měi guó qián zhí mín shí dài Pre-Columbian period   měi guó zhí mín shí dài Colonial period of the United States   měi guó guó Formation of the United States of America   měi guó xiàng kuò zhǎn Westward expansion   měi guó nèi zhàn shí Civil War era   měi guó chóngjiàn gōng huà Reconstruction and the rise of industrialization    zhàn zhōng jué Progressivism, imperialism, and World War I   měi guó jīng xiāo tiáo Post-World War I and the Great Depression   èr zhàn zhōng de měi guó United States in World War II   lěng zhàn kāi shǐ The Cold War begins   lěng zhàn zhōng de měi guó The Counterculture Revolution and Cold War Détent   lěng zhàn jié shù The end of the Cold War   xiàn dài měi guó Modern American   běi měi yóu mào xié North American Free Trade Agreement   

guójūnjìniánxìngmíngkāiduānniánfènzhōngjiéniánfènyánxùshíjiàn
běn jié míng · sēnběn jié míng · sēn Benjamin Harrison1889nián1893nián5nián
shǐ fēn · luó · lánshǐ fēn · luó · lán Stephen Grover Cleveland1893nián1897nián5nián
wēi lián · mài jīn lāiwēi lián · mài jīn lāi William McKinley1897nián1901nián5nián
'ào duō · luó 'ào duō · luó Theodore Roosevelt1901nián1909nián9nián
wēi lián · huò huá · tuōwēi lián · huò huá · tuō William Howard Taft1909nián1913nián5nián
tuō · luó · wēi 'ěr xùntuō · luó · wēi 'ěr xùn Thomas Woodrow Wilson1913nián1921nián9nián

   shì jiè zhàn shǐ 'ōu zhōu yuán shāngměi guó què yīn zhì shēn shì wàisǔn shī duōshēng wàng wéi zēng jiāzài zhěng 1920 nián dàinóng chǎn pǐn jià duàn jiàng gōng rùn zēngzhǎngměi guó jīng zhǎn cháng fán róng


  After the Gilded Age came the Progressive Era, whose followers called for reform over perceived industrial corruption. Viewpoints taken by progressives included greater federal regulation of anti-trust laws and the industries of meat-packing, drugs, and railroads. Four new constitutional amendments—the Sixteenth through Nineteenth—resulted from progressive activism. The era lasted from 1900 to 1918, the year marking the end of World War I.
  
  U.S. Federal government policy, since the James Monroe Administration, had been to move the indigenous population beyond the reach of the federal frontier into a series of Indian reservations. Tribes were generally forced onto small reservations as farmers and ranchers took over their lands.
  
  The United States began its rise to international power in this period with substantial population and industrial growth domestically and numerous military ventures abroad, including the Spanish-American War, which began when the United States blamed the sinking of the USS Maine on Spain. Also at stake were U.S. interests in acquiring Cuba, an island nation fighting for independence from Spanish occupation; Puerto Rico and the Philippines were also two former Spanish colonies seeking liberation. In December 1898, representatives of Spain and the U.S. signed the Treaty of Paris to end the war, with Cuba becoming an independent nation and Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines becoming U.S. territories. In 1900, Congress passed the Open Door Policy that at the time required China to grant equal trading access to all foreign nations.
  
  President Woodrow Wilson declared U.S. entry into World War I in April 1917 following a yearlong neutrality policy; the U.S. had previously shown interest in world peace by participating in the Hague Conferences. American participation in the war proved essential to the Allied victory. Wilson also implemented a set of propositions titled the Fourteen Points to ensure peace, but they were denied at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference. Isolationist sentiment following the war also blocked the U.S. from participating in the League of Nations, an important part of the Treaty of Versailles.


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