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Battle of Santiago de Cuba

Battle of Santiago de Cuba
Part of the Spanish–American War

Combate en Santiago de Cuba, Ildefonso Sanz Doménech
DateJuly 3, 1898
Location
Result American victory
Belligerents
United States Spain
Commanders and leaders
William T. Sampson
Winfield S. Schley
Pascual Cervera 
Fernando Villaamil 
Strength
5 battleships
2 armored cruisers
2 armed yachts[1]
4 armored cruisers
2 destroyers[2]
Casualties and losses
1 killed
1 wounded[2]
1 cargo ship sunk[3]
343 killed
151 wounded
1,889 captured
4 armored cruisers sunk
2 destroyers sunk[2]

The Battle of Santiago de Cuba was a decisive naval engagement that occurred on July 3, 1898 between an American fleet, led by William T. Sampson and Winfield Scott Schley, against a Spanish fleet led by Pascual Cervera y Topete, which occurred during the Spanish–American War. The significantly more powerful US Navy squadron, consisting of four battleships and two armored cruisers, decisively defeated an outgunned squadron of the Royal Spanish Navy, which consisted of four armored cruisers and two destroyers. All of the Spanish ships were sunk and no American ship was lost. The crushing loss sealed American victory in the Cuban theater of the war ensuring the independence of Cuba from Spanish rule.

Tensions between Spain and the United States worsened over the Spanish conduct during their efforts to quell the Cuban War of Independence, with many Americans being agitated by largely exaggerated reports of Spanish atrocities against the Cubans. In January 1898, fearing the fate of American interests in Cuba from the war, the cruiser USS Maine was dispatched to protect them. Less than a month later, the cruiser exploded while lying at anchor in Havana harbor, killing 261 sailors onboard and inflaming American opinion with Spain being portrayed as the culprit in the American media regardless of the actual source of the explosion. Two months later, war was declared.

The Americans realized that defeating a significant Spanish squadron then stationed in Cuba was vital to ensuring victory in the war. A squadron consisting of six warships were dispatched to ensure success, commanded by both Sampson and Schley, each admiral having his own approach to naval warfare. On July 3, the Spanish squadron steamed out of the harbor to engage with the Americans. The Spanish, being totally unprepared and outgunned, made a desperate attempt to reach the open sea with the American battleships and cruisers in hot pursuit. Superior force prevailed, and the entire Spanish fleet was sunk with minimal casualties for the Americans, who suffered only two men killed or wounded.

The Americans pulled a total of 1889 Spanish sailors from the water, among them Cervera. The captured Spaniards were treated with respect and care by the Americans, and Cervera gained respect from the American officers for his dignified conduct during and after the battle. Although the battle ensured the American campaign in Cuba would end in a success, tensions soon arose between Sampson and Schley, with various parties in the US Navy and the American public debating over which admiral had made the greater contribution to victory, and the dispute reached the desk of Theodore Roosevelt. The battle remains one of the most significant naval battles in US maritime history.

Background

Preliminary context

The battle marked the culmination of the Cuban Wars for Independence, which had been waged by Cuban revolutionaries against Spanish imperial power for several decades. The United States had political, economic, cultural, and ideological interests in Cuba. Within the larger context, many American political leaders, pushed by interventionist public opinion, were outraged by the publication of a private letter by Spanish Minister Enrique Dupuy de Lôme critical of US President William McKinley and by the destruction of the American armored cruiser USS Maine that was touted by newspapers at the time as the "Battleship Maine" for which a naval court of inquiry and American yellow journalism blamed Spain.[4]

Cuban revolutionaries had staged revolts against Spanish colonial authority in the Ten Years' War (1868–1878), the Little War (1879–1880), and the Cuban War of Independence (1895–1898).[5] During the last war, Spanish General Valeriano Weyler established a policy of interning Cubans in camps he called reconcentrados, which functioned as internment camps. The etymology behind the re- prefix is that formerly the Cubans lived in villages but now they were going to be redistributed into new villages under the hypocritical pretext that it was for their own protection. Spanish forces gathered Cubans who lived in the countryside and centralized them in camps, where they could be monitored. As a consequence, many Cubans died of disease and malnutrition. That policy did as much to paint the Spanish as barbarians to the Cuban natives and the United States as any other item of misrule by the Spanish.

With outrage over Weyler's seemingly-brutal policy and sympathy with the Cubans' struggle building, US public opinion pushed for war with Spain after the publication of the de Lôme Letter in February. Enrique Dupuy de Lôme had been appointed the Spanish Minister to the United States in 1892. In that capacity, it was his duty to refrain from allowing his personal beliefs to intervene with his public duty to support peaceful diplomatic relations between the United States and Spain. However, a letter that expressed his opposition to McKinley's foreign policy decisions was exposed, and the New York Journal translated and printed the letter.[6] Many Americans considered it an insult to the nation and to the president.[7]

Although Spain apologized on February 13, 1898, Maine exploded and sank in Havana Harbor, Cuba, two days later and killed 266 American sailors. After a hasty naval court of inquiry, the American press blamed Spain and accused it of planting a mine that sank the battleship. The war with Spain became known as the "Correspondents' War". Journalists not only wrote stories about the conflict but also took part in the fight. In 1898, the prestige of the press ran high.[8]

American society was changing as literacy rates increased. There was a new revolution of readers. As war zones became more open to the press, journalists wrote eyewitness accounts of what was happening. In an era before radio and television, newspapers were the main source of information, opinion, and entertainment for the American public. In New York City, where the population was about 2,800,000, the combined circulation of daily papers was about 2,000,000.[9]

In response to the public's outcry, McKinley took action against Spain. On April 25, the United States declared war and claimed to have had no self-serving interest in Cuba, but some political and military leaders and imperialists believed that war would be an opportunity for the United States to expand territories overseas and to demonstrate its increasing naval power against a weak foe.[10] Moreover, the United States sought to expand economic ties with Cuba for its resources in sugar and tobacco, all of which influenced America's decision to intervene. It was evident that gaining territories across the globe would increase US strength and influence and tap markets for the products of American industry.[11][page needed]

Spanish Prime Minister Práxedes Mateo Sagasta did not seek war with the United States. He did not expect victory but knew that Spanish citizens would likely revolt if he conceded to American demands in Cuba. Meanwhile, Spanish naval leaders tried to employ a strategy that would not win the war outright but resist the US Navy as much as possible. On May 1, 1898, American and Spanish naval forces met in the Philippines at the Battle of Manila Bay, which resulted in a decisive victory for the United States. The Spanish government sent their fleet, under Admiral Pascual Cervera y Topete, to defend Cuba and keep an open line of communication with the Spanish garrison there. Cervera opposed that strategy since he believed his squadron lacked the strength necessary to engage the American squadron. He preferred to engage the Americans near the Canary Islands or to mount an attack against the American coast, but he was overruled by his superiors in Madrid.[12] Cervera's own misgivings reveal the seriousness of the situation faced:

It is impossible for me to give you an idea of the surprise and consternation experienced by all on the receipt of the order to sail. Indeed, that surprise is well justified, for nothing can be expected of this expedition except the total destruction of the fleet or its hasty and demoralized return.

Lacking a clear strategy, the Spanish policymakers at home may have hoped to end the war quickly in a "glorious defeat" against the more powerful US Navy.[13] Cervera knew better but like a good officer followed orders to the letter. There is a hint of his real views in his attack orders to the fleet. He suggests they nail their flags to the masts; that is, not even to think about lowering them in surrender.[citation needed] As the fleet was being massacred against superior firepower, some captains in fact ran their ships aground and surrendered to save what was left of their men.

Spanish fleet

Before taking command of the Spanish Caribbean Squadron, Cervera had served a variety of military and political roles, then retired after a dispute with opposing politicians. However, when war against the United States broke, Cervera was recalled into the Spanish Navy and given command of the Caribbean Squadron. The squadron was to be dispatched from Spain with the ultimate destination of the Caribbean, initially Puerto Rico but then changed to Cuba, to reinforce the Spanish garrison, defend the island from American invasion, and break the American naval blockade.[14] Before the outbreak of war, Cervera attempted to inform Spanish officials of the Spanish Navy's weakness relative to the US Navy.[15] Captain Fernando Villaamil, the Second Officer in the Ministry of the Navy and a pioneer in destroyer warfare, disagreed with Cervera's passivity and advocated Spain to offset American naval superiority by scattering the fleet and taking the initiative through quick and dispersed actions. A lack of consensus between Cervera, Villaamil, and the Spanish government put Spanish naval strategy in flux from the beginning.

