now pursued by European countries, or it must abandon the doctrine
that government derive their powers from the consent of the governed.
48
Garrison, in a very outspoken article that called out the United States for its ideological
duplicity, argued that the consent of the governed was denied to the people of the various
island chains the United States were involved in previous to 1898. The United States
prior to the Spanish American war subjugated the Hawaiian and Sandwich island chains.
To enter upon such a career as our Jingoes picture, we must renounce the
principles which have made the country great. Imperial rule abroad necessitates
imperial rule at home. No nation can have adjustable ethics, applicable alike to
freedom and to the government of subjugated races. If it is right to deny suffrage
to the governed people in the Sandwich Islands, it will not be long before, under
the plea of necessity, suffrage in the United States will be curtailed and the right
of the governed to choose their representatives denied.
49
These articles serve as telling examples of how the AIL presented its ideas to the
American people.
Historian Fred Harvey Harrington, outlined The AIL's arguments further by
arguing that the consent of the governed was important to legitimate the government's
imperialist policies. The Anti-Imperialist League pointed out that consent was not given,
or even sought out. Garrison also argued against the Imperialists who wished to abandon
48
Bryan, "First Speech Against Imperialism," 5.
49
Garrison, "War and Imperialism Fatal to Self Government," 208.
29
the traditions that the United Sates had been so faithful to for nearly a century. They also
wanted to become actively involved in global politics, which the AIL argued would do
nothing more than hurt the people of the United States in the long run.
The Anti-Imperialist movement existed before the establishment of the AIL and
the members of the movement held beliefs similar to those of the AIL. Even before the
onset of the Spanish American War, imperialist rumblings in Washington D.C. reached
the Anti-Imperialists. Early publications in the popular Anti-Imperialist newspaper, The
Advocate of Peace put forth a scathing commentary on President McKinley's inaugural
address in 1897 that denounced many of his political stances.
The author argued that "The President says " we must avoid the temptation of
territorial aggression.'* This certainly implies, though it does not say, that we
must avoid the temptation of territorial greed. Our real danger lies just here. If we
become greedy of more territory, for the purpose of national aggrandizement, we
shall be sure to become territorially aggressive, if not directly by arms, yet by
other means which are often quite as effective and not less criminal.
50
This was a quite forthright commentary on the way that many Anti-Imperialist League
members eventually began to feel about the annexation of territory, even before the outset
of the Spanish American War.
The Anti-Imperialist League sought to prove to the American people that the
traditions of isolationism and the preservation of traditional American foreign policies
like the Monroe Doctrine, were important to the survival of the United States. The AIL
argued that McKinley' policies were hypocritical and jingoist, and that the abandonment
of the traditional foreign policies would injure the health of the United States in the long
run, undermine the "American way", and begin to erode the thoughts and traditions that
Americans held most sacred, including the ideology of the consent of the governed.
50
"President McKinley's Inaugural," The Advocate of Peace, (1894-1920), Vol. 59, No. 4 (April 1897), 78.
30
The AIL's next argument against the establishment of empire utilized the United
States Constitution as evidence. The AIL argued that the Constitution made no provisions
for the United States to establish a European style empire that would include non-
contiguous territory. The Anti-Imperialists used traditional rhetoric as well as literal
interpretations of the Constitution to argue that it was contrary to the fundamental tenets
of American democracy for President McKinley and his government, with the support of
other Imperialists, to establish an overseas empire. The AIL asserted that President
McKinley and the imperialists were violating the supreme law of the land.
The Constitution serves as the basis for all laws and policies instituted in the
United Sates. Throughout its history, it has seen its fair share of controversy, and
revision, and continues to be hotly debated to this day. The debate between the
Imperialists and Anti-Imperialists, over the legality of creating an overseas empire, was
no different. The Imperialists argued that the spirit of the Constitution would not prevent
the United States from taking the former Spanish colonies and keeping them as an
overseas possessions. They posited that the founding fathers had not imagined that the
United States would have the ability to become a world power capable of establishing an
overseas sphere of influence, and therefore did not write provisions into the Constitution
for such an occurrence.
51
According to the Imperialists, in the event the United States
found itself in possession of overseas territory, an occurrence not anticipated by the
founding fathers, that McKinley and his administration had to do what they thought was
best for the nation.
The Anti Imperialists, on the other hand, argued that the letter of the Constitution
needed to be followed, that the founding fathers wrote the constitution as a living
51
Tomkins, 25-26.
31
document, and that since there had been no amendments specifically providing legal
avenues for the establishment of empire that it was forbidden by law.
52
Essentially, the
Anti-Imperialist League argued that the establishment of an empire was antithetical to a
literal reading of the Constitution, and they argued this point vigorously.
H.E Von Holst, a prominent German-American Anti-Imperialist, also discussed
the importance of the Constitution, and the implications it had for the establishment of an
empire, the constitutions stances on self government, and its importance to the
perpetuation of freedom and American values.
The federal government under the constitution has never swerved from the path
thus taken by the old Congress. Our laws teem with provisions bearing testimony
to the fact that self government is the basic national principle, not merely granted
as an inestimable privilege to the incipient new commonwealths, the in choate
states of the future, but also imposed upon them as an irrefragable obligation.
53
Von Holst's perspective allowed the Anti-Imperialist League to see the hypocrisy being
perpetrated by the President McKinley from an outside viewpoint, and thereby bring into
focus the true nature of McKinley's deviation from traditional American foreign policies
and America's most foundational document.
The AIL's arguments that the Constitution did not include protocols for the
acquisition of new territory was not a new one in 1898. In fact, Anti-Expansionists
argued against acquiring new territory as far back as the purchase of the Louisiana
territory from France. Michael P. Cullinane looked at the Anti-Imperialist ideology
beginning to form in this time period. "Interpreting the law in cases of acquisition and
governance of new territory would persist as one of the most relied on means of anti
52
William Jennings Bryan, "Cincinnati Speech" (1899) Bryan on Imperialism, (New York: Arno Press of
the New York Times, 1970) 11.
53
H.E. Von Holst, "The Annexation of Hawaii," The Advocate of Peace, (1894-1920), Vol. 60, No. 3,
(March 1898), 65.
32
imperial activism throughout the nineteenth century,..."
54
Anti-Imperialist arguments
renewed these arguments regarding the thoughts that the United States was not able to
acquire new territory under the Constitution. Even prior to the establishment of the AIL,
Anti-Imperialists were hard at work in an effort to subvert the establishment of empire.
Arguments against the annexations of Hawaii, and other Pacific island chains illustrated
these ideas.
55
The Anti-Imperialist League and Imperialists alike, used the Constitution and its
lack of explicit language as legal justification for their arguments. AIL supporter, and
prominent lawyer, Elmer Adams examined the language in the constitution that caused
expansion controversy.
First: Section III, Article 4, ordains as follows: "The Congress shall have power to
dispose of and make all needful rules and regulations respecting the territory or
other property belonging to the United States." Second: The same section and
article ordains as follows: "New states may be admitted by the Congress into this
Union."
56
"There is certainly no power given by the Constitution to the federal
government to establish or maintain colonies bordering on the United States, or at
a distance, to be ruled and governed at its own pleasure, nor to enlarge its
territorial limits in any way except by the admission of new states.
57
According to Adams, the Constitution did not give the Federal government the right to
annex the islands of the former Spanish empire and incorporate them into the United
States. The Anti-Imperialist League took this concept and incorporated it into their
rhetoric, and built several of its political arguments around this concept.
The Anti-Imperialist League argued that since the Constitution did not give
specifics when it came to the concept of adding new territory into the union that
traditional annexation practices ought to be observed. The Anti-Imperialist League was
54
Cullinane, 13.
55
Tomkins, 18-22.
56
Adams, "The Causes and Results of Our War With Spain From a Legal Standpoint," 123.
57
Ibid, 126.
33
opposed to keeping the former Spanish colonies because they were not slated to become
states. The people who lived in these new territories were kept in a state of limbo, where
the people were not U.S. Citizens because the islands were not states, but neither were
they free because the islands were not granted their independence. An excellent example
of this was the islands of Hawaii. The United States annexed the islands of Hawaii in
1898, but they did not become a state until 1959.
58
The people of Hawaii stayed in this
state of limbo for six decades and were subsequently taken advantage of by American
business owners, all the while, not having the rights and privileges of American
citizens.
59
It was this type of political ambiguity that the Anti-Imperialist League sought
to avoid. Historian Julius W. Pratt commented on the Hawaiian situation that the United
States found themselves in, as the AIL viewed it.
Annexation by joint resolution was Unconstitutional. Hawaii, if annexed, would
in all probability become a state with two senators. In view of this unwelcome
possibility, Senator Morrill announced that he was opposed to annexation.
'weather by treaty or by joint resolution, by flagrant Executive usurpation, or in
any manner which leaves an open door for their admission into the union as a
state.
60
In 1898, US Senator George Hoar of Massachusetts argued that taking these foreign lands
and incorporating them into the United States' sphere of influence without making them
into states was antithetical to the constitution by its very nature.
Dominion over subject people, and the rule over vassal states, was forbidden to us
by the constitution, by our political principles, by every lesson of our own history
and of all history. Our rule should be to acquire no territory except where we can
reasonably expect that the people we acquire will, in due time and on suitable
conditions be annexed to the United States as an equal part of a self governing
republic.
61
58
Walter Nugent, Habits of Empire: A History of American Expansion, (New York: Random House, 2008),
256-264.
59
Ibid, 256-264.
60
Julius W. Pratt, Expansionists of 1898 The Acquisition of Hawaii and the Spanish Islands, (Boston:
Johns Hopkins Press, 1938), 323-324.
61
Ibid, 324-325.
34
According to the AIL the constitution did not provide any way for McKinley and his
government to annex the former Spanish colonies, and keep them as colonies, without
extending the rights and privileges of citizenship to the inhabitants of the islands, and
eventually creating states out of the new territory. They argued this because of the
annexation traditions that the United States adhered to throughout the twentieth century.
Never before had the United States taken control of territory without the express purpose
of creating states out of them.
62
The Anti-Imperialist League utilized the American Constitution as evidence to
prove to the American people that the arguments espoused by the Imperialists were
hypocritical and in direct violation of the supreme law of the land. The AIL used the
Constitution to illustrate the folly of McKinley's new policies and the annexation of the
former Spanish colonies, as well as provide illustrations of what the future possibly held
if the United States was allowed to establish an overseas empire.
The Anti-Imperialist League also argued that the United States was not given the
right to take new territory without the express purpose of making them into states. Again,
the League relied on the Constitution for evidence against the Imperialists. The Anti-
Imperialist League believed that if territory was to be incorporated into the United States,
the Constitution demanded that they become states. President McKinley and his
administration had little to no interest in making states out of the former Spanish colonies
and so the AIL accused them of egregiously violating the basic tenets of the
constitution.
63
The lack of answers to the question of whether or not the acquired Spanish
62
Theodore Woolsey, "An Inquiry Concerning our Foreign Relations," Yale Review, I (August, 1892.) 162-
174.
63
Adams, 124
35
colonies would gain statehood, according to the League, was nothing short of yet another
hypocrisy.
The Anti-Imperialists were not completely blind to the appeal of Imperialist
arguments, and the desire for additional territory to be incorporated into the United
States. They argued that the former Spanish colonies could be annexed into the United
States, if and only if they were destined to become states, according to the provisions of
statehood provided in the Constitution. The AIL admitted that the Constitution did
provide for the federal government to take territory for the express purpose making them
into states; however, the people therein would be imbued with all of the rights and
privileges that came with being a citizen of the United States. The AIL argued that the
United States annexing this territory without making them into states would again leave
the people in a state of limbo and would truly violate the rights of the inhabitants of the
islands. The violation of these people's rights would be a slight against the integrity of the
Constitution of the United States, and weaken the standing of the United States globally,
according to the Anti-Imperialist League.
64
William Jennings Bryan, a prominent Anti-
Imperialist, looked at the issues with annexation and its inconsistencies with the making
of new states.
If all annexed territory is given a territorial form of government with the
understanding that the territorial form is merely a preparation for complete
statehood, then no annexation will be tolerated, unless the people who are to come
in are capable of sharing in the full destiny of our people.
65
In this statement Bryan is arguing that if the people of the Philippines are not capable of
sharing in the responsibilities that come along with becoming states, then the annexation
of the Philippines cannot be tolerated. Bryan is alluding to the tradition of annexing
64
Ibid, 350.
65
William Jennings Bryan, Bryan on Imperialism. Speeches, Newspaper Articles and Interviews, (1899),
(New York: Arno Press of the New York Times, 1970), 65.
36
territory in preparation for the formation of new states. The AIL as a whole stressed the
importance of being consistent with this tradition.
