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Good Neighborism of 1927
Charles and Ann Lindbergh 1931
article
Coolidge and Hoover sought to end military interventions in hemisphere
1
Marines pulled out of Nicaragua 1925 but sent back 1927
Coolidge sent Henry Stimson to Nicaragua April 1927 for "American-chaperoned elections" by staining fingers with mercurochrome
but Marines stayed in Nicaragua until 1933 due to Sandino
Juan Trippe pioneered U.S.-Cuba air mail service in 1927
Coolidge in 1927 had made Amherst classmate and Morgan banker Dwight Morrow ambassador to Mexico
Morrow brought
Lindbergh
to Mexico late 1927 as "Ambassador of the Air"
Morrow-Calles agree to allow pre-1917 subsoil ownership, slow land expropriation and anti-clerical measures
"the first real beginnings of the embryonic Good Neighbor Policy"
but Cardenas reversed agreements in 1930s and Lindbergh became an isolationist
Nelson Rockefeller expanded the
Good Neighbor
policy
Clark Memo of 1928
State Department's J. Reuben Clark wrote 236-page memo Dec. 17, 1928
repudiated the 1904 Roosevelt Corollary's "police power" interpretation of the Monroe Doctrine
but reserved the right of intervention for defense