 
Fernando Villaamil, c.1897

On April 29, Cervera steamed from Cape Verde. Panic gripped the American people, who did not know what his ships might do: attack the largely-undefended East Coast while the fleet sailed about in an effort to engage him; prey upon American shipping; or perhaps sail up the Potomac and set fire to Washington, DC. Ultimately, Cervera did none of those but managed to evade the US fleet for several weeks, confounded his American counterparts, and recoaled in the process before he finally sought refuge in the harbor of Santiago de Cuba.[16] On May 29, 1898, an American squadron sighted Cervera's newest ship, the cruiser Cristóbal Colón, and immediately established a blockade around the mouth of the harbor.[17] The Spanish soon found themselves "blockaded closely by an American semicircle of ships about six miles from the Morro by day, and moving discreetly closer after nightfall."[18] Moreover, by early July, the Spanish were nearly surrounded at Santiago from the east by an advancing American army numbering some 16,000 soldiers, 3,000 Cuban insurgents to the west, and the American fleet to the south.[19][page needed]

The Spanish squadron consisted of the cruisers Almirante Oquendo, Vizcaya, Infanta Maria Teresa, and Cristóbal Colón in addition to Villaamil's destroyers Plutón and Furor. The cruisers displaced approximately 7,000 tons each, but they were not heavily armored, and their armament did not match the Americans. With the exception of Cristóbal Colón, which was more lightly armed, the cruisers' main armament consisted of two 11-inch (279 mm) guns each and a secondary armament of ten 5.5-inch (140 mm) guns.[20] Cervera's fleet was at a further disadvantage relative to the Americans because of the condition of its ships. The breech mechanisms in many of the Spanish guns were dangerously faulty and caused jams and other mishaps.[21] Many of the ships' boilers were in need of repair. Several ships, including Viscaya, desperately needed bottom-cleaning as they were suffering from extra drag from fouling.[21] The most well-protected ship in Cervera's fleet, the second-generation armored cruiser Cristóbal Colón, had not even had her main battery installed[21] and carried wooden dummy guns instead.

Finally, Cervera's crews were poorly trained. They lacked experience and practice in gunnery drills, and their training had emphasized rapid fire at regular intervals but the Americans favored more deliberately-aimed fire.[22][23] Relative to the Americans' fleet, which consisted mainly of modern battleships, Cervera's force was lightly armed, a result of recent budget cuts but also a naval policy that for many years favored the construction of light swift ships to patrol the far-flung oceanic empire.

 
Cristóbal Colón

With Cervera's fleet bottled in Santiago, Captain General Ramon Blanco y Erenas, the top military commander in Cuba, ordered it to sortie from the harbor along the coast westward to Cienfuegos. In Cervera's eyes, escape from the bay seemed nearly impossible. He strongly considered fleeing under protection of night but opted to sail by day instead to ensure the safe navigation of his ships through Santiago's narrow channel. On July 3, 1898, Cervera, aboard his flagship Infanta Maria Teresa, led the Spanish fleet out of the safety of the Santiago harbor at 7 min intervals.

American fleet

The primary elements of the American forces in Cuban waters were initially divided between two commands: Rear Admiral William T. Sampson of the North Atlantic Squadron and Commodore Winfield Scott Schley, commanding the "Flying Squadron".[24] Although the two combined squadrons outnumbered the Spanish fleet, victory was not achieved solely by American numerical superiority. Rather, victory resulted from strategic and tactical decisionmaking in addition to the general superiority of the American forces. As the historian James C. Rentfrow argues, the American victory at Santiago was, in many ways, the culmination of an "ongoing process towards [the North Atlantic Fleet's] construction as a combat unit."[25]

The American fleet was composed of many different types of vessels. At the head of the fleet were Sampson's armored cruiser USS New York and Schley's armored cruiser USS Brooklyn. New York and Brooklyn, but only armored cruisers were well-armed for their class.[26] Schley's flagships were powerful cruisers, but the primary firepower of the American fleet resided in its battleships USS Indiana, USS Massachusetts, USS Iowa, and USS Texas. The American battleships were modern steam-powered and steel-hulled coast defense battleships all built within the decade. The oldest and least powerful of them was Texas, a near-sister ship to the famous Maine, which had exploded in Havana Harbor in February. The ships were armed with 13-inch (330 mm) guns and could steam at speeds up to 17 knots (31 km/h).[26] Off Santiago, Schley's "Flying Squadron" was merged into the larger fleet under Sampson's overall command.

To bolster the force, US Navy Secretary John D. Long ordered the battleship USS Oregon to sail from Mare Island, California, to join the fleet in the Caribbean. The "West coast's lone battleship" steamed from San Francisco around Cape Horn to Key West to join the rest of Sampson's fleet in early May, a 14,500-nautical-mile (26,854 km) journey completed in 66 days.[27] The ship's armament included four 13-inch guns, eight 8-inch (203 mm)/30 caliber guns, and 18-inch (457 mm)-thick steel armor. With its 11,000-horsepower (8,203 kW) engines, it was propelled through the water at a rate upwards of 17 knots. Its combined speed and firepower gave Oregon the nickname "bulldog of the Navy."[28] These "were clearly superior ships," observed W.J. Murphy, a sailor aboard Iowa.[29] The powerful battleships, at least according to Murphy, enabled the US fleet to be victorious in battle.

 
USS Brooklyn

Battleships and cruisers, however, were not the only forces the Americans employed in the conflict. Other vessels included torpedo boats like USS Porter, light cruisers such as USS New Orleans, and even the collier USS Merrimac, which sank on June 3.[30] Sampson specifically approached Lieutenant Richmond P. Hobson, the commanding officer, charging him with the task to "sink the collier in the channel" in order to both blockade the Spanish fleet and to clear the narrow passage of any mines.

Standoff at Santiago

Sampson structured the blockade as a semicircle at the opening of the harbor. An auxiliary ship floated around the edges and waited to be used if a forced entrance was necessary, and a torpedo boat was stationed farther off the front line. The newly-developed torpedo boat was charged with guarding Sampson's flagship when he broke the blockade to perform "frequent inspections, attacks, and pursuits," according to a correspondent aboard the New York.[31]

Except for the sinking of Merrimac, the duty proved tedious. "Blockade duty off the Cuban coast was long, dull and unremitting," wrote the historian Jim Leeke.[32] During the day, the blockade stationed constant lookouts. At night, a battleship shone a searchlight on the entrance of the harbor if the Spanish fleet attempted an escape under the cover of darkness. The chore was repeated daily for nearly two months. As a sailor aboard USS Gloucester put it, "what at first had been a pleasure had become a duty."[33]

As long as Cervera remained within Santiago Harbor, his fleet was relatively safe. The guns of the city were quite sufficient to make up for his fleet's deficiencies, and the area was well defended with sea mines, torpedoes, and other obstructions.[34] Nevertheless, Cervera was terribly outmatched. Though his ships were modern, they were too few, and their technical problems compounded his worries. The lack of refitting facilities in Santiago to assist with the repairs of the vessels in Cervera's squadron made the situation all the more desperate.[35]

For more than a month, the two fleets faced off, with only a few inconclusive skirmishes resulting. For his part, Cervera was content to wait in the hope that bad weather would scatter the Americans so that he could make a run to a position more favorable for engaging the enemy. However, US land forces began to drive on Santiago de Cuba, and by the end of June 1898, Cervera found himself unable to remain safely in the harbor, and Governor-General Ramón Blanco y Erenas wanted a sortie: "it is better for the honor of our arms that the squadron perish in battle...."[36]

The breakout was planned for 09:00 on July 3. That seemed the most logical time: the Americans would be at religious services, and waiting until night would only make the escape even more treacherous. By noon on July 2, the fleet had a full head of steam and had fallen into position for the breakout.[37]

At about 8:45 a.m., just as his ships had slipped their moorings, Admiral Sampson and two ships of his command, his flagship, the armored cruiser New York, and the torpedo boat USS Ericsson had left their positions for a trip to Siboney and a meeting with Major General William Rufus Shafter of the US Army.[38] That opened a gap in the western portion of the American blockade line, which left a window for Cervera.[1] Sampson's New York was one of only two ships in the squadron fast enough to catch Cervera if he managed to break through the blockade. Further, the battleship Massachusetts and the cruisers USS Newark and New Orleans had left that morning to coal at Guantanamo Bay.[38]

With the departure of Admiral Sampson, who had signaled, "Disregard movements of flagship," immediate command devolved to Commodore Schley in armored cruiser Brooklyn, which now became the de facto flagship of the blockade.

Thus, the blockade formation that morning consisted of Schley's Brooklyn, followed by the battleships Texas, Oregon, Iowa, and Indiana and the armed yachts USS Vixen and Gloucester.[1]

At 09:35, the navigator of Brooklyn sighted a plume of smoke coming from the mouth of the port and reported to Schley,

The enemy's ships are coming out![39]

Battle

 
Infanta Maria Teresa at São Vicente
 
Cristóbal Colón (left) and Vizcaya
 
Almirante Oquendo at São Vicente in the latter half of April 1898.
 