AIL member Julius W. Pratt looked at the way that the democratic Anti-
Imperialist senators looked at the annexation of territory.
If the Philippine islands were taken under American sovereignty, argued the
Democratic Senators, the Constitution in its full extent would at once become
applicable. The Filipinos would become citizens; all taxes, duties, and imposts
must be applied to the islands equally with the continent.
66
These senators argued that the annexation of the former Spanish territory would convey
the rights and privileges of every American citizen automatically upon every inhabitant
of the annexed territory. According to those Senators, that being the case the United
States would then incorporate millions of non-white, non-English speaking, and non-
protestant citizens into the body politic of the United States. These areas also would,
according to traditional precedent, require statehood shortly thereafter, including the
representation in the national government. All of these were issues that the largely white
male protestant, and largely Republican, government officials would find difficult to
accept. This issue truly brought the attention of the Anti-Imperialists' supporters to the
internal issues, and the overall hypocrisy that the Imperialists argued for.
67
The Anti-Imperialist League as a whole, concurred with the Democratic Senators.
The AIL argued that if these islands were to be incorporated into the United States that
they should become full states, and the people would become American citizens. The
Anti-Imperialist League believed anything short of statehood would be in violation of the
Constitution. Elmer Adams wrote about the destiny of the former Spanish Colonies."In
other words, under the Constitution of the United States, as it now stands, statehood is the
66
Pratt, Expansionists of 1898: The Acquisition of Hawaii and the Spanish Islands, 348.
67
Ibid, 348-349.
37
ultimate destiny of all territory belonging, or which may belong, to this nation."
68
Adams
went on to discuss the way that the United States set itself precedent for allowing
exceptions to the protocol for the admission of new states. He looked at the rather loose
population requirements, as well as the state governmental systems that the territories set
up before inclusion as states. Adams continued by arguing that with minimal work the
Philippines would meet the governmental requirements and the population requirements
set up in the constitution were easily met. In fact, Adams argued that the Philippines
could be comfortably split into as many as five new states for inclusion into the Union.
69
The AIL argued that if the United States was not going to make the territory into
states, they required independence. Alexander Vest, an Anti-Imperialist democratic
senator from Missouri was the first person to propose legislation that would keep the
United States from keeping the new acquisitions as colonies. Vest was not against the
concept of acquiring territory, but he believed, like the AIL, that they should be made
into states. Historian Michael Cullinane quotes Vest as follows, "(territory) must be
acquired.... with the purpose of organizing such territories into states suitable for
admission into the Union."
70
Vest, a vocal Anti-Imperialist, is also quoted by Historian
Julius W Pratt, as saying
That under the Constitution of the United States no power is given to the Federal
Government to acquire territory to be held and governed permanently as colonies.
The Colonial system of European nations cannot be established under our present
constitution, but all territory acquired by the Government, except such small
amount as may be necessary for coaling stations, must be acquired and governed
with the purpose of ultimately organizing such territory into States suitable for
admission into the Union.
71
68
Adams, "The Causes and Results of Our War With Spain From a Legal Standpoint" 125-126.
69
Ibid, 126.
70
Cullinane, 30.
71
Pratt, Expansionists of 1898: The Acquisition of Hawaii and the Spanish Islands, 346.
38
Vest saw the federal government perpetrating a hypocrisy, by defying the Constitution of
the United States in favor of jingoist foreign policies.
Moorefield Stoorey, another prominent Anti-Imperialist also looked at the
concept of independence for the former Spanish Colonies. He argued that giving
independence to the former colonies, the Philippines in particular, could be easily
achieved, and that the islands themselves could be placed under a protectorate treaty
agreement signed by the global powers and made into an independent nation.
72
The Anti-Imperialist League also used fear to motivate the American people into
supporting their point of view. They argued that the preservation of the American way of
life was directly tied to the preservation of traditional foreign political ideas, and that
without these traditions that the basic tenets of American society would begin to crumble.
Tradition was integral to the Anti-Imperialist League. The League's members
argued that traditional ideologies were integral to the survival of the nation, and the
preservation of the personal freedoms that came along with it. The survival of the
republic held a great significance to the Anti-Imperialist League, and many members
argued that the inclusion of noncontiguous territory into an overseas empire would lead
to the collapse of the American republic. Vest weighs in on the importance of personal
liberties.
There was no place under our constitution for the colonial system of Europe,
based , as that system was 'upon the fundamental idea that the people of immense
areas of territory can be held as subjects, never to become citizens.' It was against
that system that our revolutionary war had been fought, and it was unthinkable
that we should reestablish it ourselves.
73
72
Moorfield Storey, "The Neutralization of the Philippines as a Peace Measure". From the recent Annual
Address of Moorfield Storey, President of the Anti-Imperialist League of Boston" The Advocate of
Peace, (1894-1920). Vol. 70, No. 1, (January, 1908), 19-20.
73
Pratt, Expansionists of 1899: The Acquisition of Hawaii and the Spanish Islands, 346.
39
Vest argued that the annexation of the former Spanish colonies, and not including them
as states, providing the people who resided therein with the rights and privileges of
citizenship, the United States would became nothing more than a despotic regime.
74
William Jennings Bryan also contributed to this argument by saying, "The Imperialists do
not desire to clothe the Filipinos with all the rights and privileges of American
citizenship; they want to exercise sovereignty over a theory entirely at variance with
constitutional government.
75
Bryan went on to say, "Imperialism might expand the
nation's territory but it would contract the nation's purpose. It is not a step forward toward
a broader destiny; it is a step backward, toward the narrow views of kings and
emperors."
76
The AIL used these arguments, and others like them to declare McKinley's
new policies as hypocritical.
When it was apparent that McKinley, and the imperialists, would not allow the
new colonies to become states, the Anti-Imperialist League began advocating for a way
that the United States could disentangle itself from the ideological quagmire that it found
itself in. The AIL provided President McKinley and the American people with a choice,
independence or statehood. When it became obvious that statehood was not likely, the
AIL began to push for the independence of the former Spanish colonies.
The Anti-Imperialist League felt that any acquisition taken by the United States
must be destined to be a state, and that any island that was not going to be made into a
state ought to be allowed independence. William Jennings Bryan spoke on the
importance of independence as well. "The Filipinos are not far enough advanced to share
in the government of the people of the United States, but they are competent to govern
74
Ibid.
75
Bryan, Bryan on Imperialism: Speeches, Newspaper Articles and Interviews, 12
76
Ibid, 15.
40
themselves."
77
These views were directly tied to feelings of American Exceptionalism
amongst Anti-Imperialists. Historian Julius W. Pratt looked at the arguments of US
Senators Platt and Chilton who were prominent in drafting the 1898 declaration of war,
and its amendments. They argued, that without the consent of congress the Philippines
and the Filipino people could not be brought into the United States without being in
direct violation of the Constitution. They believed this because of the perceived
inferiority of the Filipinos, as well as the supposed superiority of the American political
system.
Pratt also looked further at the arguments of Platt and Chilton who questioned the
ability of the United States to annex the former Spanish colonies under the spirit of the
Teller Amendment.
78
The Teller amendment kept the United States from directly
annexing Cuba, and Platt and Chilton argued that the spirit of the amendment provided a
blanket proclamation that the United States could not annex any of the former Spanish
colonies. The Anti-Imperialist League advocated the United States allowing the former
Spanish Colonies be admitted into the Union as states, and if they were not going to
become states, that they be allowed their independence.
The AIL's final argument regarding the preservation of traditional ideologies
concerned the precedent established by the acquisition of the former American territorial
acquisitions. Imperialists argued that a precedent had been set as early as the Louisiana
purchase that allowed presidents to annex territory into the control of the United States
government. These acquisitions, argued the Imperialists, gave the United States the
prerogative to take whatever territory it so chose as a spoil of war, or other action as
77
William Jennings Bryan, "Jackson Day Speech at Chicago," Bryan on Imperialism, (New York: Arno
Press of the New York Times, 1970), 13.
78
Pratt, Expansionists of 1898: The Acquisition of Hawaii and the Spanish Islands, 354.
41
agreed upon between two national states. This is best illustrated when examining the end
of the Mexican American War and the annexation of the American southwest. However,
the Anti-Imperialist League was skeptical of any claims regarding such precedent and
sought to refute them.
Imperialists argued that the founding fathers supported territorial expansion, and
they used the American expansion under President Thomas Jefferson as evidence for
their claims. Further expansions including Texas, the American southwest, from Mexico,
and the purchase of Alaska from Russia, solidified these precedents in the minds of the
American people. AIL thinkers such as William Jennings Bryan retorted with their own
evaluation of Jefferson and his viewpoints on imperialism, and in doing so invalidated
imperialist arguments, as the annexation of the Spanish colonies were incongruous with
the precedents set by the United States early in the nineteenth century. Bryan in several of
his speeches discussed this idea.
Jefferson has been quoted in support of imperialism, but our opponents must
distinguish between imperialism and expansion; they must also distinguish
between imperialism and expansion; they must also distinguish between
expansion in the western hemisphere and an expansion that involves us in the
quarrels of Europe and the orient. They must still further distinguish between
expansion which secures contiguous territory for future settlement and expansion
which secures us alien races for future subjugation. Jefferson favored the
annexation of necessary contiguous territory on the North American Continent,
but he was opposed to wars of conquest and expressly condemned the acquiring
of remote territory.
79
Our opponents, conscious of the weakness of their cause, seek to confuse
imperialism with expansion, and have endeavored to claim Jefferson as a
supporter of their policy. Jefferson spoke so freely and used language with such
precision that no one can be ignorant of his views. On one occasion he declared, '
If there be one principle more deeply rooted than any other in the mind of every
American, It is that we should have nothing to do with conquest.' and again he
said: ' Conquest is not in our principles; it is inconsistent with our government.'
80
79
Bryan, Bryan on Imperialism: Speeches, Newspaper Articles and Interviews, 5.
80
Ibid, 75.
42
Bryan drew a distinction between the acquisition of territory on the North American
continent and the acquisition of overseas territory. This distinction became an important
point for the AIL which became the backbone of the retorts to the Imperialist arguments.
After examination of the United States' previous territorial acquisition, the AIL
argued that the annexation of territory before the Spanish American war was acceptable
within the ideological constructs of America's traditional foreign policies. Prominent
Anti-Imperialist Carl Shurz, in an 1899 speech entitled "American Imperialism", looked
at the differences between the annexations of Florida, Alaska, and others in relationship
to the then current string of proposed annexations by the United States.
All the former acquisitions were on the continent, and excepting Alaska
contiguous to our borders. They were situated, not in the tropical, but in the
temperate zone where our people could migrate in mass. They were but very
thinly peopled - in fact without any population that would have been in the way of
new settlement. They could be organized as territories in the usual manner, with
the expectation that they would presently come in the union as self governing
states with populations substantially homogenous to our own. They did not
require a material increase of our army of navy, either for their subjection to our
rule or for their defense against any probable foreign attack provoked by their
being in our possession.... Compare now with our old acquisitions as to all these
important points those at present in view.
81
Shurz argued that the previous acquisitions were contiguous territory, and were annexed
for the express purpose of creating space in thinly populated areas for the white Anglo-
Saxon protestant American population to spread out, and prosper. He countered
imperialists by arguing the former Spanish colonies were annexed for different purposes.
He went on to argue that the people of the United States would never move to these
tropical island locations en-masse as they had previously.
82
The League also had to deal with the popular notion of Manifest Destiny.
Manifest Destiny was the ideology that the United States was destined to spread outward
81
Shurz, "American Imperialism," American Imperialism in 1898, 78.
82
Ibid, 78-79.
43
beyond its borders and was very popular early throughout the nineteenth century. It was
initially used to justify the expansion across the continent, however imperialists used this
concept when justifying the expansion into the Pacific with the islands of the former
Spanish empire. The Anti-Imperialist League attempted to discredit this; however, the
idea that the United States was destined to continue to spread its influence outward was
extremely popular amongst the American populous. Manifest Destiny was a notion that
was too powerful, popular and widespread for the AIL to effectively refute.
83
The Anti-Imperialist League worked to refute the notion that the Spanish colonies
could be acquired as an empire, based on historical precedent. The Imperialists evoked
the authority of the founding fathers like Thomas Jefferson, as well as utilizing the
popular ideology of Manifest Destiny to justify the annexation of overseas colonies. The
Anti-Imperialist League, throughout its lifespan, spent a great deal of time arguing
against these ideologies, attempting to illustrate the folly of creating an overseas empire.
