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Prologue: Selected Articles
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Winter 1999 Prologue: Selected Articles
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Winter 1999, Vol. 31, No. 4
U.S. Marines in the Boxer Rebellion
By Trevor K. Plante
A Chinese "Boxer," 1900. (NARA 111-SC-83087)
In 1900 a crisis erupted in China as the "Boxers" increased
their resistance to foreign influence and presence. By the end of
the nineteenth century, several countries had already established
spheres of influence in China. In the fall of 1899, Secretary of
State John Hay wrote that the United States, a late arrival,
wanted to maintain an "open door policy" in China. If the Boxers
succeeded in pushing the United States and other foreign
countries out, this newly opened door could soon be shut.
Discontent with foreigners had been on the rise in China
since 1898, when the "I Ho Ch'uan" (Society of "Righteous and
Harmonious Fists") began gaining popularity in a province in
northwest China. This group commonly referred to as "Boxers"
opposed"
....
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