Furor chased by Iowa, Indiana and New York

The Spanish column made its way around Cay Smith at around 9:31 a.m. on July 3 and left the channel about five minutes later. In the lead was Cervera's flagship Infanta Maria Teresa, followed by Vizcaya, Cristóbal Colón, Almirante Oquendo, travelling at around 8–10 knots (15–19 km/h) and 800 yards (730 m) apart, followed by the torpedo-boat destroyers Plutón and Furor, respectively.[1] They then formed three echelons, the destroyers heading eastward, followed by Cristóbal Colón and Almirante Oquendo, and Infanta Maria Teresa and Vizcaya made for Brooklyn.[40]

The battle commenced almost immediately. At the mouth of the harbor, the American vessels, Texas, Iowa, Oregon, and Indiana, engulfed the Spanish fleet in a "hail of fire."[41] At 9:30 a.m., the first shot was fired by Iowa and Signal No. 250 was hoisted when the ships were seen in the channel.[42] The Spanish responded, supported by the batteries on Morro and Upper Socapa.[43] After leaving the channel, the Spanish vessels turned westward in column towards the American fleet.[44]

While the Spanish had taken the initiative by beginning the engagement, two factors slowed their escape. One was the continuing problem experienced in maintaining proper speed by Vizcaya;[35] the other was the poor quality of most of the coal in the Spanish holds. An expected resupply of high-quality anthracite[45] had been captured aboard the collier Restormel,[46] by the American auxiliary cruiser USS Saint Paul on May 25.[47]

Brooklyn headed nearly straight for Infanta Maria Teresa at first, but by 10:05, it was apparent they were on a collision course, and Commodore Schley ordered a sharp turn to starboard, the so-called "retrograde loop," when all of the other American ships had already turned to port.[40] That threatened Texas with collision and Captain Philip of Texas ordered "all engines back full," which brought Texas to a near standstill until Brooklyn passed across the bow of Texas.[40] Infanta Maria Teresa and Vizcaya then altered course to the west, Cristóbal Colón and Almirante Oquendo falling in behind, and the two squadrons paralleled each other.[40] Texas then swung behind Brooklyn, but Oregon then ran up on Texas and passed inboard, masking the fire of Texas. Oregon, initially to the rear of the action but the fastest ship in the US fleet, soon raced past Indiana, which had an engine problem and could go only 9 knots (17 km/h) at the time of the battle. Iowa had started from a disadvantaged position and was passed by Infanta Maria Teresa but hit her with two 12-inch (300 mm) rounds from 2,600 yards (2,400 m) and swung into the chase.[40] As Iowa was passed in turn by Cristóbal Colón, the Spanish ship hit her with two shots from her secondary battery. One of them struck near the waterline and caused Iowa to slow[40] and she therefore engaged Almirante Oquendo, bringing up the rear of Cervera's four cruisers. With the Spanish fleet past the American blockade, the battle became a chase.[48]

Rather than expose the entirety of his fleet to the American battle line, Cervera had signaled his other ships to continue to the southwest while he attempted to cover their escape by directly engaging Brooklyn, his nearest enemy. Though Brooklyn was hit more than 20 times during the battle, she suffered only two casualties, and her return fire resulted in the deaths of most of Cervera's bridge crew and grave damage to the ship generally. Under that brutal punishment, Infanta Maria Teresa began to burn furiously. According to Admiral Sampson's battle report, "it was afterward learned that the Infanta Maria Teresa's fire-main had been cut by one of [the] first shots."[49] Cervera ordered her aground at 10:35 in shallows along the Cuban coast and had been completely wrecked and aflame.[50] Admiral Cervera survived and was rescued after he had been picked up near Punta Cabrera by the crew of Gloucester.[51]

The rest of the Spanish fleet continued its race for the open sea. Almirante Oquendo was hit a total of 57 times and was driven out of the battle by the premature detonation of a shell stuck in a defective breech-block mechanism of an 11-inch turret, which killed the entire gun crew.[52] A boiler explosion finished her, and she was ordered scuttled by the mortally wounded Captain Lazaga. At 10:35 Almirante Oquendo ran aground no more than a mile beyond Infanta Maria Teresa. Meanwhile, Plutón and Furor made a dash in a direction opposite the rest of the Spanish squadron. Gloucester inflicted a considerable amount of damage by direct fire at close range to the destroyers, which eventually led to their destruction from the battleships Iowa, Indiana, and eventually New York. After receiving word of the battle, Sampson turned his flagship New York around and raced to join the fight. Furor was sunk at 10:50 before making the beach.[53] Plutón succeeded in grounding herself at 10:45 near Cabanas Bay. In total, Furor and Plutón lost two thirds of their men.[53]

Vizcaya was locked in a running gun duel for nearly an hour with Brooklyn. Despite steaming side by side with Schley's flagship at a range of about 1,200 yards (1,100 m) and even with some good shooting, which knocked out a secondary gun aboard Brooklyn,[53] almost none of the Spaniards' nearly 300 shots caused significant damage, and Brooklyn pounded Vizcaya with devastating fire. Subsequent claims by Admiral Cervera and later research by historians have suggested that nearly 85% of the Spanish ammunition at Santiago was utterly useless, defective, or simply filled with sawdust as a cost-saving measure for practice firing. The American ammunition had no such issues of lethality. Vizcaya continued the fight until she was overwhelmed and by the end of the engagement, she had been struck as many as 200 times by the fire from Brooklyn and Texas. Brooklyn had closed to within 950 yards (870 m) when she finally delivered an 8 inches (203 mm) round, which, according to witnesses, may have detonated a torpedo being prepared for launch.[54] A huge explosion ensued, Vizcaya was mortally wounded, and fires raged out of control that burned her reserves of ammunition that were on deck. She hauled down her flag and turned toward the Aserraderos beach to ground herself at 11:15.[54][48]

Schley signaled Indiana to go back to the harbor entrance, and Iowa was signaled to resume blockading station. Iowa, Ericsson, and Hist aided the crew of the burning Vizcaya. Meanwhile, Harvard and Gloucester rescued those of Infanta Maria Teresa and Almirante Oquendo. With flames and ready-to-explode ammunition on deck, the officers and sailors still ran into harm's way to rescue the Spanish crews. These proved to be some of the most valiant actions performed that day.

While Vizcaya was under fire, Cristóbal Colón had drawn ahead.[49] Within a little more than an hour, five of the six ships of the Spanish Caribbean Squadron had been destroyed or forced aground. Only one vessel, the speedy new armored cruiser Cristóbal Colón, still survived and steamed as fast as she could for the west and freedom. Though modern in every respect and possibly the fastest ship in either fleet, Cristóbal Colón had one serious problem: she had been only recently purchased from Italy, and her main 10-inch (254 mm) armament[35] had not yet been installed because of a contractual issue with Armstrong Whitworth. She therefore sailed with empty main turrets but retained her ten 6-inch (152 mm) secondary battery. That day, speed was her primary defense.

By the time Vizcaya had been beached, Cristóbal Colón was nearly six miles beyond Brooklyn and Oregon. At her best rate of nearly 15 knots (28 km/h), Cristóbal Colón slowly distanced herself from the pursuing US fleet.[54] Her closest antagonist, USS Brooklyn, had begun the battle with just two of her four engines coupled because of her long stay on the blockade line, and she could manage barely 16 knots (30 km/h) while she was building steam. As Brooklyn ineffectively fired 8-inch rounds at the rapidly-disappearing Cristóbal Colón, there was only one ship in the US fleet with a chance of maintaining the pursuit, Oregon, burning Cardiff coal and New York, doing 20 knots (37 km/h).[55]

 
The wreck of Vizcaya after the Battle of Santiago de Cuba.
 
Wreck of Vizcaya

For 65 min, Oregon pursued Cristóbal Colón. which hugged the coast and was unable to turn toward the open sea because Oregon was standing out about 1.5 mi (1.3 nmi; 2.4 km) from the course of Cristóbal Colón and would have been able to close the gap fatally of Cristóbal Colón had turned to a more southerly course.

Finally, three factors converged to end the chase. Cristóbal Colón had run through her supply of high-quality Cardiff coal and was forced to begin using an inferior grade obtained from Spanish reserves in Cuba. Also, peninsula jutting out from the coastline would soon force her to turn south, across Oregon's path. Finally, on the flagship Brooklyn, Commodore Schley signaled Oregon Captain Charles Edgar Clark to open fire. Despite the immense range still separating Oregon and Cristóbal Colón, the forward turret of Oregon launched a pair of 13-inch shells that bracketed the wake of Cristóbal Colón just astern of the ship.[55]

 
Vizcaya explodes

Vizcaya exploded at 1:20 p.m., Captain Jose de Paredes, declining to see his crew needlessly killed, abruptly turned the Cristóbal Colón toward the mouth of the Turquino River and ordered the scuttle valves opened and the colors struck as she grounded.[55][56] Captain Cook of Brooklyn went on board to receive the surrender. Oregon was in charge of the wreck of Cristóbal Colón wreck with orders to save her if possible. All of the prisoners were to be transferred to USS Resolute. Despite all efforts, Cristóbal Colón was taken by the sea and sank in shoal water. As the ships of the US fleet pushed through the carnage and rescued as many Spanish survivors as possible, one officer was fished out by sailors of Iowa. The man proved to be Captain Don Antonio Eulate of Vizcaya. He thanked his rescuers and presented his sword to Captain Robley Evans, who handed it back as an act of chivalry.[57]

By the end of the battle, the Spanish fleet had been completely destroyed. The Spanish lost more than 300 killed and 150 wounded out of 2,227 men, or approximately 22% of the fleet. 1,800 officers and men were taken prisoner by the Americans, and roughly 150 returned to Santiago de Cuba. The American fleet lost only one killed and one wounded, the former being Yeoman George Henry Ellis of the Brooklyn.[53][48] The Spanish ships were devastated by the overwhelming barrage of firepower by the Americans. However, according to historian David Trask, despite the overwhelming victory, only 1–3% of all rounds fired by the Americans found their mark.[58]

Sampson-Schley controversy

The American victory bred controversy in the ranks of the naval officer corps over the question of the commanding officer who deserved credit for the victory. Should it be Sampson, who was in operational command of the fleet, but absent when Cervera's force engaged the Americans, or Schley, who remained in tactical command during Sampson's absence and who saw the fight to a successful close from the bridge of Brooklyn? The controversy between the two officers began almost immediately after the conclusion of the battle.[citation needed]

At the conclusion of the battle, Sampson's flagship New York approached Brooklyn. Schley sent the message by signal flag: "The enemy has surrendered" and "We have gained a great victory." Against common practice at the end of a victorious battle, Sampson did not respond with the expected congratulatory remark, but rather, according to historian Joseph G. Dawson, "the answering signal was terse and seemed needlessly brusque."[59] After the messages were exchanged, more tension grew between the two officers when Schley requested for he and his crew to "have the honor of the surrender of the Cristobal Colon." With disregard to Schley and the other commanding officers, Sampson cabled Secretary Long, "The fleet under my command offers the nation as a Fourth of July present the whole of Cevera’s fleet." He invoked General William T. Sherman's message to President Abraham Lincoln after taking Atlanta in 1864 but made no reference to Schley.[60] A day after the news reached the United States, The New York Times published an article with the headline "Sampson's Fourth of July Victory," which expressed gratitude towards Sampson for his leadership during the battle.[61] In Sampson's hometown of Palmyra, New York, a respectful 100 shots were fired for his victory. Following the newspaper headlines were interviews and telegraphs from Sampson's wife, sister, and two sons. Each message displayed praise and congratulations for his accomplishments in the battle.