The abandonment of traditional isolationism, as well as a criticism of McKinley's
replacement foreign policies were two of the ways that the Anti-Imperialist League
illustrated the hypocrisy of the creation of an American Empire. The Anti-Imperialist
League supported the traditional foreign policies of Washington and Jefferson, as well as,
the Monroe Doctrine. They supported isolationism and sought to check to the acceptance
of McKinley's jingoist imperial foreign policies.
The League also believed that the acquisition of new overseas territories was
hypocritical. The AIL argued that the Constitution did not have the any provisions for
the annexation of the former Spanish colonies. They also argued that the United States
did not have the precedent for annexing new territory without making them into states,
83
Michael Hunt, Ideology and U.S. Foreign Policy, (Yale University Press, 2009), 39-42.
44
and that all the territory annexed by the United States throughout the nineteenth century,
was conducted under different conditions. The AIL believed that the creation of a
European style empire was against the tenets of the Constitution and that the former
colonies ought to be granted their independence.
Further arguments brought by the AIL, stated that if the United States was not
going to be granting them their independence, then the United States needed to make
them into states, which would come with the appropriate representation in Washington
and the rights and privileges as American citizens.
The AIL, throughout their arguments against imperialism, had a constant warning
to the American people. They argued that if the United States were to begin assembling
an empire, the American republic would begin to deteriorate. The AIL believed that if the
United States could deny the people of the former Spanish empire the right of the
"consent of the governed" across the Pacific, what would preclude the government from
denying American citizens those same rights at home. The AIL also thought that the if
the United States were to set up an empire that the death of the republic could be a direct
result.
To the members of the Anti-Imperialist League, all of these arguments illustrated
the hypocrisy that the United States found itself in at the end of the Spanish American
War. Throughout 1898 the AIL relentlessly attempted to stem the tide of imperial
expansionist sentiment amongst the American people by showing the American people
the importance of tradition. Isolationism, and traditional foreign political ideas was very
important to the Anti-Imperialist League. The League emphatically opposed to the
acquisition of overseas colonies at the end of the Spanish American War, and they
45
believed that the United States was being hypocritical when annexation began to occur.
Historian Theodore P. Greene, discussed the AIL's arguments for the traditional political
and social doctrines of the United States.
Anti Imperialists, on the other hand, asked whether a republic like the United
States could afford to contradict its political and social traditions by assuming
control over other peoples who were to be its subjects, not its citizens. Would not
such s course endanger our basic institutions and weaken our philosophy of
government? These were the central and the enduring questions which posed the
dilemma for thoughtful citizens.
84
Imperialists worked hard to contradict the Anti-Imperialist League at every turn, and
were largely successful. The Imperialists argued that the AIL was standing in the way of
progress and discounted the League's arguments at every turn.
As the months drew on, and the Spanish American War drew to a close, it became
more and more obvious that the AIL was not going to succeed in its goal to subvert the
establishment of an American empire. This realization began to stress the unity of the
high ranking members of the AIL. Secondary arguments, that branched off of the appeals
to tradition, began to creep into the league's rhetoric. This became an issue because of the
disparate nature of the members of the AIL. People from all walks of life were no longer
united behind appeals to tradition and the associated arguments. These secondary
arguments began to fracture the AIL's delicate internal balance. This is part of the Anti-
Imperialist League that is largely ignored by historians, and it is something that is unique
to this analysis of the AIL.
While these secondary arguments were always present amongst the ranks of the
AIL, by the time the year 1900 divisions amongst the upper echelons of the AIL were bad
enough that the outset of the Philippine Insurrection could not re-unite the AIL. In an
attempt to reunite the AIL behind one specific cause the AIL put forth William Jennings
84
Theodore P Greene, American Imperialism in 1898, (Boston: D.C. Heath and Company, 1955), i.
46
Bryan as a presidential candidate. The presidential election of 1900 marked a turning
point for the AIL. William Jennings Bryan ran as a Democrat, and also supported a
number of the AIL's arguments. However, Bryan also supported the notion of Free Silver,
which was unpopular with a large number of Democrats. Free Silver was also less than
popular with several of the high profile members of the AIL. Bryan's unpopular ideas
cost him the presidency, and also cost the AIL its chance to have a supporter in the White
House. Bryan's defeat was particularly hard on the Anti-Imperialist League because
afterward the divisions amongst the high ranking members, and the rise in importance of
secondary arguments became even more pronounced than before. These secondary
arguments were the direct reason for the AIL's loss of effectiveness and, in turn, allowed
the establishment of the American empire to be completed relatively unopposed.
47
Chapter 3:
Secondary Arguments
Prior to 1900, the AIL struggled against the growing tide of popular and political
support for the creation of an American empire; clearly, the League was fighting a losing
battle. The League's leadership thought that the only way to reverse the process was to
field William Jennings Bryan as a presidential candidate against McKinley in 1900.
Unfortunately, McKinley’s victory was another crushing defeat for the Anti-Imperialist
League. Bryan's loss exacerbated the inherent turmoil within the upper echelons of the
AIL's leadership. This defeat as well as the increasing probability of an American empire
loomed large in the minds of the AIL's members. The upper echelons of the AIL created
the rhetoric, and the further and further away from their central goal the more divided
they became over the AIL's internal policies. Since the AIL was such a disparate group of
Americans, from all sorts of different political, economic, and racial backgrounds, the
deterioration of its primary objective resulted in the rise of secondary arguments. These
secondary arguments illustrated the partisan nature of the AIL's leadership and its
inherent inability to work together, it also created a loose confederation of groups that all
presented different arguments to the public. The AIL lost its united front, and in turn
much of its effectiveness. This loss of effectiveness led to the AIL being unable to
capitalize on some of the events that took place in and around 1900, most notably the
Philippine insurrection.
48
It is these arguments that many historians tend to miss in their brief examinations
of the Anti-Imperialist League. Many historians do not examine the ideas of the AIL at
all, but it was the rise of these secondary arguments that facilitated the AIL's fall from
prominence. The disparate nature of the AIL's members led to the rise of these secondary
ideas and, in turn, led to the fall of the AIL due to infighting amongst its highest
echelons.
After its creation, membership in the American Anti-Imperialist League grew for
a variety of reasons. Many members became involved because of their adherence to
ideas of American Exceptionalism, racial superiority, national security, and others. While
the preservation of traditional foreign policies and ideologies served as the primary
argument against Imperialists early in 1898, these secondary arguments were quite
popular amongst many of the members of the Anti-Imperialist League from the very
outset. However, the prominence of these ideas escalated as 1898 drew to a close, and
became even more important after the election of 1900. There were many of the
secondary arguments that the Anti-Imperialist league relied upon to combat imperialist
sentiments; however, several became more influential with its members than others.
These arguments saw their genesis in the traditional arguments, but began to branch
further and further away from the preservation of traditional ideologies as the turn of the
century approached.
The first of the AIL's secondary arguments came from an economic standpoint.
The AIL believed that the Imperialist entrepreneurs advocated for annexation in order to
benefit themselves and their shareholders. The League attempted to illustrate that one of
the major reasons that the United States considered annexing islands across the Pacific
49
Ocean and the Gulf of Mexico was due to pressure from American business interests.
Imperialists argued that the markets in Asia would open new outlets for the American
economy, and provide protected overseas markets for excess American goods.
85
The
League believed that the United States did not need to subjugate, and forcibly place them
under the American sphere of influence in order to provide foreign markets for excess
American goods.
The next secondary argument resonated with League members in very different
ways. The concepts of race and equality played important roles in the establishment of
the American empire. Also, American Exceptionalism was an important ideology to
Imperialists and Anti-Imperialists alike. The concept that white Anglo-Saxon Protestants
would sit in the houses of government as equals alongside Filipinos and Cubans was
largely looked at as a preposterous notion.
86
Imperialists and Anti-Imperialists alike, used
racist viewpoints to justify the retention of the former Spanish Colonies. Prominent
Imperialists also used racist arguments such as "The White Man's Burden" or
"Benevolent Assimilation" to justify the annexation of the former Spanish colonies.
87
Some members of the Anti-Imperialist Imperialist League also used their own unique
brand of racism throughout the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.
The final secondary ideology was important to Imperialists as well as Anti-
Imperialists, and is important to many Americans even to this day. This final ideology
involved the preservation of national security. The imperialists argued that retention of
the former Spanish colonies were integral to the national security of the United States.
85
Walter LaFeber, The New Empire: An Interpretation of American Expansion 1860-1898, (Ithaca: Cornell
University Press, 1998.) 18.
86
Michael Hunt, Ideology and US Foreign Policy, (Yale University Press. 2008), 79-81.
87
Ibid, 61-70.
50
Alternatively, the Anti-Imperialists argued that the United States had no reason to be
overly concerned with national security after the Spanish American War was resolved,
due to the positive relationships that the United States had with the imperial powers of
Europe. The AIL also argued that the retention of these colonies could lead to future
hostilities over trade routes and land disputes between the imperial nations.
88
By 1900, these various secondary arguments, became nearly as important to the
League as their views on traditional isolationism. While these were not as integral to the
AIL as the preservation of traditional isolationism they were still important to the
arguments of the Anti-Imperialist League because they initially grew from these
traditional viewpoints. That being said, the divergence from its primary objectives
illustrated the AIL's incongruent arguments composition, and made extremely obvious
the fact that the Anti-Imperialist League was a confederation of political and social
interests. The inherent greed of the American business interests who pushed for the
acquisition of foreign markets, racist attitudes, and the preservation of national security
all served as secondary arguments against Imperialism for the AIL. These secondary
arguments are important when examining the League's efforts after the treaty of 1898,
and are the direct reason for the loss of effectiveness of the AIL after 1900 presidential
campaign until the end of its life.
In the years following the end of the Spanish-American War, the American Anti-
Imperialist League attempted to bring into disrepute the American business interests'
Imperialist sentiments. The Anti-Imperialists worked tirelessly to discredit and to combat
88
Theodore Woolsey, "An Inquiry Concerning our Foreign Relations," Yale Review, I (August, 1892.) 162-
174.
51
the American entrepreneurs' insistences on empire in an effort illustrate to the American
people the folly of empire. These entrepreneurs included the leaders of businesses such as
James Dole, J.P. Morgan, and others.
As the nineteenth century drew to a close, American industrial and agricultural
production out-paced domestic demand, leading to a large excess in American trade
goods. From the industrialists perspective the liquidation of these excess trade goods was
of paramount importance. One solution to this issue that they devised involved utilizing
overseas markets to assuage the stress of the excess goods on the marketplace.
89
The
problem was that overseas marketplaces changed a great deal during the nineteenth
century. At its beginning, the United States traded a majority of its excess goods into the
European markets.
90
However, throughout the nineteenth century, American businesses
began to out produce the demands of European marketplaces. As the nineteenth century
wore on, European nations became increasingly protective of their domestic marketplaces
and American products faced restrictions in many European nations. As a result,
American business interests searched for new overseas markets in order to sell their
excess goods. The Asian markets of China, Japan and the other Asiatic countries
provided American business owners with promising locations to move their excess
goods.
91
As American business owners planed to flood the Asian marketplaces with
American goods, several European empire, began to divide up the Asiatic marketplaces
into "spheres of influence" in the mid-nineteenth century. Also, Japan was a developing
89
Michael Hunt, Ideology and U.S. Foreign Policy, (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1987), 125.
90
E. Berkley Tomkins, Anti-Imperialism in the United States: The Great Debate, 1890-1920, (Philadelphia:
University of Pennsylvania Press, 1970), 5.
91
Walter, LaFeber, The New Empire. An Interpretation of American Expansion 1860-1898, (Ithaca, New
York: Cornell University Press, 1963), 379.
52
nation in its own right and was looking to expand onto the mainland of Asia. The French
government closed Indochina to most foreign trade, and Germany, France, England,
Japan and Russia divided China into several "spheres of influence" and the United States
could not trade freely with the Chinese. These spheres of influence became zones of
economic control for each nation, where they enjoyed special political arrangements,
such as "most favored nation status", as well as economic incentives to trade with that
particular location. John Hay's Open Door Notes, facilitated the further bolstering of
these spheres of influence by crafting legitimate treaties and other governmental
agreements between China and the United States.
92
‘[t]he imperialistic powers were
carving up China like a ripe melon, and American merchants were beginning to fear that
they might be shut out of this potentially vast market."
93
The business interests of the
United States were left with very limited options. John Hay's "Open Door Notes" could
only go so far in opening Asia to American trade agreements. Therefore, the most
attractive option to the American entrepreneurs was to lobby for the annexation of non-
contiguous territories and to use these locations as an outlet for excess American goods.
94
The plight of the American business interests was discussed in detail in the trade
journals of the time. These trade journals delineated the growing problem with American
production as the nineteenth century drew to a close. Journals such as the New York
Commercial Advertiser, The Journal of Commerce, the Boston Herald, and the
92
Thomas Bailey, A Diplomatic History of the American People, (Tenth Ed.), (Englewood Cliffs, New
Jersey: Prentice Hall, 1980) 470.
