1890 - Alfred Thayer Mahan - On Sea Power

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1890: Alfred Thayer Mahan, On Sea Power

U.S. History Resources

1890

Alfred Thayer Mahan, On Sea Power

One of the most important shapers of "the new Manifest Destiny" was Navy Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan. In 1894, he was appointed to the teaching staff of the Naval War College at Newport, Rhode Island. The appointment was understood to be an official endorsement of the theory of sea power Mahan had been promoting for a number of years. In 1890, the same year he published his first book, The Influence of Sea Power upon History, Mahan summarized his ideas in an essay entitled "The United States Looking Outward," from which the following excerpt is taken.

Indications are not wanting of an approaching change in the thoughts and policy of Americans as to their relations with the world outside their own borders. For the past quarter of a century, the predominant idea, which has asserted itself successfully at the polls and shaped the course of the government, has been to preserve the home market for the home industries. The employer and the workman alike have been taught to look at the various economical measures proposed from this point of view, to regard with hostility any step favoring the intrusion of the foreign producer upon their own domain, and rather to demand increasingly rigorous measures of exclusion than to acquiesce in any loosening of the chain that binds the consumer to them. The inevitable consequence has followed, as in all cases when the mind or the eye is exclusively fixed in one direction, that the danger of loss or the prospect of advantage in another quarter has been overlooked; and although the abounding resources of the country have maintained the exports at a high figure, this flattering result has been due more to the superabundant bounty of Nature than to the demand of other nations of our protected manufactures. For nearly the lifetime of a generation, therefore, American industries have been thus protected, until the practice has assumed the force of a tradition, and is clothed in the mail of conservatism. In their mutual relations, these industries resemble
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the activities of a modern ironclad that has heavy armor, but inferior engines and guns; mighty for defense, weak for offense. Within, the home market is secured; but outside, beyond the broad seas, there are the markets of the world, that can be entered and controlled only by a vigorous contest, to which the habit of trusting to protection by statute does not conduce. At bottom, however, the temperament of the American people is essentially alien to such a sluggish attitude. Independently of all bias for or against protection, it is safe to predict that, when the opportunities for gain abroad are understood, the course of American enterprise will cleave a channel by which to reach them.... The interesting and significant feature of this changing attitude is the turning of the eyes outward, instead of inward only, to seek the welfare of the country. To affirm the importance of distant markets, and the relation to them of our own immense powers of production, implies logically the recognition of the link that joins the products and the markets,--that is, carrying trade; the three together constituting that chain of maritime power to which Great Britain owes her wealth and greatness .... Whether they will or no, Americans must now begin to look outward. The growing production of the country demands it. An increasing volume of public sentiment

1894: Samuel Gompers, The Railway Act of 1894

U.S. History Resources

demands it. The position of the United States, between the two Old Worlds and the two great oceans, makes the same claim, which will soon be strengthened by the creation of the new link joining the Atlantic and Pacific. The tendency will be maintained

and increased by the growth of the European colonies in the Pacific, by the advanc ing civilization of Japan, and by the rapid peopling of our Pacific States with men who have all the aggressive spirit of the advanced line of national progress.

QUESTIONS

1. 2.

What do you think Mahan has in mind when he says that American exports depend primarily on the "superabundant bounty of nature"? What, according to Mahan, is the primary purpose of sea power? How is it related to the change of attitude toward the rest of the world he claims to perceive in the United States?

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