Less than two weeks before Sampson's battle report was due, reporters sensed that there was tension between the two officers. On July 5, Kentucky Representative Albert S. Berry went on record in favor of Schley by declaring, "Schley is the real hero of the incident. Sampson commands the fleet in those waters, but it was Commodore Schley in command when Cervera and his fleet made the plucky attempt at escape and it was under Schley that every one of that Spanish fleet met its destruction." Berry still did not impugn Sampson but believed that Schley deserved much of the credit for the American victory. The next day, a news report from the Baltimore American declared that "Schley [was] the real hero."[62]

The controversy quickly became a public spectacle inflamed by journalistic sensationalism, popular interest in the recent war, and in the war's celebration of military heroism. On August 9, 1898, the Springfield Republic claimed the controversy to be largely a product of writers determined "to get a brilliant hero out of the Santiago battle at any cost."[63] Many journalists felt that Sampson's "careful, thorough and comprehensive leadership" did not fit the mold of the brash American hero in the era of Rooseveltian masculinity. Just as early motion picture-makers such as Thomas Edison made films celebrating Schley's leadership at Santiago, journalists by and large placed Schley on a pedestal for winning the battle because he was the man standing on the bridge who led the fleet towards the enemy and victory in combat.

The controversy also sharply divided the Navy's officer corps. Alfred Thayer Mahan, author of The Influence of Sea Power upon History: 1660–1783, threw his considerable influence behind Sampson. He argued that it did not matter who was in command during the battle because the "stringent methods laid down" by Sampson brought about the ultimate victory.[64] In Mahan's eyes, the press and the public were robbing Sampson of the credit that he deserved since it was through his overall command that Schley had the means to defeat the enemy.[citation needed]

Within the Navy, the controversy sharpened when Long proposed promotions for the two officers. Prior to the war, both men had held the rank of captain, and both men were promoted to rear admiral to reflect their wartime commands. After the war, Long proposed for both officers to be promoted to vice admiral. Sampson had ranked number ten in the Naval Register and Schley ranked number eight.[65] Upon promotion, Sampson would be moved eight numbers up and Schley only six and would rank Sampson higher in the register than Schley. Alexander McClure, editor of the Philadelphia Times, warned President McKinley that the promotion of Sampson over Schley would be a "great injustice" in the eyes of the public. His warning was ignored, and the promotion of Sampson over Schley became permanent on March 3, 1899.[66]

Shortly thereafter, The New York Sun published an article that quoted Brooklyn's navigator, Lieutenant Commander Albon C. Hodgson, as saying that Schley gave orders to turn "hard aport" when first met by the Spanish fleet. That turn, in which Brooklyn had nearly collided with the battleship Texas, was a key critique of Schley's antagonist that Sampson and his supporters had been using to construct an argument of cowardice against Schley. Hodgson asked if he meant to starboard, and Schley replied "no." According to that testimony, Schley apparently said "damn the Texas; let her look out for herself!" Schley, denying any such remark, requested for Hodgson to write a formal statement retracting his accusations. He pointed out that such a statement would damage the reputation of not only Schley but also Hodgson. The latter complied and retracted his statement but requested Schley to write a statement explaining why he retracted his claim. Schley did not answer that request.[67]

Long grew increasingly frustrated by the issue and its detrimental effects within the service. In November 1899, he ordered all officers to refrain from discussing the matter in public. However, debate continued in private, and those against Schley "were determined to destroy his reputation through a court of inquiry" that would investigate Schley's actions and ultimately give credit to the appropriate officer. Schley had nothing to gain from a court of inquiry but was forced to seek a hearing on his own accord in order to clear his name. Outraged by the publication of Edgar S. Maclay's History of the United States Navy, which Schley supporters deemed slanderous to the admiral's reputation, Schley sought and received the court of inquiry.[68]

A court of inquiry opened on September 12, 1901 at the Washington Navy Yard to investigate 24 charges against Schley from his search for Cervera off Cienfuegos to the conclusion of the battle of Santiago de Cuba. Contrary to public opinion, the court concluded after 40 days of deliberations closely followed by the public and the press that Schley did not "project the right image of a naval officer" because of his failure to act "decisively between his departure from Key West to the time of the battle." In the court's findings, Schley was criticized for his route to the battle and for possibly endangering the Texas. It also referenced the "injustice to Lt. Cmdr. Hodgson when he published only a portion of the correspondence that passed between the officers about the matter." Admiral George Dewey, president of the court of inquiry and a so-called supporter of Schley, offered a dissenting opinion.[69]

Disappointed with the court's conclusions, Schley appealed his case to President Theodore Roosevelt. The president called for an end to all public disputes. Tensions died down temporarily, but arose after the publication of Long's personal memoir in which the former secretary of the navy credited Sampson fully and believed that Schley contributed little to the battle's outcome. Sampson died in 1902 and Schley in 1911, but the controversy left an internecine struggle within the Navy that in some ways tarnished its image after what had otherwise seemed a glorious naval victory.[citation needed]

Aftermath

The end of the Spanish–American War was in many ways a new beginning for the US Navy and marked a watershed moment in American and Spanish history. The defeat of the Spanish Navy gave the US nearly uncontested control of the seas surrounding Cuba. With resupply of the Spanish garrison nearly impossible, Spain ultimately sued for peace and surrendered in August, and the war was over. Some of the terms of surrender were as follows:

3. Que los Estados Unidos convienen en transportar todas las fuerzas españolas en dicho territorio al Reino de España con la menor demora posible… [That the United States agrees to carry all Spanish forces in that territory to the Kingdom of Spain with the least possible delay...]
5. Las autoridades españoles convienen en quitar, o ayudar a que sean quitadas por la Marina americana, todas las minas y demás entorpecimientos a la navegación que existen ahora en la bahía de Santiago de Cuba y su entrada. [The Spanish authorities agree to remove or help to remove with the American Navy, all mines or other obstructions to navigation that now exist in the Bay of Santiago de Cuba and its entrance.]
9. Que las fuerzas españolas saldrán de Santiago de Cuba con honores de guerra, depositando después sus armas en un lugar mutuamente convenido... [That the Spanish forces will leave Santiago de Cuba with the honors of war, afterwards depositing their weapons in a mutually agreed-upon place...][70][page needed]

The terms, upon which both sides came to an agreement during the 1898 Treaty of Paris (1898) negotiations, decided the fate of the remaining Spanish troops, vessels, and the matter of Cuba's sovereignty. Spanish prisoners-of-war who were not wounded were sent to Seavey's Island at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery, Maine, where they were confined at Camp Long from July to September 1898. The Americans treated Spain's officers, soldiers, and sailors with great respect. Ultimately, Spanish prisoners were returned to Spain with their "honors of war" on American ships.

The battle was the end of any noteworthy Spanish naval presence in the New World.[71] It forced Spain to reassess its strategy in Cuba and resulted in an ever-tightening blockade of the island. Fighting continued until August. When the Treaty of Paris was signed, all surviving Spanish capital ships were now husbanded to defend their homeland and left only isolated units of auxiliary vessels to defend the coast. Uncontested US control of the seas around Cuba made resupply of the Spanish garrison impossible and its surrender inevitable.[51] Admiral Cervera received different treatment from the sailors taken to Portsmouth. For a time, he was held at Annapolis, Maryland, where he was received with great enthusiasm by the people of that city.[72] The Battle of Santiago de Cuba brought Cervera peace of mind that he had fulfilled an officer's duties and that his fleet had upheld Spanish honor. His bravery in the face of the enemy's superiority garnered respect from Spanish and American sailors and officers alike. The Spanish prisoners-of-war were released upon the signing of the 1898 Treaty of Paris, and the remaining Spanish forces left Cuba. Civil order was left to the military government that the United States established. The US Army under the overall administration of General Leonard Wood governed the island for some time afterwards and, with help, removed many of the mines that had been laid in the bay.

In the imperial vacuum left by Spain's New World empire, the United States now exerted considerable influence both in annexing formal territories such as Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines and in subsequent American military interventions throughout the Caribbean over the next half-century.

 
Spanish Navy POWs at Seavey's Island
 
The sunken Reina Mercedes in the channel at Santiago de Cuba.