93
Ibid, 471-472.
94
LaFeber, 370.
53
Tradesman discussed the importance of the expansion of American business interests into
stable overseas markets.
95
By the end of the nineteenth century, the United States out produced most every
other nation on the planet. It was this over production that led the United States to depend
on overseas markets to sell the excess goods.
96
The Anti-Imperialist League was not
opposed to the expansion of American industry, quite the contrary in fact. Some of the
most prominent AIL members were extremely successful entrepreneurs, the most notable
being Industrialist and steel magnate, Andrew Carnegie. However, the AIL was opposed
to the annexation of territory by the United States in order to create a "sphere of
influence" of its own. The AIL argued that this annexation of territory was not congruent
with traditional foreign policy standards and pandered directly to the greed of a handful
of wealthy Americans. The AIL argued that the annexation of territory benefiting only a
few Americans, and that the country would be accepting long term commitments in an
effort to make a few Americans wealthy in the short run. "Some Anti-Expansionists
urged financial retrenchment in order to start American industries and farms booming
again rather than paying fancy price tags for noncontiguous territory.”
97
Roland G. Usher
a prominent politician and historian defined Imperialist viewpoints on the purpose of the
American economy.
The economic interests of the nation may be divided into the right to advance in
all just ways our economic welfare at home; to extend American trade to all parts
of the world; to insure a continuity of intercourse with all countries; to protect the
lives and property of American citizens in foreign countries and on the high
seas.
98
95
Ibid, 371-372.
96
Ibid, 18.
97
LaFeber, 32.
98
Roland G Usher, The Challenge of the Future, (New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1916), 77.
54
The American business interests claimed that they were in need of the non-contiguous
territory in order to secure markets to sell their surplus goods to non-native marketplaces.
The AIL attempted to discount this notion and felt it was just another hypocrisy that the
American government, and imperialist media, perpetrated against the American people.
99
At the end of the Spanish American War, American business interests were
squarely in favor of retaining the former Spanish colonies; however, this was not always
the case. At the outset of 1898 the majority of American business interests were opposed
to starting hostilities with Spain. The League took this change of faith and made it into
the cornerstone of their argument against economic Imperialism.
100
Historian Julius W.
Pratt, in his article "American Business and the Spanish American War", looked at the
change in opinion that occurred within the minds of the American business interests. He
also looks at the arguments of the business interests for retaining the former Spanish
colonies. In his argument, he posits that the American business interests were not
supportive of the war early on; however, as the war drew on they saw the financial
advantages that the war could create for them and submitted them.
101
The pendulum shift
in the ideas of the American business interests illustrates the importance in the finding of
new outlets for American goods, as well as, the rise in popularity of imperialistic ideas
throughout the upper echelons of American society. The League argued that business
interests were succeeding in exporting the excess domestic supply of trade goods without
access to these specific markets before the outset of the war and questioned why they so
99
Tomkins, 20.
100
Gerald K Haines, American Foreign Relations: A Historiographical Review, (Westport, CT: Greenwood
Press, 1981), 67.
101
Julius W. Pratt, "American Business and the Spanish American War," Hispanic American Historical
Review, XIV, (May 1934), 163-201.
55
vehemently claimed that they required them after the war. The League questioned the
changes that had supposedly occurred in the American economy in less than a year's
time, and why the American industrialists were so adamant that the United States needed
to take the former Spanish colonies as colonial possessions.
South Dakota Senator, and prominent Anti-Imperialist, Richard Pettigrew argued
about the importance of American business interests in the establishment of the American
Empire.
An imperial policy has as its object the enrichment of the imperial class. The plain
man, the farmer, the miner, the factory worker, is not the gainer through
imperialism. Rather the monopolist, the land owner, the manufacturer, the trader,
the banker, who have stolen what there is to steal at home, devote their energies to
the pursuit of an empire because the pursuit of empire gives them an opportunity
to exploit and rob abroad. We annexed Hawaii, not to help the Hawaiians, but
because it was a good business proposition for the Sugar interests. We Took the
Philippine Islands because the far seeing among the plutocrats believed that there
was a future economic advantage in the east. For the same reason we are in Haiti,
Costa Rica and Panama. Each step along the imperial path is taken for the
economic advantage of the business men of the United States at the expense of the
liberty and the lives of the natives over whom we secure dominion.
102
Pettigrew provided a blunt commentary on the potential motivations of the American
business interests. Pettigrew's statements were indicative of the League's views about the
arguments of the American business interests.
Missouri Senator, Carl Shurz, another prominent Anti-Imperialist, discussed the
supposed requirement for American business interests to acquire foreign markets as an
outlet for excess American goods.
We are told that our industries are gasping for breath; that we are suffering from
over-production; that our products must have new outlets, and that we need
colonies and dependencies the world over to give us more markets. More
markets? Certainly. But do we, civilized beings, indulge in the absurd and
barbarous notion that we must own the countries with which we wish to trade?
Here are our official reports before us telling us that of late years our export trade
102
Richard F Pettigrew, Imperial Washington, (New York: Arno Press of the New York Times, 1922), 358.
56
has grown enormously, not only of farm products, but of the products of our
manufacturing industries.
103
Shurz did not believe in the necessity for access to foreign markets, and was unimpressed
by the arguments that the United States ought to take the former Spanish possessions as
colonial entities.
A large portion of the calls for war with Spain came from American business
interests. Throughout the nineteenth century, American businesses invested in the
economies of the Spanish colonies for decades, especially in Cuba. The amount of money
that Americans were investing in Spanish colonies was on the rise. From 1897 till 1898,
American business interests invested approximately fifty million dollars into the Cuban
economy; however, one hundred million had been more characteristic of American
investments in Cuba throughout the latter half of the nineteenth century.
104
These
investments steadily grew over the years, and the stark lowering in the investment
amounts was an important indicator to the beginning of American hostilities with Spain.
The last decade of the nineteenth century saw American businesses begin to lose money
under the Spanish governance.
105
That being said, as hostilities got underway American
businessmen began to see the potential commercial success that the United States would
find themselves in at the end of the war. Historian Thomas Bailey discusses this new
found knowledge, "Businessmen, hitherto partly blind to their commercial opportunities,
now found their eyes jarred wide open by Dewey's booming guns."
106
Bailey goes on to
quote President McKinley and his view on the new found markets. "If it is
commercialism to want the possession of a strategic point giving the American people an
103
Carl Schurz, "American Imperialism," (The Convocation Address delivered on the occasion of the
Twenty Seventh Convocation of the University of Chicago, 4 January 1899), 1.
104
Bailey, 471.
105
LaFeber, 450.
106
Ibid, 458.
57
opportunity to maintain a foothold in the markets of that great Eastern country [China],
for God's sake let us have commercialism."
107
The change in the attitudes of the business
interests from the beginning of the Spanish American War to the end of it were stark and
the AIL was looking for ways to combat the arguments of the business interests.
Julius W. Pratt wrote about American business interests and how they wanted to
acquire these islands as a route to acquire new overseas markets.
We can now turn to the question whether American business was imperialistic;
whether, in other words, business opinion favored schemes for acquiring foreign
territory to supply it with markets, fields for capital investment, or commercial
and naval stations in distant parts of the world....We have seen above that the
rising tide of prosperity was intimately connected with the increase in American
exports, particularly of manufactured articles. That the future welfare of American
industry was dependent upon the command of foreign markets was an opinion so
common as to appear almost universal.
108
Imperialists gained a groundswell of support when the business concerns saw the former
Spanish colonies as stepping stones on the way to Asian marketplaces.
The Anti-Imperialists argued that the European nations had not cut off American trade
with Asia completely, and there was no reason to suspect that the Asian markets would
be closed to American goods any further. The AIL argued that since this was the case
there was no real reason to subjugate the people of the Pacific for a few Americans to
make a great deal of money. Shurz also discusses this notion in his article American
Imperialism.
But does the trade of China really require that we should have the Philippines and
make a great display of power to get our share? Read the consular reports , and
you will find that in many places in China our trade is rapidly gaining, while in
some British trade is declining, and this while great Britain had on hand the
greatest display of power imaginable and we had none.
109
107
Ibid, 472.
108
Pratt, 163-201.
109
Schurz, 2.
58
Imperialists argued that if the United States were to pass on the retention of American
colonies that it could spell doom for the American economy. They argued that with the
decline in European trade to Asia, that the United States was in a perfect position to
capitalize on their decline and stood to make a great deal of political and economic gains.
Shurz continues on to write that he found it absurd and completely irrational that the
arguments of the American imperialists not to capitalize on the commercial opportunities
of the former Spanish American empire would cripple the American economy for
decades.
110
The American business interests also had an impact on the president himself. The
Anti-Imperialist League, for a time, counted on the fact that McKinley was also against
the establishment of empire. Early in his presidency President McKinley decided not to
actively try to annex new territory, and the AIL believed this policy was a big victory for
their cause. However, the Spanish American War approached, McKinley came under
more and more pressure from prominent American businessmen and members of the
legislature, and eventually he changed his mind. After McKinley's change of heart, the
League opposed his policies in any way that he could.
William Jennings Bryan described the arguments of the American business
interests of the United States. He elaborated on why the Imperialists required the islands
of the former Spanish empire.
The principal arguments, however, advanced by those who enter upon a defense
of imperialism are: First, That we must improve the present opportunity to
become a world power and enter into international politics. Second, That our
commercial interests in the Philippine Islands and in the Orient make it necessary
110
Ibid.
59
for us to hold the islands permanently. Third, that the spread of the Christian
religion will be facilitated by a colonial policy. Fourth, That there is no honorable
retreat from the position which the nation has taken.
111
He attempted to warn and illustrate to the American people that once the United States
became entangled in the former Spanish colonies it would be impossible, or dishonorable
to leave them to their fate. This fear of entangling alliances was common amongst the
members of the Anti-Imperialist League.
William Jennings Bryan continued to argue against the prominent American
business interests' points of view. He looked at the way that business interests justified
their arguments to themselves.
Some defend annexation on the grounds that the business interests of the islands
demand it. The business interests will probably be able to take care of themselves
under an independent form of government, unless they are very different from the
business interests of the United States. The so-called businessmen constitute a
very small fraction of the total population of the islands, which will say that their
pecuniary interests were superior in importance to the right of all the rest of the
people to enjoy a government of their own choosing.
112
The justifications of the American business interests were quite controversial to Bryan,
and taking colonies to serve the interests of a few Americans was hypocritical according
to him. Senator Pettigrew also looked at how these business interests justified their
arguments for the United States to take the former Spanish colonies, as well as other
pacific island territories .
The annexation of Hawaii was the first big victory won by the business interests
in their campaign to plunder outside of the United States. It was the precedent that
they needed , the precedent that made easy the annexation of Puerto Rico, the
Platt Amendment to the Cuban Treaty, the conquest of the Philippines and the
111
Bryan William Jennings, "Bryan on Imperialism." (Arno Press of the New York Times: Ney York, NY,
1970), 85.
112
Ibid, 56.
60
other imperialistic infamies that have sullied the good name of the United States
during the past twenty years.
113
Pettigrew and Bryan both attempted to discredit the imperialists' arguments by
postulating that the United States was not suited to be an imperial power. These two
prominent Anti-Imperialists argued that the American character would be irreparably
damaged if the United States were to take the islands as colonies.
American business owners in the late nineteenth century used any excuse they
could muster in order to acquire new markets in the Pacific. These new markets were to
serve as an outlet for excess American goods that could not be sold in the home
marketplace. Imperialist business owners, and political pundits in Washington, attempted
to justify the acquisition of these new islands through a series of different arguments. The
Anti-Imperialist League sought to disprove these justifications as nothing more than
hypocritical pandering to influential and greed driven Americans.
American entrepreneurs used their "pull" to influence American foreign policy
throughout the nineteenth century. Before the outset of the Spanish American war,
American business interests had no real designs on the Spanish colonies, but as soon as
they became available for exploitation, many American entrepreneurs began to advocate
for annexation after they saw the possibility of monetary gains. The Anti-Imperialist
League attempted to stop these business interests from seizing these islands. The League
spent a great deal of effort refuting the arguments of the American entrepreneurs, but to
no avail. The desire for overseas markets by those in control of great swaths of the
113
Richard F Pettigrew, "Imperial Washington." (New York: Arno Press of the New York Times, 1970),
319.
61
American economy was too great for the Anti-Imperialist League to quell.
114
Contrary to
Tomkins', the disparate nature of the AIL saw the rise in these secondary arguments
against empire, which created a rift in the upper echelons of the Anti-Imperialist
leadership, and these divisions hindered the league's ability to refute imperialist
arguments effectively.
