Glen
Moderator
Time for a decade round-up of the 1910s!
First off, North America 1910s -
Canada sees the defeat of the Liberal government at the beginning of the decade. The decade is one of peace and continuing high numbers of immigrants flocking to the shores of Canada. Only by the end of the decade is women's suffrage becoming a widespread phenomenon.
Newfoundland sees not much change, and St Pierre and Miquelon continue their languid incorporation into the Dominion.
The United States of America is preoccupied first with the amazing election of 1912 where former President Theodore Roosevelt launches a third party bid for a third term. With the Republicans split, Dark Horse Woodrow Wilson takes the White House. His administration is taken up mostly with dealing with Mexican bandits such as Pancho Villa, part of the chaos of the Mexican Civil War. With a large economic downturn, Woodrow Wilson is defeated in 1916 by former Supreme Court Justice Charles Evan Hughes. One of the first major diplomatic acts of the Hughes administration is to sponsor a Naval Conference, strengthening and expanding the Naval agreements of 1906, helping to maintain peace and keep down military costs for the Great Powers.
Mexico suffered through a Civil War after the Diaz Presidency, but out of the chaos came a new constitution and things began to return to normalcy by the end of the 1910s.
Next time....Central America and the Caribbean....
Central America and the Caribbean 1910s -
In the 1910s, events in Central America and the Caribbean were highly influenced by their Northern neighbor, the USA. With the election of President Wilson a period of military intervention ensued, with US Marines occupying at various times Nicaragua and Haiti. The Wilson administration imposed upon Nicaragua the Bryan-Chamorro treaty as well. About the only bright spot in relations between the Wilson Administration and Central America was the openning of the Panama Canal in 1915. The US territories of Martinique and Guadelupe were being slowly integrated into the American system, and benefitted economically from increased tourism from the US, especially in light of lax enforcement of Prohibition in the Caribbean territories.
However, with the advent of the Hughes Administration in 1917, relations with Central America and Haiti began to change. Hughes ended military occupation in the region and was more even-handed in his foreign policy towards these nations.
(Note that St. Maartins is entirely Dutch, Virgin Islands still Danish)