The late 19th century was a transitional period for the US Navy and for the growth of American power. The war and the conquest of territory seemed to validate American navalism and tipped the scale of US naval policy towards the full embrace of Mahanian sea power. The Spanish–American War and subsequent interventions in Latin America known collectively as the Banana Wars were indicative of American commitment to the Monroe Doctrine articulated by the Roosevelt Corollary, which committed the United States, through the Navy and Marine Corps particularly, to be an international police force in the Western Hemisphere.

Imperialist sentiments followed the victory of the US Navy and the newfound celebrity status of some of its commanders. Part of the impetus for new territorial expansion was the need for foreign naval bases and the need for a larger navy to take and maintain control of such bases. The Philippines, Guam, Puerto Rico, and others had become locations for US overseas naval bases and coaling stations, but native resistance remained high. The resistance in the Philippines developed into a colonial war between local guerrillas and US forces under Major General Elwell S. Otis, who was appointed military governor of the Philippines after the Spanish–American War. The territorial conflict was ironic because the roles of the Spanish–American War were now reversed. The US had fought to free Cuba from Spain's colonial power but now aimed to colonize the Philippines. Ultimately, the Spanish–American War brought to light deeply rooted conflicts between the principles of democracy and the urges of the buffing American imperialism.

Two of the Spanish ships, Infanta Maria Teresa and Cristóbal Colón, were later re-floated and taken over by the US. Both eventually foundered and were lost. Reina Mercedes, abandoned in Santiago Bay because of engine troubles, was an unprotected cruiser captured by the US Navy and used as a receiving ship until 1957 as USS Reina Mercedes.

All of the various flags, warship pennants, national combat flags, the royal standard, admirals' flags, and so on retrieved from the Spanish ships in the days following the battle are part of the United States Navy Trophy Flag Collection at the U.S. Naval Academy Museum in Annapolis, Maryland. The collection was given to the care of the US Naval Academy by an act of Congress in 1949.[73]

In 1998, in recognition of the hundredth anniversary of the battle and the Spanish–American War, the US Secretary of the Navy authorized the return of the National Combat Flag from the Spanish flagship Infanta Maria Teresa to the Spanish Navy via their Chief of Staff, who was to meet with the US Navy Chief of Naval Operations in Newport, Rhode Island. However, the return of the flag was aborted when the curator of the Naval Academy Museum, citing the congressional language from 1949, refused to surrender the banner.

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Nofi 1996, p. 174
  2. ^ a b c Nofi 1996, p. 185
  3. ^ See: USS Merrimac (1894)
  4. ^ Trask 1981, pp. 24–28
  5. ^ Trask 1981, pp. 14–24
  6. ^ DiGiantomasso, John (2012). "Battle of Santiago, July 3, 1898". The Spanish–American War Centennial Website. Retrieved December 6, 2019.
  7. ^ Hoganson, Kristin L. (2000). Fighting for American Manhood: How Gender Politics Provoked the Spanish-American and Philippine-American Wars. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. p. 89.
  8. ^ Campbell, W. Joseph (2013). The Year That Defined American Journalism: 1897 and the Clash of Paradigms. New York, London: Routledge. p. 9. American newspapers probably were never more popular or integral than they were in the late 1890s
  9. ^ Office of the Historian, Foreign Service Institute, United States Department of State (2016). "U.S. Diplomacy and Yellow Journalism, 1895–1898". Retrieved December 7, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ Kinzer, Stephen (2017). The True Flag: Theodore Roosevelt, Mark Twain, and the Birth of American Empire. New York: Henry Holt and Company. p. 2. In 1898, Americans plunged into the farthest-reaching debate in our history... The United States had to decide whether to join the race for colonies .... The United States had been a colony.... yet suddenly it found itself with the chance to rule faraway lands. This prospect thrilled some Americans. It horrified others. Their debate gripped the United States.
  11. ^ LaFeber, Walter (1967). The New Empire: An Interpretation of American Expansion, 1860–1898. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. ISBN 9780801490484.
  12. ^ Trask 1981, pp. 60–71
  13. ^ Nofi 1996, p. 79
  14. ^ Nofi 1996, pp. 78–80
  15. ^ Leeke 2009, pp. 84–86
  16. ^ Nofi 1996, p. 80
  17. ^ Trask 1981, p. 105
  18. ^ Leeke 2009, p. 88
  19. ^ Graham, George Edward; Schley, Winfield Scott (1902). Schley and Santiago: An Historical Account of the Blockade and the Final Destruction of the Spanish Fleet under Command of Admiral Pasquale Cervera, July 3, 1898. Chicago: W.B. Conkey.
  20. ^ Carter, Alden R. (1992). The Spanish–American War. New York: Franklin Watts, Inc. pp. 98–101. ISBN 9780531200780.
  21. ^ a b c Nofi 1996, p. 78
  22. ^ Trask 1981, p. 106
  23. ^ Leeke 2009, pp. 89–90
  24. ^ Nofi 1996, p. 81
  25. ^ Rentfrow, James C. (2014). Home Squadron: The U.S. Navy on the North Atlantic Station. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press. p. 137.
  26. ^ a b Leeke 2009, p. 92
  27. ^ Gannon 1958, p. 33
  28. ^ Gannon 1958, pp. 43–45
  29. ^ Murphy, W.J. (2018) [1898]. "A true account of the Naval battle as seen by me on board the Iowa". Battle of Santiago, Eyewitness Account. Naval History and Heritage Command.
  30. ^ Leeke 2009, p. 115
  31. ^ Goode 1899, p. 195
  32. ^ Leeke 2009, p. 121
  33. ^ Leeke 2009, p. 122
  34. ^ Nofi 1996, pp. 116–118
  35. ^ a b c Nofi 1996, p. 169
  36. ^ Nofi 1996, p. 171
  37. ^ Nofi 1996, p. 172
  38. ^ a b Nofi 1996, p. 173
  39. ^ Nofi 1996, p. 175
  40. ^ a b c d e f Nofi 1996, p. 176
  41. ^ Trask 1981, p. 263
  42. ^ That predefined signal flag indicated, "The enemy ships are escaping."
  43. ^ Nofi 1996, pp. 175–176
  44. ^ Goode 1899, p. 298
  45. ^ Nofi 1996, p. 87
  46. ^ Nofi 1996, p. 89
  47. ^ Nofi 1996, p. 170
  48. ^ a b c Symonds, Craig L. (1995). The Naval Institute Historical Atlas of the U.S. Navy. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press. pp. 114–115. ISBN 9781557507976.
  49. ^ a b Goode 1899, p. 299
  50. ^ Nofi 1996, p. 178
  51. ^ a b Nofi 1996, p. 184
  52. ^ Nofi 1996, p. 179
  53. ^ a b c d Nofi 1996, p. 180
  54. ^ a b c Nofi 1996, p. 181
  55. ^ a b c Nofi 1996, p. 182
  56. ^ Trask 1981, p. 264
  57. ^ Nofi 1996, p. 183
  58. ^ Trask 1981, pp. 265–266
  59. ^ Dawson 1993, p. 59
  60. ^ Dawson 1993, p. 60
  61. ^ West 1948, p. 286
  62. ^ West 1948, p. 287
  63. ^ West 1948, p. 291
  64. ^ West 1948, p. 290
  65. ^ "Sampson and Schley". New York Times. July 10, 1898.
  66. ^ Langley 1993, p. 89
  67. ^ Langley 1993, p. 90
  68. ^ Langley 1993, p. 91
  69. ^ Langley 1993, pp. 91, 93
  70. ^ Muller y Tejeiro, José (1898). Combates y Capitulación de Santiago de Cuba. Madrid: F. Marqués.
  71. ^ Office of the Historian, Foreign Service Institute, United States Department of State (2016). "The Spanish-American War, 1898". Retrieved December 8, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  72. ^ "Cervera at Annapolis". Chicago Tribune. July 17, 1898.
  73. ^ United States Naval Academy Museum. "Museum Collections". USNA. Retrieved December 8, 2019.

References

  • Azoy, A.C.M. Signal 250! The Sea Fight Off Santiago. New York: David McKay Company, Inc, 1964.
  • Bradford, James C. Crucible of Empire: The Spanish–American War & Its Aftermath. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 1993.
  • Dawson, Joseph G. III (1993). Bradford, James C. (ed.). William T. Sampson and Santiago: Blockade, Victory, and Controversy. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press.
  • Feuer, A. B. The Spanish–American War at Sea: Naval Action in the Atlantic. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger, 1995.
  • Gannon, Joseph (1958). The USS Oregon and the Battle of Santiago. New York: Comet Press.
  • Goldstein, Donald M., Katherine V. Dillon, J. Michael Wenger, and Robert J. Cressman: The Spanish–American War: The Story and Photographs. Brassey's 2001, ISBN 978-1-57488-303-9, p. 121–136 (restricted online copy, p. 121, at Google Books)
  • Goode, W.A.M. (1899). With Sampson through the War. New York: Doubleday & McClure.
  • Graham, George Edward and Winfield Scott Schley. Schley and Santiago; an Historical Account of the Blockade and Final Destruction of the Spanish Fleet under Command of Admiral Pasquale Cervera, July 3, 1898. Chicago: W.B. Conkey, 1902.
  • Hobson, Richmond Pearson. The Sinking of the Merrimac. New York: Century, 1899.
  • LaFeber, Walter. The New Empire: An Interpretation of American Expansion, 1860-1898. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1967.
  • Langley, Harold D. (1993). Bradford, James C. (ed.). Winfield Scott Schley and Santiago: A New Look at an Old Controversy. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press.
  • Leeke, Jim (2009). Manila and Santiago: The New Steel Navy In The Spanish–American War. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press.
  • Nofi, Albert A. (1996). The Spanish–American War, 1898. Conshohocken, Pennsylvania: Combined Books. ISBN 0-938289-57-8.
  • Rentfrow, James C. Home Squadron: The U.S. Navy on the North Atlantic Station. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 2014.
  • Spector, Ronald H. Admiral of the New Empire: The Life and Career of George Dewey. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1974.
  • Sweetman, Jack. Great American Naval Battles. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1998.
  • Tejeiro, José Müller Y. Combates Y Capitulación De Santiago De Cuba. Madrid: F. Marqués, 1898.
  • Titherington, Richard H. A History of the Spanish–American War of 1898. New York: D. Appleton, 1900
  • Trask, David F. (1981). The War with Spain in 1898. New York: Macmillan.
  • West, Richard S. Jr. (1948). Admirals of American Empire; the Combined Story of George Dewey, Alfred Thayer Mahan, Winfield Scott Schley and William Thomas Sampson. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill.
  • Wright, General Marcus. Leslie’s Official History of the Spanish–American War. Washington, D.C. War Records Office, 1900.