The next secondary ideology that the Anti-Imperialist League held was that the
racial makeup of the former Spanish colonies made them undesirable to bring them into
the American sphere of influence. This concept sprang from ideas of American
Exceptionalism as well as the racism of white Anglo-Saxon protestants. Government
policies and political stances, throughout the nineteenth century, perpetuated racial
superiority complexes setting the stage for racist attitudes to play an important factor in
the Spanish American War. Race relations in the United States at the time of the Spanish
American War were tense and the arguments of Imperialists and Anti-Imperialists used
racist attitudes as an augment to their arguments.
Throughout the nineteenth century the Constitution of the United States was
amended in order to address race relations. 1864 saw the passage of the thirteenth
amendment to the Constitution of the United States that abolished the long standing
institution of slavery in the United States. Shortly thereafter, on 9 July 1868, the
fourteenth amendment passed, and it extended constitutional rights, as well as citizenship
rights to all of the freed slaves.
115
These amendments as well as many other
reconstruction legislations and policies extended a shaky semblance of equality to the
114
LaFeber, 7-10.
115
"United States Constitution." National Archives of the United States, Accessed 1 November 2015,
http://www.archives.gov/exhibits/charters/constitution_transcript.html.
62
African American populations throughout the United States. The practical effectiveness
of these policies was another matter.
White policy makers , especially in the South, had a hard time accepting the new
found equality of the former slave population. These feelings led to a large number of
state and local laws and also created "black codes" and "Jim Crow Laws" in the southern
states. These laws tried to subvert the newfound rights of the African American
population throughout the late nineteenth century into the mid twentieth century.
116
Not only were the African Americans discriminated against because of their race,
but white lawmakers attempted to subvert the rights of any non-whites. These lawmakers
also passed a number of laws subjugating the Chinese and Japanese populations living in
the United States. The Burlingame Treaty of 1868 as well as the Chinese exclusion Act of
1882 saw the United States close its borders to Chinese immigrants, as well as Chinese
merchant ships. These laws were in kept in effect until mid way through World War II.
117
The United States was also less than kind to its native populations in the latter
part of the nineteenth century. Legislators, throughout the existence of the United States,
and even before, had trouble dealing with the native populations, seeing them as
"backward", and even "barbaric". These notions continued forward into the psyches of
the legislators in the late nineteenth century. As white populations began moving further
and further westward, and more states were being admitted into the union, the native
populations of these regions were being brought into the United States, often by threat of
or application of violence. Governmental legislations in the late nineteenth century, such
116
Walter Nugent, Habits of Empire: A History of American Expansion, (Random House, 2008), 269.
117
Ibid, 270.
63
as the 1871,1885,Indian Appropriations bills, as well as, the 1889 Homestead Act, denied
the native populations the right to consider themselves separate nations, forced them onto
reservations and allowed settlers to take the traditional lands of the Native Americans as
their own.
118
The late nineteenth century was a hotbed for racism. Various legislations passed
by largely white legislators, brought racial tensions and racist attitudes under scrutiny of
the federal government. In fact, some historians argue that the last two decades of the
nineteenth century were where Americans were at their most racially intolerant.
119
Many
historians look at these racist attitudes in order to evaluate the inability of the United
States to grant the former Spanish colonies their independence. Historian Walter Nugent
writes, "The Filipinos therefore had the bad luck of encountering American society and
government at its most racist moment,"
120
All of these different acts, and pieces of legislation set the stage for the creation of
for American Imperialism. They all played a role in how the lawmakers of the time
decided to proceed with the establishment of an American empire. Rubin Francis Weston,
in his book Racism in U.S. Imperialism, writes, "Ideas of race superiority in the United
States have been a clear and perceptible thread that runs through the warp and woof of
the American fabric."
121
118
Nugent, 270.
119
Ibid, 268.
120
Ibid, 269.
121
Rubin Francis Weston, Racism in U.S. Imperialism. (Colombia, SC: University of South Carolina Press,
1972), 32.
64
Nugent looks at the inherent racism that was commonplace within the United
States. He discussed the American belief that the people of the Pacific islands, and the
former Spanish colonies were unable to govern themselves.
The consistent position of the president and others close to him was that the
Filipinos were not capable of self government. Aguinaldo, his colleagues, and
other Filipinos were referred to by tribal names, and thus diminished in
legitimacy. Their inferiority was assumed, not analyzed, it was conventional
wisdom, resting on racial and religious biases prevalent among even educated
Americans of the day. ... Imperialists and Anti-Imperialists alike regarded
Filipinos as a non Anglo-Saxon, non white, and hence inferior race, like blacks or,
more explicitly, Indians.
122
The inherent racism ran rampant throughout the United States through all levels of the
social strata, all the way up to the highest levels of government.
According to historian Walter LaFeber, Anti-Imperialists argued, "The United
States suffered from a land glut already; no more land could properly be developed. If the
Union acquired more territory, it might be Latin American, and this would aggravate the
race problem."
123
Race relations had had a direct influence on what territory the United
States acquired in the past. The territory annexed at the end of the Mexican American
War had a great deal to do with the races of the people who lived in those locations.
Many Americans at the time did not wish to annex those areas because of the need to
extend the rights and privileges of American citizenship to non white people.
124
American Exceptionalist ideologies took hold during this time period as well, many
Americans did not want to annex Mexican territory in fear of the admission of states that
were largely, or entirely of Latin-American descent.
122
Nugent, 267.
123
LaFeber, 32.
124
Hunt, 80-81.
65
These racist arguments, and precedents were taken into consideration by the Anti-
Imperialist League. The League's members opposed the establishment of an American
empire for both racist and non-racist reasons. The members of the Anti-Imperialist
League was not exclusively racist, and motivated by racist arguments, but some were,
and those motivations bear exploring. The racially motivated arguments of the AIL
contributed to the fracturing of the Anti-Imperialist League, and its loss of
effectiveness.
125
Racism amongst members of the Anti-Imperialist League was commonplace. The
inherent racism that many of the League members held was closely connected to their
regional affiliations as well as their Anti-Imperialist arguments. However, the league as a
whole never espoused specific racially motivated arguments in a public way. The racist
arguments varied from person to person. Many of the League's members saw the
inclusion of the islands as colonies as incompatible to the basic principles of the United
States, according to the Constitution. When it became obvious that the new colonies
would not become states in the traditional sense, but were still going to be retained by the
United States, the racist arguments and attitudes of many Anti-Imperialist League
members became more prominent. This led to a split between AIL members who were
pro-equality, and others who were more racially motivated.
Some of the more prominent Anti-Imperialists in the U.S. Congress were
outwardly racist about their ideas. Many of these racially motivated senators resided in
the Southern states. Senator Donelson Caffery of Louisiana, argued that the islands of the
Philippines could not be annexed because the inhabitants were not able to give their
125
Tomkins, 10.
66
consent to be governed. Caffery argued, " it would be impolitic, unwise and dangerous to
incorporate... a distant country beyond the sea, whose inhabitants were of a Dissimilar
race, with a different religion, customs, manners, traditions, and habits..."
126
Senator
John Daniel of Virginia feared that the inclusion of the Filipinos into the body politic
would create a split between inferior and superior. He argued that half of the population
would become dependent a circumstance that was akin to the conditions of slaves prior to
the Civil War. Daniel went so far as to claim that if the Filipinos were brought into the
Union their dependence on the United States would become perpetual, and the United
States would have to rule over them as a despot. All of these statements were made after
his staunch support of the intervention in Cuba.
127
John L. McLaurin of South Carolina
argued that it was imprudent to incorporate a "mongrel and semi barbarous population"
into the political schema of the United States. McLaurin continued by calling out some
of the universal suffragists in Congress, who also supported imperialism. He argued that
the incorporation of the lesser races into the empire, but not offering them statehood was
hypocritical by its very nature.
128
Benjamin Tillman, of South Carolina, also was quoted
as saying "The advocates of the Philippine policy were undertaking to annex islands
containing 10,000,000 of the colored race, of whom more than one-half were barbarians
of the lowest type.”
129
The Anti-Imperialist cause met with a great deal of support from
the Southern states, however this support was blended with outwardly racist attitudes
common in that region of the United States. That being said racist ideas were not
uncommon in the north as well.
126
Weston, 93-94.
127
Ibid, 92.
128
Ibid, 94.
129
Ibid, 90.
67
Other, non-southern, political members of the League often had racial biases
against the people of the newly acquired lands in the pacific as well. Anti-Imperialist
Senator from South Dakota, Robert Pettigrew, in his article Aggression in the Philippines
compares the people of the Philippine Islands to the "naked savages" that were conquered
by the British across the globe.
130
He also argued that Imperialism's ultimate goal is to
conquer and subjugate the "weaker races". Pettigrew further argues that the annexation of
weaker nations, that were "incapable of self government", would lead to the dilution of
white bloodlines, and by extension the pureness of the American governmental system.
"The vigorous blood, the best blood the young men of our land, will be drawn away to
mix with the distant races and hold them in subjugation."
131
This desire to protect the
peoples of the United States from a dilution of white purity was not an uncommon view
amongst Anti-Imperialists.
Rudyard Kipling's 1899 poem "The White Man's Burden", became extremely
popular in the United States. It bluntly portrayed the widely popular notion of superiority
of Caucasians over every other race, and argued that it was the duty of the white race to
elevate every other race. Kipling's views were taken up by Imperialists who used them as
justification for the annexation of the former Spanish Colonies. Kipling's poem served as
a prominent argument for Imperialists. It allowed feelings of racial superiority to be
transferred onto imperialistic arguments. Historian Erin Murphy discusses the influence
of Kipling on the racial climate of the late nineteenth century.
For example, in February 1899, McClure s magazine published Rudyard Kipling's
poem "The White Man's Burden: The United States and the Philippine Islands."
130
Richard F. Pettigrew, "Imperial Washington." (Arno Press of the New York Times: Ney York, NY,
1970), 333.
131
Ibid, 367.
68
In the midst of debates over the United States' involvement in the Philippines, the
poem spread quickly. In it, Kipling advised the United States to take its place
alongside Great Britain and make the sacrifices necessary for the civilization of
those "half devil and half child.
132
The "White Man's Burden", was well received by the imperialists including Theodore
Roosevelt who received an advanced copy. Weston argues that the imperialists of the late
nineteenth century valued Kipling's argument and that they believed that America had the
duty to accept the burden of imperialism as a matter of racial pride.
133
The Anti-Imperialist League, on the other hand, objected to the supposed duty of
the White Man's Burden espoused by Kipling, and believed that it embodied the racist
arguments of the imperialists. Murphy also looks at the Anti-Imperialist viewpoint on
Kipling's famous poem.
However, it ["The White Man's Burden"] was also the inspiration for many anti-
imperialist counter poems, serving as a phrase for anti-imperialist ridicule because
of contradictions between violence and civilization. More than a phrase, "the
white man's burden" was a cultural schema with a set of masculinized aspirations
for the United States in the Philippines, aspirations to which anti-imperialists
vehemently objected. It was against the tidal pull of this schema that anti-
imperialists navigated their course.
134
Anti-Imperialist writers penned dozens of Anti-Kipling poems, editorials, and opinion
pieces that sought to refute the influence of his poem.
135
There were also some members of the Anti-Imperialist League who disliked
McKinley's new foreign policies because of its' inherent racist qualities. Some of the
more prominent Anti-Imperialist League members, with Mark Twain among them,
132
Erin L. Murphy, "Women's Anti-Imperialism, 'The White Man's Burden,' and the Philippine American
War," (The Asia-Pacific Journal), 251-252 http://www.japanfocus.org/-Erin-Murphy/3182.
133
Ibid, 253-254.
134
Weston, 19.
135
Zwick, 22.
69
worked against annexation, because he believed that the people of those islands deserved
their independence.
In the minds of the AIL, the United States was discarding traditional ideologies
for new ideologies, such as, "Benevolent Assimilation." The concept of Benevolent
Assimilation ran hand in hand with the concept of Manifest Destiny that was common in
the United States at this time. Benevolent Assimilation was McKinley's concept of the
United States pushing forward into the wider world, and placing American governmental
systems overseas, in an effort to do what was best for the people in those places.
Benevolent Assimilation built upon Manifest Destiny, which was an important concept in
the United States in the nineteenth century. It described the widely held belief that the
United States was destined to expand its borders across the North American continent.