External links

  • Spanish–American War Centennial
  • Edison Film Sampson-Schley Controversy Tea Party
  • Edison Film Sampson-Schley Controversy Battle of Santiago

Coordinates: 20°01′11″N 75°48′50″W / 20.0198°N 75.8139°W / 20.0198; -75.8139

battle, santiago, cuba, part, spanish, american, warcombate, santiago, cuba, ildefonso, sanz, doménechdatejuly, 1898locationoff, santiago, cuba, caribbean, searesultamerican, victorybelligerentsunited, statesspaincommanders, leaderswilliam, sampson, winfield, . Battle of Santiago de CubaPart of the Spanish American WarCombate en Santiago de Cuba Ildefonso Sanz DomenechDateJuly 3 1898LocationOff Santiago de Cuba Caribbean SeaResultAmerican victoryBelligerentsUnited StatesSpainCommanders and leadersWilliam T Sampson Winfield S SchleyPascual Cervera Fernando Villaamil Strength5 battleships 2 armored cruisers 2 armed yachts 1 4 armored cruisers 2 destroyers 2 Casualties and losses1 killed 1 wounded 2 1 cargo ship sunk 3 343 killed 151 wounded 1 889 captured 4 armored cruisers sunk 2 destroyers sunk 2 The Battle of Santiago de Cuba was a decisive naval engagement that occurred on July 3 1898 between an American fleet led by William T Sampson and Winfield Scott Schley against a Spanish fleet led by Pascual Cervera y Topete which occurred during the Spanish American War The significantly more powerful US Navy squadron consisting of four battleships and two armored cruisers decisively defeated an outgunned squadron of the Royal Spanish Navy which consisted of four armored cruisers and two destroyers All of the Spanish ships were sunk and no American ship was lost The crushing loss sealed American victory in the Cuban theater of the war ensuring the independence of Cuba from Spanish rule Tensions between Spain and the United States worsened over the Spanish conduct during their efforts to quell the Cuban War of Independence with many Americans being agitated by largely exaggerated reports of Spanish atrocities against the Cubans In January 1898 fearing the fate of American interests in Cuba from the war the cruiser USS Maine was dispatched to protect them Less than a month later the cruiser exploded while lying at anchor in Havana harbor killing 261 sailors onboard and inflaming American opinion with Spain being portrayed as the culprit in the American media regardless of the actual source of the explosion Two months later war was declared The Americans realized that defeating a significant Spanish squadron then stationed in Cuba was vital to ensuring victory in the war A squadron consisting of six warships were dispatched to ensure success commanded by both Sampson and Schley each admiral having his own approach to naval warfare On July 3 the Spanish squadron steamed out of the harbor to engage with the Americans The Spanish being totally unprepared and outgunned made a desperate attempt to reach the open sea with the American battleships and cruisers in hot pursuit Superior force prevailed and the entire Spanish fleet was sunk with minimal casualties for the Americans who suffered only two men killed or wounded The Americans pulled a total of 1889 Spanish sailors from the water among them Cervera The captured Spaniards were treated with respect and care by the Americans and Cervera gained respect from the American officers for his dignified conduct during and after the battle Although the battle ensured the American campaign in Cuba would end in a success tensions soon arose between Sampson and Schley with various parties in the US Navy and the American public debating over which admiral had made the greater contribution to victory and the dispute reached the desk of Theodore Roosevelt The battle remains one of the most significant naval battles in US maritime history Contents 1 Background 1 1 Preliminary context 1 2 Spanish fleet 1 3 American fleet 1 4 Standoff at Santiago 2 Battle 3 Sampson Schley controversy 4 Aftermath 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksBackground EditPreliminary context Edit The battle marked the culmination of the Cuban Wars for Independence which had been waged by Cuban revolutionaries against Spanish imperial power for several decades The United States had political economic cultural and ideological interests in Cuba Within the larger context many American political leaders pushed by interventionist public opinion were outraged by the publication of a private letter by Spanish Minister Enrique Dupuy de Lome critical of US President William McKinley and by the destruction of the American armored cruiser USS Maine that was touted by newspapers at the time as the Battleship Maine for which a naval court of inquiry and American yellow journalism blamed Spain 4 Cuban revolutionaries had staged revolts against Spanish colonial authority in the Ten Years War 1868 1878 the Little War 1879 1880 and the Cuban War of Independence 1895 1898 5 During the last war Spanish General Valeriano Weyler established a policy of interning Cubans in camps he called reconcentrados which functioned as internment camps The etymology behind the re prefix is that formerly the Cubans lived in villages but now they were going to be redistributed into new villages under the hypocritical pretext that it was for their own protection Spanish forces gathered Cubans who lived in the countryside and centralized them in camps where they could be monitored As a consequence many Cubans died of disease and malnutrition That policy did as much to paint the Spanish as barbarians to the Cuban natives and the United States as any other item of misrule by the Spanish With outrage over Weyler s seemingly brutal policy and sympathy with the Cubans struggle building US public opinion pushed for war with Spain after the publication of the de Lome Letter in February Enrique Dupuy de Lome had been appointed the Spanish Minister to the United States in 1892 In that capacity it was his duty to refrain from allowing his personal beliefs to intervene with his public duty to support peaceful diplomatic relations between the United States and Spain However a letter that expressed his opposition to McKinley s foreign policy decisions was exposed and the New York Journal translated and printed the letter 6 Many Americans considered it an insult to the nation and to the president 7 Although Spain apologized on February 13 1898 Maine exploded and sank in Havana Harbor Cuba two days later and killed 266 American sailors After a hasty naval court of inquiry the American press blamed Spain and accused it of planting a mine that sank the battleship The war with Spain became known as the Correspondents War Journalists not only wrote stories about the conflict but also took part in the fight In 1898 the prestige of the press ran high 8 American society was changing as literacy rates increased There was a new revolution of readers As war zones became more open to the press journalists wrote eyewitness accounts of what was happening In an era before radio and television newspapers were the main source of information opinion and entertainment for the American public In New York City where the population was about 2 800 000 the combined circulation of daily papers was about 2 000 000 9 In response to the public s outcry McKinley took action against Spain On April 25 the United States declared war and claimed to have had no self serving interest in Cuba but some political and military leaders and imperialists believed that war would be an opportunity for the United States to expand territories overseas and to demonstrate its increasing naval power against a weak foe 10 Moreover the United States sought to expand economic ties with Cuba for its resources in sugar and tobacco all of which influenced America s decision to intervene It was evident that gaining territories across the globe would increase US strength and influence and tap markets for the products of American industry 11 page needed Spanish Prime Minister Praxedes Mateo Sagasta did not seek war with the United States He did not expect victory but knew that Spanish citizens would likely revolt if he conceded to American demands in Cuba Meanwhile Spanish naval leaders tried to employ a strategy that would not win the war outright but resist the US Navy as much as possible On May 1 1898 American and Spanish naval forces met in the Philippines at the Battle of Manila Bay which resulted in a decisive victory for the United States The Spanish government sent their fleet under Admiral Pascual Cervera y Topete to defend Cuba and keep an open line of communication with the Spanish garrison there Cervera opposed that strategy since he believed his squadron lacked the strength necessary to engage the American squadron He preferred to engage the Americans near the Canary Islands or to mount an attack against the American coast but he was overruled by his superiors in Madrid 12 Cervera s own misgivings reveal the seriousness of the situation faced It is impossible for me to give you an idea of the surprise and consternation experienced by all on the receipt of the order to sail Indeed that surprise is well justified for nothing can be expected of this expedition except the total destruction of the fleet or its hasty and demoralized return Lacking a clear strategy the Spanish policymakers at home may have hoped to end the war quickly in a glorious defeat against the more powerful US Navy 13 Cervera knew better but like a good officer followed orders to the letter There is a hint of his real views in his attack orders to the fleet He suggests they nail their flags to the masts that is not even to think about lowering them in surrender citation needed As the fleet was being massacred against superior firepower some captains in fact ran their ships aground and surrendered to save what was left of their men Spanish fleet Edit Before taking command of the Spanish Caribbean Squadron Cervera had served a variety of military and political roles then retired after a dispute with opposing politicians However when war against the United States broke Cervera was recalled into the Spanish Navy and given command of the Caribbean Squadron The squadron was to be dispatched from Spain with the ultimate destination of the Caribbean initially Puerto Rico but then changed to Cuba to reinforce the Spanish garrison defend the island from American invasion and break the American naval blockade 14 Before the outbreak of war Cervera attempted to inform Spanish officials of the Spanish Navy s weakness relative to the US Navy 15 Captain Fernando Villaamil the Second Officer in the Ministry of the Navy and a pioneer in destroyer warfare disagreed with Cervera s passivity and advocated Spain to offset American naval superiority by scattering the fleet and taking the initiative through quick and dispersed actions A lack of consensus between Cervera Villaamil and the Spanish government put Spanish naval strategy in flux from the beginning Fernando Villaamil c 1897 On April 29 Cervera steamed from Cape Verde Panic gripped the American people who did not know what his ships might do attack the largely undefended East Coast while the fleet sailed about in an effort to engage him prey upon American shipping or perhaps sail up the Potomac and set fire to Washington DC Ultimately Cervera did none of those but managed to evade the US fleet for several weeks confounded his American counterparts and recoaled in the process before he finally sought refuge in the harbor of Santiago de Cuba 16 On May 29 1898 an American squadron sighted Cervera s newest ship the cruiser Cristobal Colon and immediately established a blockade around the mouth of the harbor 17 The Spanish soon found themselves blockaded closely by an American semicircle of ships about six miles from the Morro by day and moving discreetly closer after nightfall 18 Moreover by early July the Spanish were nearly surrounded at Santiago from the east by an advancing American army numbering some 16 000 soldiers 3 000 Cuban insurgents to the west and the American fleet to the south 19 page needed The Spanish squadron consisted of the cruisers Almirante Oquendo Vizcaya Infanta Maria Teresa and Cristobal Colon in addition to Villaamil s destroyers Pluton and Furor The cruisers displaced approximately 7 000 tons each but they were not heavily armored and their armament did not match the Americans With the exception of Cristobal Colon which was more lightly armed the cruisers main armament consisted of two 11 inch 279 mm guns each and a secondary armament of ten 5 5 inch 140 mm guns 20 Cervera s fleet was at a further disadvantage relative to the Americans because of the condition of its ships The breech mechanisms in many of the Spanish guns were dangerously faulty and caused jams and other mishaps 21 Many of the ships boilers were in need of repair Several ships including Viscaya desperately needed bottom cleaning as they were suffering from extra drag from fouling 21 The most well protected ship in Cervera s fleet the second generation armored cruiser Cristobal Colon had not even had her main battery installed 21 and carried wooden dummy guns instead Finally Cervera s crews were poorly trained They lacked experience and practice in gunnery drills and their training had emphasized rapid fire at regular intervals but the Americans favored more deliberately aimed fire 22 23 Relative to the Americans fleet which consisted mainly of modern battleships Cervera s force was lightly armed a result of recent budget cuts but also a naval policy that for many years favored the construction of light swift ships to patrol the far flung oceanic empire Cristobal Colon With Cervera s fleet bottled in Santiago Captain General Ramon Blanco y Erenas the top military commander in Cuba ordered it to sortie from the harbor along the coast westward to Cienfuegos In Cervera s eyes escape from the bay seemed nearly impossible He strongly considered fleeing under protection of night but opted to sail by day instead to ensure the safe navigation of his ships through Santiago s narrow channel On July 3 1898 Cervera aboard his flagship Infanta Maria Teresa led the Spanish fleet out of the safety of the Santiago harbor at 7 min intervals American fleet Edit The primary elements of the American forces in Cuban waters were initially divided between two commands Rear Admiral William T Sampson of the North Atlantic Squadron and Commodore Winfield Scott Schley commanding the Flying Squadron 24 Although the two combined squadrons outnumbered the Spanish fleet victory was not achieved solely by American numerical superiority Rather victory resulted from strategic and tactical decisionmaking in addition to the general superiority of the American forces As the historian James C Rentfrow argues the American victory at Santiago was in many ways the culmination of an ongoing process towards the North Atlantic Fleet s construction as a combat unit 25 The American fleet was composed of many different types of vessels At the head of the fleet were Sampson s armored cruiser USS New York and Schley s armored cruiser USS Brooklyn New York and Brooklyn but only armored cruisers were well armed for their class 26 Schley s flagships were powerful cruisers but the primary firepower of the American fleet resided in its battleships USS Indiana USS Massachusetts USS Iowa and USS Texas The American battleships were modern steam powered and steel hulled coast defense battleships all built within the decade The oldest and least powerful of them was Texas a near sister ship to the famous Maine which had exploded in Havana Harbor in February The ships were armed with 13 inch 330 mm guns and could steam at speeds up to 17 knots 31 km h 26 Off Santiago Schley s Flying Squadron was merged into the larger fleet under Sampson s overall command To bolster the force US Navy Secretary John D Long ordered the battleship USS Oregon to sail from Mare Island California to join the fleet in the Caribbean The West coast s lone battleship steamed from San Francisco around Cape Horn to Key West to join the rest of Sampson s fleet in early May a 14 500 nautical mile 26 854 km journey completed in 66 days 27 The ship s armament included four 13 inch guns eight 8 inch 203 mm 30 caliber guns and 18 inch 457 mm thick steel armor With its 11 000 horsepower 8 203 kW engines it was propelled through the water at a rate upwards of 17 knots Its combined speed and firepower gave Oregon the nickname bulldog of the Navy 28 These were clearly superior ships observed W J Murphy a sailor aboard Iowa 29 The powerful battleships at least according to Murphy enabled the US fleet to be victorious in battle USS Brooklyn Battleships and cruisers however were not the only forces the Americans employed in the conflict Other vessels included torpedo boats like USS Porter light cruisers such as USS New Orleans and even the collier USS Merrimac which sank on June 3 30 Sampson specifically approached Lieutenant Richmond P Hobson the commanding officer charging him with the task to sink the collier in the channel in order to both blockade the Spanish fleet and to clear the narrow passage of any mines Standoff at Santiago Edit Sampson structured the blockade as a semicircle at the opening of the harbor An auxiliary ship floated around the edges and waited to be used if a forced entrance was necessary and a torpedo boat was stationed farther off the front line The newly developed torpedo boat was charged with guarding Sampson s flagship when he broke the blockade to perform frequent inspections attacks and pursuits according to a correspondent aboard the New York 31 Except for the sinking of Merrimac the duty proved tedious Blockade duty off the Cuban coast was long dull and unremitting wrote the historian Jim Leeke 32 During the day the blockade stationed constant lookouts At night a battleship shone a searchlight on the entrance of the harbor if the Spanish fleet attempted an escape under the cover of darkness The chore was repeated daily for nearly two months As a sailor aboard USS Gloucester put it what at first had been a pleasure had become a duty 33 As long as Cervera remained within Santiago Harbor his fleet was relatively safe The guns of the city were quite sufficient to make up for his fleet s deficiencies and the area was well defended with sea mines torpedoes and other obstructions 34 Nevertheless Cervera was terribly outmatched Though his ships were modern they were too few and their technical problems compounded his worries The lack of refitting facilities in Santiago to assist with the repairs of the vessels in Cervera s squadron made the situation all the more desperate 35 For more than a month the two fleets faced off with only a few inconclusive skirmishes resulting For his part Cervera was content to wait in the hope that bad weather would scatter the Americans so that he could make a run to a position more favorable for engaging the enemy However US land forces began to drive on Santiago de Cuba and by the end of June 1898 Cervera found himself unable to remain safely in the harbor and Governor General Ramon Blanco y Erenas wanted a sortie it is better for the honor of our arms that the squadron perish in battle 36 The breakout was planned for 09 00 on July 3 That seemed the most logical time the Americans would be at religious services and waiting until night would only make the escape even more treacherous By noon on July 2 the fleet had a full head of steam and had fallen into position for the breakout 37 At about 8 45 a m just as his ships had slipped their moorings Admiral Sampson and two ships of his command his flagship the armored cruiser New York and the torpedo boat USS Ericsson had left their positions for a trip to Siboney and a meeting with Major General William Rufus Shafter of the US Army 38 That opened a gap in the western portion of the American blockade line which left a window for Cervera 1 Sampson s New York was one of only two ships in the squadron fast enough to catch Cervera if he managed to break through the blockade Further the battleship Massachusetts and the cruisers USS Newark and New Orleans had left that morning to coal at Guantanamo Bay 38 With the departure of Admiral Sampson who had signaled Disregard movements of flagship immediate command devolved to Commodore Schley in armored cruiser Brooklyn which now became the de facto flagship of the blockade Thus the blockade formation that morning consisted of Schley s Brooklyn followed by the battleships Texas Oregon Iowa and Indiana and the armed yachts USS Vixen and Gloucester 1 At 09 35 the navigator of Brooklyn sighted a plume of smoke coming from the mouth of the port and reported to Schley The enemy s ships are coming out 39 Battle Edit Infanta Maria Teresa at Sao Vicente Cristobal Colon left and Vizcaya Almirante Oquendo at Sao Vicente in the latter half of April 1898 Furor chased by Iowa Indiana and New York Ha llegado el momento solemne de lanzarse a la pelea Asi nos lo exige el sagrado nombre de Espana y el honor de su bandera gloriosa He querido que asistais conmigo a esta cita con el enemigo luciendo el uniforme de gala Se que os extrana esta orden