After the end of the Spanish American War, American politicians evoked
Manifest Destiny, and in turn, Benevolent Assimilation, in the United States, to justify
the expansion across the Pacific ocean, beyond continental borders. The Anti-Imperialist
League, on the other hand, saw expanding beyond the natural borders of the continent as
incompatible with the concept of Manifest Destiny, and traditional American ideals as a
whole. The AIL also believed that McKinley merely evoked Manifest Destiny under the
guise of Benevolent Assimilation, in order to subjugate the non-white populations of the
former Spanish colonies, via racially motivated policies.
Benevolent Assimilation was defined by President William McKinley who stated
that:
It should be with the earnest and paramount aim of the military administration to
win the confidence, respect, and affection of the inhabitants of the Philippines by
assuring them in every possible way that full measure of individual rights and
70
liberties which is the heritage of a free people, and by proving to them that the
mission of the United States is one of Benevolent assimilation, ...
136
To McKinley, "Benevolent Assimilation" meant that the United States would go into the
Philippines, as well as the other former Spanish islands, and liberate the people from the
tyranny of the Spanish government. The imperialists saw Manifest Destiny, and its
ideological counterpart, Benevolent Assimilation as integral to the future of the United
States that were seemingly in line with what the United States represented ideologically.
The AIL on the other hand argued that these ideas were incongruent with traditional
American foreign policies.
The reality of what the United States claimed their policy was, and what the Anti-
Imperialist League argued the policies of the McKinley administration were, were very
different things. Mark Twain and the rest of the Anti-Imperialist League sought to show
that there were atrocities being perpetrated across the Filipino countryside under the guise
of Benevolent Assimilation. The League tried to impress upon the American people that
men and women were being butchered in their homes, and tortured, all under the guise of
McKinley's racially motivated "Benevolent Assimilation". Weston writes, "While the
president was speaking to congress, the United States Armed Forces were trying to
"benevolently assimilate" the Filipinos - with bullet and bayonet at a ratio of ten Filipinos
killed to one American.”
137
Mark Twain describes the atrocities in detail in many of his writings. Twain
attacked the idea of Benevolent Assimilation in an article entitled "The Philippine
Incident".
we have pacified some thousands of the islanders and buried them; destroyed their
fields, burned their villages, and turned their widows and orphans out of doors;
136
Nugent, 268.
137
Weston, 103.
71
furnished heartbreak by exile to some dozens of disagreeable patriot, subjugated
the remaining ten millions by Benevolent Assimilation which is the pious new
name of the musket.
138
"Benevolent Assimilation" to Twain and others within the Anti-Imperialist League, was
nothing more than shiny rhetoric to disguise war time atrocities, to transmute racist
foreign policies in the minds of the American people, and to mask the Filipino resistance
to American control. To the AIL, McKinley's "Benevolent Assimilation" became another
hypocrisy in a long line of hypocrisies following the Treaty of Paris of 1898.
Senator Pettigrew, argued that McKinley's Benevolent Assimilation was doing
nothing more than pandering to the desires of the industrialists, and other American
business interests. He argues that assimilation to imperialists is the same a subjugation of
what he believed to be an inherently inferior race of people.
The Imperialist's aim is to assimilate, not the people of these possessions, but their
lands and their wealth. If the people will work, the American plutocrats will
exploit their labor as well as the resources of their respective countries. If the
people refuse to work, they will be brushed aside and men and women who will
be more amenable to discipline will be imported from some other country to take
their places.
139
Pettigrew goes on to evidence this argument by stating that the subjugation of the
inferior peoples for the gain of the imperialists is exactly what occurred in Hawaii. He
goes on to compare Hawaii to the Philippines by arguing the American efforts to
Benevolently assimilate the Filipinos would only be temporary, because if they resist,
new peoples would be imported, who would be more agreeable to being assimilated.
140
Former President Benjamin Harrison critiqued President McKinley's
"benevolence" in his article, "The Status of Annexed Territory and Its Free and Civilized
Inhabitants." Harrison argued that McKinley's policy of benevolently assimilating the
138
Mark Twain, Jim Zwick, The Philippine Incident, 58.
139
Pettigrew, "Imperial Washington," 347.
140
Ibid.
72
Filipino population, but not making them citizens only made them slaves to American
popular opinion. It was that popular opinion that had a tendency to shift and change as
the years went on.
The benevolent disposition of the President is well illustrated in these instructions.
He conferred freely, "until Congress shall take action,- upon the Filipinos, who
accepted the sovereignty of the United States and submitted themselves to the
government established by the commission, privileges that our fathers only
secured after eight years of desperate war. There is this, however, to be noted, that
our fathers were not content to hold these priceless gifts under revocable license.
They accounted that to hold these things under tenure of another man's
benevolence was not to hold them at all. Their [Filipinos] battle was for rights, not
privileges- for a constitution not a letter of instructions.
141
Harrison argued that the popular opinion of the American people could always shift, and
the "privileges" of American "benevolence" could always be revoked, and that the rights
of the Filipinos would never be concrete unless the constitution was applied to them after
they became U.S. citizens. A status that many Imperialists would be hard pressed to
extend due to their racist assumptions.
Other imperialists believed that they could wrap their imperialistic arguments in
polished words and phrases, claiming that the burden of imperialism fell onto the United
States, and that it was their duty to protect their "little brown brother".
142
The inherent
racism of the imperialists was obvious and distinctly aimed at the people of the former
Spanish colonies, however most Americans simply embraced the racially charged
arguments of the Imperialists.
Race played an enormous role in the acquisition of the American empire, on both
sides of the issue, Imperialist and Anti-Imperialist alike. Issues of racism were deeply
141
Benjamin Harrison, "The Status of Annexed Territory and Its Free and Civilized Inhabitants." North
American Review, CLXXII (January 1901), 12.
142
Bailey, 476.
73
engrained in the psyche of American leaders and effected ideologies, political debates,
and policy changes.
Historians, years after the annexation of the Philippines, have the advantage of
hindsight. The Anti-Imperialists, however did not. It is easy to deplore these people for
their racist attitudes and insensitivities, and to place modern notions of equality and race
upon their actions. However, it is important to keep in mind that the Anti-Imperialists
found themselves bound to their time period, were products of their environment, and
were quite different than their ideological successors today. Racism was a reality in the
late nineteenth and early twentieth century, and even the ideologues of the Anti-
Imperialist League were not immune.
Disagreements amongst the upper echelons of the AIL's leadership over racial
issues was yet another cause for the fracturing of the Anti-Imperialist League. The
League's members stood on different sides of the racial issues, with some supporting
equality, while some others supported notions of white superiority that were very
common throughout this time period. These schisms between the members of the AIL
were just one more stumbling block for the unity of the AIL, and in turn their campaign
against the rising tide of imperialism suffered.
The third and final secondary ideology that will be explored here is that of the
preservation of national security. National security was important to the Americans of the
late nineteenth century, much like it is to Americans today; however, for very different
reasons. The last decade of the nineteenth century saw the Pacific Ocean brimming with
large empires that could potentially make an aggressive strike on the western seaboard of
74
the United States with little warning, and this inherent fear of invasion soon became
embroiled in the annexation debates.
The American Imperialists as well as United States government in the late
nineteenth century attempted to justify the acquisition and establishment of an American
Empire in order to protect national security. One of the main justifications was that the
islands would be taken by another power if the United States did not. The imperialists
held the notion that the islands of the former Spanish Empire were strategic military
assets that once acquired could not be relinquished for fear of their being obtained by
another empire. This concept became known to the AIL as the "fiction of requirement".
These concepts became major influences on public opinion that the Anti-Imperialist
league sought to disprove to the American people.
During the last few months of the Spanish American war, many American
imperialists argued that if the various island chains of the former Spanish empire were
not taken under the protection of the United States, that they would fall under the sphere
of one of the European nations. England possessed several nearby island chains, as well
as Australia and India in the region, France controlled the Indochinese peninsula, and
Japan was an emerging industrial nation that was beginning to outgrow its borders and
looking for areas to exert its influence. Also, the German states, in 1871, united into a
German Empire, and was looking to expand its sphere of influence as well. These major
players, as well as some of the smaller empires, Russia, Holland, Belgium, and others, all
looked at the possessions of the declining Spanish empire as opportunities for territorial
expansion.
143
143
Greene, 1.
75
American Imperialists argued that the collapse of the Spanish empire, at the end
of the Spanish American war, created a power vacuum in Spain's former colonies and
that if the United States did not step into this obligation, some other major power would
and, in turn, would freeze the United States out of the markets, and strategic assets in
these emerging colonies. Some imperialists also feared that the newly liberated Spanish
colonies, if the United States gave them their independence, would simply backslide and
control would revert back to their former colonial masters or fall under the control of a
new one.
144
The Anti-Imperialist League argued fervently against these concepts, and did
its best to disprove the imperialists' arguments on these issues.
The notion that the United States needed to shield these islands from the
predatory Europeans was a fallacy that the Anti-Imperialist League attempted to expose.
The League argued that the Spanish empire had been waning for decades, and if the
Europeans wanted the islands for themselves they would have taken them already. The
League used the islands of Hawaii as a pertinent example. Hawaii was independent and
largely undefended for centuries, if a European nation was going to take the Hawaiian
islands why had it not happened up to that point? Anti-Imperialist H.E. Von Holst looked
at the view that the United States needed to shield these islands from predatory
Europeans.
Some of them [Imperialists] believe, and all of them try to make us believe, that
we act, in a way, under compulsion, because if we do not take Hawaii, most
certainly some other power will? Probably England. For proofs, we ask in vain.
The question why some other power, especially England, did not take it long ago,
although the natives could never have offered.
145
144
Thomas Bailey, Diplomatic History of the American People, ( Tenth Ed.), (Prentice Hall: Englewood
NJ, 1980), 463.
145
H.E. Von Holst, "The Annexation of Hawaii," The Advocate of Peace, (1894-1920), Vol. 60, No. 3
(March 1898), 65.
76
Von Holst argued that the United States did not ask the Hawaiian populous if it wanted to
be annexed, at least not in any "fair" fashion, and proceeded to annex Hawaii anyway.
Von Holst disputes that the Hawaiian annexation was necessary, and any precedent set by
it subsequently void. He questioned what had stopped any of the so-called predatory
European empires interested in the island chain from taking it long before the United
States could have.
To the Anti-Imperialist League the concept of predatory Europeans in the Pacific,
scooping up islands to their heart's content, was ludicrous, and they sought to prove it to
the American people. The Anti-Imperialist League used an international incident,
between the United States and the German Empire, as evidence. The German empire had
stationed several warships in the Philippines and were poised to take Manila from
American control early in the Spanish American War. It was only when Admiral Dewey
began to become aggressive toward the German navy, despite being out-manned and out-
gunned, that the German warships backed down and were escorted out of Manila harbor
by an observing British fleet. The League used this incident as an argument for their
position that the European empires would not have taken the former Spanish colonies for
themselves, in an effort to the respect the American protection of those islands, as well as
American interests.
146
Historian and political analyst George Kennan, also supported the Anti-
Imperialist League's arguments about predatory European nations. Kennan argued that
the probability of predatory Europeans trying to take territory out from under the United
States was slim.
146
Tomkins, 13-15.
77
In the case of Puerto Rico and Hawaii, this argument seems to me to have been
unsubstantial. There was no real likelihood anybody else intervening. Puerto Rico
could quite safely have been left with Spain, or given independence like Cuba, so
far as our security was concerned. In the case of the Philippines the question was
a more serious one.
147
Kennan then went on to describe the incident with the German navy in Manila Harbor.
He argued that this incident played more into the arguments of the imperialists.
148
The Anti-Imperialist League also looked at the emerging attitudes of some of the
European imperial powers. Imperialists argued that predatory imperialist powers would
take the opportunity to expand their empires. The League used them as evidence against
the idea that they would seek to work against the United States and their interests.
Historian Michael Hunt argued that:
The conviction that an upstart, pugnacious, despotic Germany was the common
enemy gave these sentimental notions strong strategic implications. German
machinations, real or imagined, in Samoa, China, the Philippines, and Latin
America had come to worry American officials. The British, on the other hand,
set about carefully cultivating American goodwill.
149
Hunt argued that the different individual nations were more or less likely to entangle
themselves in American foreign policy. After the end of initial hostilities with Spain in
the Philippines, the AIL argued that Germany, and all of the other European imperial
powers would respect American interests if the Philippines were granted their
independence. Imperialists on the other hand argued that the various imperial nations
were consistently looking to expand their power, and there was no reason to expect that
they would respect American policy and viewpoints.
150
Nugent agrees with Hunt when
he argues that '"European competition", the fear that Britain of Germany might get it all,
147
George F Kennan, American Diplomacy, (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1951), 17.
148
Ibid, 17.
149
Michael Hunt, Ideology and U.S. Foreign Policy, (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1971), 133.
150
Ibid, 128-134.
78
played some role until 1899 and even to 1914.'
151
These ideas were often presented by
imperialists and the Anti-Imperialists had a difficult time refuting them.
Much to the chagrin of the AIL, the Imperialists were eventually proven correct,
when the German government sought to take the portions of certain islands for
themselves, and lobbied for a partition of the Philippine islands. However, the United
States annexed the Philippine islands and the German request was withdrawn.
152
Many Imperialists, playing on the fears of many Americans, argued that these
newly freed islands were necessary acquisitions in order to protect American security.
They argued that the west coast of the United States would be vulnerable to naval attack
if the former Spanish colonies were not acquired. They also argued that Puerto Rico was
an important station in the defense of the American gulf coast. The League attempted to
dispel the notion that the islands of the former Spanish empire had any significance at all
to the protection of American coasts.
We [England and America] both stood timorously by at Port Arthur and wept
sweetly and sympathizingly and shone while France and Germany helped Russia
rob the Japanese; and how gallantly we went to the rescue of poor Cuba,
friendless, disparaging, borne down by centuries of bitter slavery, and broke off
her chains and set her free, with approving England at our back, facing
disgruntled Europe, and in her friendly eye, a warning and the light of battle.
153
The idea that the nations of Europe would not respect American interests in the Pacific
was refuted by the AIL, who evidenced American relations with England as a powerful
source of support.
151
Nugent, 256.
152
Samuel Flagg, Bemis, A Diplomatic History of the United States, (New York: Holt Publishing, 1935),
465.
153
Zwick, Twain, "Introducing Winston Churchill," (1900), 10-11.
79
Many American Imperialists believed that the annexation of the islands in the
Pacific was necessary for the United States' national security. Von Holst wrote about this
in a Advocate of Peace article entitled, "Annexation of Hawaii". Von Holst wrote, "Our
Western coast, say the annexationists, is dangerously exposed ; the way to it will be most
effectively blocked to every enemy if Hawaii is ours, for the hold of no man-of-war is big
enough to steam from Asia to Australia over the vast Pacific."
154
Von Holst goes on to
argue that Hawaii has no military value and evidences Alfred Thayer Mahan, a prominent
naval military strategist, as an authority on naval military strategy.
155
The Anti-
Imperialist League referenced Mahan's arguments that the Hawaiian islands were of little
strategic importance and that the annexation of those islands in no way made the western
coast of the United States safer from foreign invaders.
Senator Carl Shurz argued that acquiring islands to protect the American borders
would create a subsequent need to acquire even more islands in order to protect the initial
islands. Shurz was arguing that the dangers of the hunger for territorial expansion would
create a "snowball" effect that once begun would be difficult to stop.
If we take those new regions, we shall be well entangled in that contest for
territorial aggrandizement, which distracts other nations and drives them far
beyond their original design. So it will be inevitably with us. We shall want new
conquests to protect that which we already possess. The greed of speculators
working upon our government, will push us from one point to another, and we
shall have new conflicts on our hands, almost without knowing how we got into
them. It has always been so under such circumstances, and always will be. This
means more and more soldiers, ships, and guns.
156
154
Von Holst, 63.
155
Ibid, 64.
156
Schurz, "American Imperialism," 1.
80
The snowball effect of taking islands in order to defend islands would eventually be
unsupportable according to the Anti-Imperialists and the cost of maintaining and
defending these islands would outweigh their benefit.
Shurz was not the first to put forth the snowball argument. In fact, The Advocate
of Peace put forth a commentary on President McKinley's inaugural address in 1897
which argued that territorial aggression simply led to more territorial aggression.
The author argued that "The President says " we must avoid the temptation of
territorial aggression.'* This certainly implies, though it does not say, that we
must avoid the temptation of territorial greed. Our real danger lies just here. If we
become greedy of more territory, for the purpose of national aggrandizement, we
shall be sure to become territorially aggressive, if not directly by arms, yet by
other means which are often quite as effective and not less criminal.
157
This commentary on the way that many Anti-Imperialist felt about the annexation of
territory, even before the outset of the Spanish American War. The AIL capitalized on
these ideas and worked them into their rhetoric and arguments.
Shurz also argued that the territorial hunger of the imperialists and business
interests would not stop at the Philippines, and that would put the United States into
conflict with the European imperial nations. Shurz argued that the British were
supportive of the annexation of the Philippines because it would keep the United States
busy and keep them from meddling in British affairs in the Pacific. American British
political relations at this time were good, and the AIL used this relationship to argue that
American interests had an ally in the Pacific to assist in the preservation of an
independent Philippines.
158
157
"President McKinley's Inaugural," The Advocate of Peace, (1894-1920), Vol. 59, No. 4 (April 1897), 78.
158
Schurz, "American Imperialism," 1.
81
The Anti-Imperialist League was skeptical at best when it came to the notion that
the people of the United States would be safe guarded by the acquisition of the former
Spanish colonies. The League argued that the former Spanish colonies were not
necessary for national security, and were largely proven correct in their time. The League
argued that national security of the United States had not been threatened, and the nation
had no true enemies on the Pacific coast.
The fate of the islands of the former Spanish empire, Guam, Puerto Rico, Cuba,
and the Philippines, as well as the islands of Hawaii were in question at the end of the
Spanish American War. In opposition to the Imperialist arguments the Anti-Imperialist
League argued that they were not of strategic importance and, for a time, the league was
correct; however, as the twentieth century rolled along, and World War I erupted in
Europe, those islands took on a greater military, and strategic significance.
The Panama Canal had not yet been built at the time of the Spanish American
war, however the French canal project failed, but a joint American-British project was
poised to be set into motion. The project was still in the planning stages. Imperialists such
as Theodore Roosevelt, were cognizant of the future strategic significance of islands like
Cuba and Puerto Rico. Those two islands served, and continue to serve as an important
component to the protection of the Gulf of Mexico. The tip of Florida, the Atlantic side of
Cuba, and Puerto Rico, all served, and continue to serve, as key entry points for shipping
to and from the Gulf of Mexico. They also served as key points of control for what would
become the Panama Canal. Cuba and Puerto Rico became very important components to
American national security, especially during the Cold War.
82
Imperialists also argued that Hawaii had a great deal of geographical significance
to the United States. Hawaii is, strategically situated approximately halfway between the
west coast of the United States and the eastern coast of Asia making it a strategically
significant acquisition during the first half of the twentieth century, and imperialists in the
late nineteenth century foresaw this importance. The United States used Hawaii as a re-
coaling station for its naval vessels, but more importantly for American merchant ships.
Guam, and American Samoa, served similar functions as the Hawaiian islands. However,
the military significance of these islands was not great as those of Cuba and Puerto Rico.
The Philippine islands served as a potential marketplace for American goods, but
it also served the United States as a stopping point on the way to Chinese markets. There
were naval bases installed on the Philippine islands however, they were of little
consequence until the outset of World War II. The Philippines were not as important
strategically as the other islands but economically it became the jewel in the crown of the
American empire that the United States acquired at the end of the Spanish American
war.
159
The Anti-Imperialist league spent a great deal of time and effort attempting to
discredit imperialist arguments for annexation. The Anti-Imperialist League argued that
the former Spanish colonies were not of any strategic importance. The Anti-Imperialist
league was, for the most part, incorrect. However, in the late nineteenth century, the
United States had no legitimate enemies that could threaten American shores, and the
AIL's argument carried some influence. The League could not evaluate the importance of
the islands in to the future, but only the past, and they were using the information that
159
Pettigrew, 358.
83
they had. The Anti-Imperialist League was a product of their time, and their objections to
the annexation of the former Spanish colonies, were reflections of the political climate of
the late nineteenth century.
The Anti-Imperialist League spent a great deal of time illustrating the folly of the
Imperialists' push to establish an American Empire. The League worked very hard to
discount the Imperialists' arguments, and they reacted to a few important Imperialist
arguments. These reactions became the basis for alternate arguments that became
important to the AIL's arguments.
The Anti-Imperialists argued that the establishment of the American empire was
undertaken, at least in part, to pacify the nation's business interests. The League believed
that the endless search for foreign markets were not as important to the survival of the
United States as the Imperialists concluded. The League argued that the foreign markets
were open up to that point, and there was no evidence that they would close to American
goods and services into the future.
Racism also played an important role in the application of the AIL's alternate
arguments. American Anti-Imperialists were products of their time. They lived in a time
where the United States was not a equal place for non-white peoples in the late nineteenth
century. The United States was arguably at one of the most racially prejudiced time
periods in its history. The Anti-Imperialists, used racist, and non-racist arguments alike in
order to discredit the Imperialists' arguments. Ideas such as "The White Man's Burden"
and McKinley's "Benevolent Assimilation" were vehemently discredited and abhorred by
the AIL. Despite the people of the United States taking great steps forward in the latter
84
years of the nineteenth century, the inherent racism that was ingrained in the American
psyche served as an important part of Anti-Imperialist League's thought processes, and
the development of their arguments.
Also, preserving national security was, and still is, a paramount concern for the
United States government. The Imperialists of the late nineteenth century saw the
establishment of an empire as imperative to preserving national security. Imperialists
argued that the establishment of an empire was principal in protecting American trade
routes and coastlines. The Anti-Imperialists were very adamant that the United States did
not require the islands of the former Spanish empire in order to protect national security.
The League argued that the United States was not in danger and the islands were in no
way integral to American national security. The importance of the islands were not fully
grasped by the AIL, and many Imperialist Americans believed them to be standing in the
way of progress.
The American Anti-Imperialist League stood against the establishment of an
American empire. The League spent a great deal of time attempting to discredit the
arguments of the imperialists. The United States made a great deal of changes to its
foreign policy in the last several years of the nineteenth century and the Anti-Imperialist
League was attempting to resist these changes. While they were ultimately unsuccessful,
the League fought for what they believed in and wanted to try to protect their country
from making, what they believed to be, a fatal mistake that potentially could have spelled
the death of the United States.
85
These secondary arguments were important to the AIL; however, they did cause a
fracturing amongst the upper echelons of the AIL's leadership, contrary to the arguments
of other historians like Tomkins. The Anti-Imperialist League was a disparate group of
Americans whose reason for uniting, stopping the establishment of an American empire
through appeals to traditional American policies, was destroyed by the end of 1898. It
was at this point that the secondary arguments began to become more and more important
to the League's rhetoric. The leadership's personal partisan roots began to dominate their
arguments, and the secondary arguments grew in popularity. These secondary arguments
directly led to a loss of the AIL's effectiveness, and its unity. The AIL was no longer
united for one cause and the varying nature of the league's members came to define each
individual's rhetoric against imperialism.
As 1900 approached, the AIL's strength waned, and the election of 1900 was the
final straw for any true semblance of unity amongst the AIL's high ranking members.
Bryan's defeat at the hands of McKinley further fractured of the arguments and rhetoric
of the AIL. The Anti-Imperialist League's ultimate demise was facilitated by the rise of
these secondary arguments.
86
Chapter 4:
Conclusion
The Anti-Imperialist League was a political pressure group founded in 1898. In
the nearly two decades that it opposed the establishment of an American empire, the AIL
garnered support from a number of prominent Americans, from many different social and
political strata, who flocked to the AIL and were important to its cause. The League also
relied on elected officials who became members to assert their influence into the houses
of government allowing the AIL to reach the people who made the decisions that they
were so ideologically opposed to. Politicians such as Carl Shurz, William Jennings
Bryan, former President Grover Cleveland, and Richard Pettigrew all are counted
amongst the more outspoken members of the political elite who favored Anti-Imperialist
viewpoints.
160
These prominent Americans came from a wide variety of backgrounds,
and all held different ideas of what was important for the preservation of the United
States in the long run. It was these influential members of the AIL who were responsible
for the development of the arguments of the Anti-Imperialist League as a whole.
Historians tend to examine the American empire from the perspective of the
Imperialists. There are not nearly as many examinations of the Anti-Imperialist League.
Those that do look at the AIL do not typically look at their arguments and their evolution.
However; this evolution played against the Anti-Imperialist League's weaknesses. The
160
E Berkley Tomkins, Anti-Imperialism in the United States: The Great Debate1890-1920, (Philadelphia:
University of Pennsylvania Press, 1970), 6.
87
AIL's disparate nature and a rise in the importance of secondary arguments contributed to
their loss in unity, ultimately caused the AIL to flounder. This worked in the favor of the
Imperialists and contributed to their ultimate failures. These notions have not been taken
into account by historians up to this point. However; previous investigations of the AIL
provided a unique perspective on a ground breaking time in American history, and it is
important to look at them in order to gain a deeper and richer understanding of American
diplomatic history at the turn of the twentieth century.
The Anti-Imperialist League was popular among Americans early in 1898. As
Michael Cullinane noted, "By 1898 there were ten regional branches and membership
had swollen to the hundreds of thousands."
161
The AIL garnered a great deal of support
from prominent Americans who united with one another behind the idea of preventing
imperialism from expanding to the United States. They sought to achieve this by arguing
in favor of traditional foreign policies like isolationism; however, as it became
increasingly apparent that the United States was going to establish an empire, dissention
amongst the leadership arose. This dissention began to fracture the resolve of the
leadership and secondary arguments began to take on a larger and larger role within the
rhetoric of the AIL. In this context, the AIL helped to field a Democratic presidential
candidate in the election of 1900 against William McKinley. The League's candidate was
prominent Anti-Imperialist, William Jennings Bryan. Bryan, was a staunch Anti-
Imperialist, but his views on other issues, such as the free coinage of silver, did not go
over well with a portion of the AIL's leadership. The dissention within the upper echelons
of the League escalated even further, and after Bryan's defeat the League continued to
161
Michael Patrick Cullinane, Liberty and American Anti-Imperialism, (New York: St Martin's Press,
2012), 24-25.
88
fracture from within. These fractures shook the ramshackle alliance between the various
personages, political, economic, and social groups to its core, and the importance of
secondary arguments became further and further entrenched in the arguments of the Anti-
Imperialist League. Political infighting became a major stumbling block for the AIL and
it soon was a mere shadow of its former self. Its influence began to wane shortly after
1900, as the Philippine insurrection was underway the AIL was unable to capitalize on
the bloodshed in a meaningful way. As the first World-War approached, the Anti-
Imperialist League drew less and less support until finally, on 27 November 1920, the
Anti-Imperialist League of the United States officially disbanded.
162
For nearly twenty years after it 1898 creation, members of the Anti-Imperialist
League worked tirelessly to prevent and then subvert the establishment of the American
Empire. They aimed to educate the American people on the inherent dangers involved
with the abandonment of traditional ideas such as isolationism, and exposed the
perceived hypocrisy of empire building by President William McKinley and his
government. The League used a number of different arguments to sway the American
people away from the idea of Empire.
The first set of arguments that the AIL utilized were political in nature. They
argued that the establishment of empire violated American foreign political traditions.
The AIL believed that the isolationist Foreign Policy ideas espoused by George
Washington and Thomas Jefferson, as well as the Monroe Doctrine, were being cast aside
in favor of new jingoist foreign policies. The AIL credited traditional isolationist policies
directly in the success of the United States, and they criticized President McKinley for his
162
Tomkins, 132.
89
new foreign policies, as well as his deviation from the traditional foreign policies that the
United States had thrived under for the previous century.
The Anti-Imperialist League also used the United States Constitution in making
their arguments and used it as evidence of how the hypocritical nature of empire and the
potential for the violation of the supreme law of the land. They argued that the United
States Constitution did not give the federal government the right to annex non-contiguous
territory. The AIL also asserted that the Constitution did not allow for the inclusion of
colonies under the American system of government. It was believed by many members of
the AIL that a European style empire was not compatible with the American
governmental system. They argued that if the United States did annex, or otherwise take
control of the former Spanish colonies, that the it was required, under the Constitution, to
make them into states. Inhabitants of these new states would become United States
citizens, with all of the rights and privileges that went along with that status. The AIL
evidenced precedents of making states out of new territory set long before the Spanish
American War. Anti-Imperialists asserted that excluding the creation of new states from
the former Spanish colonies, that those islands needed to be granted their independence.
The AIL used the Constitution of the United States as evidence to support their claims
that the annexation of the former Spanish colonies was hypocritical and in direct conflict
with the document upon which the United States was built.
The AIL argued that the annexation of the former Spanish colonies and keeping
them as unincorporated territory would deprive the inhabitants of any rights provided by
an independent government, while also denying any rights that would be granted as an
American citizen. This concept violated the basic tenets of what the United States had
90
fought for during the American revolution, and had unfalteringly stood for, for over a
century. The AIL held that the consent of the governed would be violated, and that the
people of the former Spanish colonies would be kept in a state of limbo that would make
them neither free citizens of their own government nor citizens of the US. The AIL went
so far as to emphasize that if McKinley's government could take the basic human rights
of those people away, what would stop them from taking the rights of American citizens
away, and that the collapse of the republic could be a side-effect of McKinley's jingoist
foreign policies. The collapse of the republic was a constant refrain in the arguments of
the AIL. They saw the republic's collapse as the ultimate failure of the American
experiment, and they expressed these ideas throughout their arguments.
163
The early
arguments of the Anti-Imperialist League were based on traditional foreign political
ideals and served as the basis for the AIL's primary arguments. These arguments began to
take a back seat to several secondary arguments that rose in prominence soon after the
signing of the 1898 Treaty of Paris.
These secondary arguments grew out of the traditional arguments of the Anti-
Imperialist League. These secondary arguments highlighted the disparate nature of the
League's membership. As 1898 drew to a close it became clear to the AIL in a creation of
an American empire was nearly unavoidable. This stress created a fracturing amongst the
leaders of the Anti-Imperialist League, and their internal unity quickly deteriorated. This
caused a rise in the secondary arguments of the AIL. This rise in the secondary arguments
led to the AIL becoming even less and less effective in arguing against the establishment
of empire. The election of 1900 was the League's last ditch effort to come together
163
Michael Patrick Cullinane, Liberty and American Anti-Imperialism, (New York: St Martin's Press,
2012), 1.
91
behind a common cause. The Democratic candidate William Jennings Bryan, was a
staunch Anti-Imperialist. Bryan's Anti-Imperialist ideas were important to the AIL, but
some of his other arguments, notably his stance on Free Silver, further split the AIL's
leadership in their support of him. Bryan's defeat in 1900 broke the Anti-Imperialist
League's unity once and for all. This break in unity kept the AIL from fielding successful
arguments against empire after 1900, and left them unable to capitalize on events such as
the Philippine Insurrection.
The Anti-Imperialist League's fracturing further facilitated the rise in a number of
secondary arguments that, after the election of 1900, took precedence over the
preservation of traditional American foreign policies. The AIL posited that empire was
being pushed forward by America's business interests. At the end of the nineteenth
century, the United States began to out produce domestic demand for goods. At this
point, certain business interests argued that only one outlet for America's excess goods
remained, and that was Asia. The last decade nineteenth century saw a brief, yet severe,
economic downturn that caused the European nations to begin to partition off areas of the
Asiatic marketplace for their own exports and began to exclude American goods. This
facilitated imperialist American business owners to push for the securing of specific
rights and privileges within the Asiatic marketplace. These pleas from business owners
brought forth agreements like the Open Door Notes, which played a large role in
American foreign policy for decades to come. However, when the opportunity to take
control of the Philippines, gain exclusive rights to the marketplaces therein, and the
access that the Philippines would provide to other Asian markets, the American business
92
elite latched onto that concept and threw their support behind annexation.
164
All of these
secondary arguments rose in prominence due to the fracturing of the AIL and served to
illustrate the disparate nature of the AIL and its leadership.
The AIL saw the catering of American policy to serve the needs of a few business
interests as hypocritical by its very nature. It went against everything the AIL believed
that the United States stood for. The AIL argued that the wants of the few did not
outweigh the needs of the many. The AIL stated that American manufacturing
community was not hurting for overseas markets, and that the European nations provided
the United States access to the Asian marketplaces up to that juncture, and believed that
that trend would continue. The Anti-Imperialist League felt that the greed of the business
interests would saddle the United States with a responsibility that American taxpayers
would pay to support for decades to come. All of this in an effort to make a small number
of Americans a great deal of wealth in the short term. The AIL saw the American
business interests pushing for annexation as greedy hypocrites who only wanted to make
a quick buck.
165
The Anti-Imperialist League also played upon the racial tensions and racist
attitudes that were present in the United States at the time, in order to counter imperialist
arguments. Some Anti-Imperialists believed that the United States ought not to annex
these areas, because they would need to become states. They alleged that the former
Spanish colonies were full of racially inferior people who could not handle the
responsibility of being American citizens. Also some Anti-Imperialists stated that the
164
Carl Schurz, "American Imperialism," (The Convocation Address delivered on the occasion of the
Twenty Seventh Convocation of the University of Chicago, 4 January 1899).
165
William Jennings Bryan, "Bryan on Imperialism," (New York: Arno Press of the New York Times, NY,
1970), 56.
93
people who resided locations would become members of the body politic and therefore
receive votes and adequate representation in congress. As a result, non-white males
would be allowed to sit in Congress, and to many Anti-Imperialists, indeed to many
Americans, this was an outlandish notion at best.
166
The racial inferiority of the Filipino
people was not even in question, they were almost unanimously seen as, "little brown
brothers" who were not capable of taking care of themselves.
167
It is important to point out however, that not all of the members of the AIL were
outwardly racist in their rhetoric, but were indeed products of their time, and racial
equality was not a popular notion amongst white Anglo-Saxon protestants in the late
nineteenth century. Some members like novelist Mark Twain was supportive of the
notions of freedom which were quite evident in his Anti-Imperialist writings.
168
Finally, the AIL argued against the ideas that the former Spanish colonies were
necessary to annex in order to protect America's national security. Imperialists argued
that the colonies were necessary to take control of because of predatory European nations
in the Pacific. They argued this because during the latter half of the nineteenth century,
great swaths of Asia had been conquered, or just annexed into several large, globe
spanning, European empires. However, the AIL argued that the United States had few, if
166
Rubin Francis Weston, Racism in U.S. Imperialism, (Colombia, SC: University of South Carolina Press,
1972), 93-94.
167
Thomas A Bailey, A Diplomatic History of the American People, 8th ed., (New York: Appleton-Century-
Crofts, 1969), 476.
168
Jim Zwick, Mark Twain's Weapons of Satire: Anti-Imperialist Writings on the Philippine American
War, (Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1992), XX.
94
any, enemies on their western seaboard, and that these islands would not provide any
military value, because they were too far out from the western coast.
169
Also, the Imperialists argued that the United States ought to annex these islands
to keep them out of the hands of those same predatory European empires. The AIL came
back at this argument by providing evidence that these islands were not sought after by
any European nations, up to that point, and remarked that the Spanish empire had been
weakening for some time, and held little control over a number of the more remote
islands. The AIL argued that if the European nations wanted to take those islands before,
they would have done so already. The AIL's arguments were further strengthened by the
case of Hawaii, which was an independent kingdom for centuries, and remained that,
until the annexation by the United States.
170
The American Anti-Imperialist League was a large group of people who were
quite passionate about stalling the effort to create an American empire. They argued that
a continuation of traditional foreign political ideologies was in the best interests for the
American people and the continuation of the American republic. Their abject failure to
preserve the United States without an empire, saw the fracturing of the AIL and the rise
of secondary arguments. These arguments illustrated the true differences in the leadership
and their personal values. The people of the AIL worked for several years after the
establishment of empire to roll back empire, but were ultimately unsuccessful.
169
H.E. Von Holst, "The Annexation of Hawaii," The Advocate of Peace (1894-1920), Vol. 60, No. 3,
(March 1898), 63
170
Julius W Pratt, "American Business and the Spanish American War," Hispanic American Historical
Review, XIV (May 1934), 163-201.
95
Even though the American Anti-Imperialist League was ultimately unsuccessful
in its goal to subvert the establishment of an American empire, its goal of preserving
American traditional foreign policy ideologies did succeed. As soon as the end of the first
World War, the United States began to question its station in the world. The United
States found itself in a position to control the fate of the free world; however, as the first
World War drew to a close the American people's appeals for a return to tradition grew
louder and louder. Various groups such as "America First" spearheaded movements to
reinstate the traditional foreign political ideologies, the same arguments that the Anti-
Imperialist League espoused throughout its existence. Other groups with similar
arguments as the AIL, like the Anti-War movement in the 1960's also advocated for a
return to isolationist policies. The Anti-Imperialist League was the ideological
predecessor to many of these groups and it was, at least in part, responsible for keeping
traditional American foreign policies alive, by keeping them in the forefront of the minds
of many of Americans.
The AIL was a group of Americans who were displeased with the foreign policies
of its government, and sought to change their situation. The establishment of the
American empire was an important segment of American political history. The
ramifications of the establishment of empire rung throughout the twentieth century, and
continue to effect the United States and its policies to this day. The AIL challenged the
federal government in a time that this was not commonplace. They questioned the foreign
policies of the president, and set a precedent for other groups to do so throughout the
twentieth century. Finally, the AIL helped to keep traditional policies alive in the minds
of American policy makers. The end of World War I brought about a resurgence of
96
traditional foreign policies like isolationism that continued throughout the interwar
period, and similar ideas can be traced throughout the twentieth century to this day.
97
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