porque es impropia en combate pero es la ropa que vestimos los marinos de Espana en las grandes solemnidades y no creo que haya momento mas solemne en la vida de un soldado que aquel en que se muere por la Patria El enemigo codicia nuestros viejos y gloriosos cascos Para ello ha enviado contra nosotros todo el poderio de su joven escuadra Pero solo las astillas de nuestras naves podra tomar y solo podra arrebatarnos nuestras armas cuando cadaveres ya flotemos sobre estas aguas que han sido y son de Espana Hijos mios El enemigo nos aventaja en fuerzas pero no nos iguala en valor Clavad las banderas y ni un solo navio prisionero Dotacion de mi escuadra Viva siempre Espana Zafarrancho de combate y que el Senor acoja nuestras almas The solemn moment has arrived to fight This is what the sacred name of Spain and the honor of its glorious flag demands of us I wanted you to attend this appointment with the enemy with me wearing the dress uniform I know that this order is strange because it is improper in combat but these are the clothes that the sailors of Spain wore on great solemnities and I do not believe that there is a more solemn time in the life of a soldier than that in which he dies for the Homeland The enemy covets our old and glorious hulks For this he has sent against us all the might of his young squadron But only the splinters of our ships will he be able to take and only obtain our weapons when corpses we float on these waters which have been and are Spain s My sons The enemy surpasses us in forces but it does not equal us in valor Nail the flags and not a single prisoner The motto of my squadron Long live Spain Battle stations and may the Lord welcome our souls Pascual Cervera y Topete s speech before the battleThe Spanish column made its way around Cay Smith at around 9 31 a m on July 3 and left the channel about five minutes later In the lead was Cervera s flagship Infanta Maria Teresa followed by Vizcaya Cristobal Colon Almirante Oquendo travelling at around 8 10 knots 15 19 km h and 800 yards 730 m apart followed by the torpedo boat destroyers Pluton and Furor respectively 1 They then formed three echelons the destroyers heading eastward followed by Cristobal Colon and Almirante Oquendo and Infanta Maria Teresa and Vizcaya made for Brooklyn 40 The battle commenced almost immediately At the mouth of the harbor the American vessels Texas Iowa Oregon and Indiana engulfed the Spanish fleet in a hail of fire 41 At 9 30 a m the first shot was fired by Iowa and Signal No 250 was hoisted when the ships were seen in the channel 42 The Spanish responded supported by the batteries on Morro and Upper Socapa 43 After leaving the channel the Spanish vessels turned westward in column towards the American fleet 44 While the Spanish had taken the initiative by beginning the engagement two factors slowed their escape One was the continuing problem experienced in maintaining proper speed by Vizcaya 35 the other was the poor quality of most of the coal in the Spanish holds An expected resupply of high quality anthracite 45 had been captured aboard the collier Restormel 46 by the American auxiliary cruiser USS Saint Paul on May 25 47 Brooklyn headed nearly straight for Infanta Maria Teresa at first but by 10 05 it was apparent they were on a collision course and Commodore Schley ordered a sharp turn to starboard the so called retrograde loop when all of the other American ships had already turned to port 40 That threatened Texas with collision and Captain Philip of Texas ordered all engines back full which brought Texas to a near standstill until Brooklyn passed across the bow of Texas 40 Infanta Maria Teresa and Vizcaya then altered course to the west Cristobal Colon and Almirante Oquendo falling in behind and the two squadrons paralleled each other 40 Texas then swung behind Brooklyn but Oregon then ran up on Texas and passed inboard masking the fire of Texas Oregon initially to the rear of the action but the fastest ship in the US fleet soon raced past Indiana which had an engine problem and could go only 9 knots 17 km h at the time of the battle Iowa had started from a disadvantaged position and was passed by Infanta Maria Teresa but hit her with two 12 inch 300 mm rounds from 2 600 yards 2 400 m and swung into the chase 40 As Iowa was passed in turn by Cristobal Colon the Spanish ship hit her with two shots from her secondary battery One of them struck near the waterline and caused Iowa to slow 40 and she therefore engaged Almirante Oquendo bringing up the rear of Cervera s four cruisers With the Spanish fleet past the American blockade the battle became a chase 48 Rather than expose the entirety of his fleet to the American battle line Cervera had signaled his other ships to continue to the southwest while he attempted to cover their escape by directly engaging Brooklyn his nearest enemy Though Brooklyn was hit more than 20 times during the battle she suffered only two casualties and her return fire resulted in the deaths of most of Cervera s bridge crew and grave damage to the ship generally Under that brutal punishment Infanta Maria Teresa began to burn furiously According to Admiral Sampson s battle report it was afterward learned that the Infanta Maria Teresa s fire main had been cut by one of the first shots 49 Cervera ordered her aground at 10 35 in shallows along the Cuban coast and had been completely wrecked and aflame 50 Admiral Cervera survived and was rescued after he had been picked up near Punta Cabrera by the crew of Gloucester 51 The rest of the Spanish fleet continued its race for the open sea Almirante Oquendo was hit a total of 57 times and was driven out of the battle by the premature detonation of a shell stuck in a defective breech block mechanism of an 11 inch turret which killed the entire gun crew 52 A boiler explosion finished her and she was ordered scuttled by the mortally wounded Captain Lazaga At 10 35 Almirante Oquendo ran aground no more than a mile beyond Infanta Maria Teresa Meanwhile Pluton and Furor made a dash in a direction opposite the rest of the Spanish squadron Gloucester inflicted a considerable amount of damage by direct fire at close range to the destroyers which eventually led to their destruction from the battleships Iowa Indiana and eventually New York After receiving word of the battle Sampson turned his flagship New York around and raced to join the fight Furor was sunk at 10 50 before making the beach 53 Pluton succeeded in grounding herself at 10 45 near Cabanas Bay In total Furor and Pluton lost two thirds of their men 53 Vizcaya was locked in a running gun duel for nearly an hour with Brooklyn Despite steaming side by side with Schley s flagship at a range of about 1 200 yards 1 100 m and even with some good shooting which knocked out a secondary gun aboard Brooklyn 53 almost none of the Spaniards nearly 300 shots caused significant damage and Brooklyn pounded Vizcaya with devastating fire Subsequent claims by Admiral Cervera and later research by historians have suggested that nearly 85 of the Spanish ammunition at Santiago was utterly useless defective or simply filled with sawdust as a cost saving measure for practice firing The American ammunition had no such issues of lethality Vizcaya continued the fight until she was overwhelmed and by the end of the engagement she had been struck as many as 200 times by the fire from Brooklyn and Texas Brooklyn had closed to within 950 yards 870 m when she finally delivered an 8 inches 203 mm round which according to witnesses may have detonated a torpedo being prepared for launch 54 A huge explosion ensued Vizcaya was mortally wounded and fires raged out of control that burned her reserves of ammunition that were on deck She hauled down her flag and turned toward the Aserraderos beach to ground herself at 11 15 54 48 Schley signaled Indiana to go back to the harbor entrance and Iowa was signaled to resume blockading station Iowa Ericsson and Hist aided the crew of the burning Vizcaya Meanwhile Harvard and Gloucester rescued those of Infanta Maria Teresa and Almirante Oquendo With flames and ready to explode ammunition on deck the officers and sailors still ran into harm s way to rescue the Spanish crews These proved to be some of the most valiant actions performed that day While Vizcaya was under fire Cristobal Colon had drawn ahead 49 Within a little more than an hour five of the six ships of the Spanish Caribbean Squadron had been destroyed or forced aground Only one vessel the speedy new armored cruiser Cristobal Colon still survived and steamed as fast as she could for the west and freedom Though modern in every respect and possibly the fastest ship in either fleet Cristobal Colon had one serious problem she had been only recently purchased from Italy and her main 10 inch 254 mm armament 35 had not yet been installed because of a contractual issue with Armstrong Whitworth She therefore sailed with empty main turrets but retained her ten 6 inch 152 mm secondary battery That day speed was her primary defense By the time Vizcaya had been beached Cristobal Colon was nearly six miles beyond Brooklyn and Oregon At her best rate of nearly 15 knots 28 km h Cristobal Colon slowly distanced herself from the pursuing US fleet 54 Her closest antagonist USS Brooklyn had begun the battle with just two of her four engines coupled because of her long stay on the blockade line and she could manage barely 16 knots 30 km h while she was building steam As Brooklyn ineffectively fired 8 inch rounds at the rapidly disappearing Cristobal Colon there was only one ship in the US fleet with a chance of maintaining the pursuit Oregon burning Cardiff coal and New York doing 20 knots 37 km h 55 The wreck of Vizcaya after the Battle of Santiago de Cuba Wreck of Vizcaya For 65 min Oregon pursued Cristobal Colon which hugged the coast and was unable to turn toward the open sea because Oregon was standing out about 1 5 mi 1 3 nmi 2 4 km from the course of Cristobal Colon and would have been able to close the gap fatally of Cristobal Colon had turned to a more southerly course Finally three factors converged to end the chase Cristobal Colon had run through her supply of high quality Cardiff coal and was forced to begin using an inferior grade obtained from Spanish reserves in Cuba Also peninsula jutting out from the coastline would soon force her to turn south across Oregon s path Finally on the flagship Brooklyn Commodore Schley signaled Oregon Captain Charles Edgar Clark to open fire Despite the immense range still separating Oregon and Cristobal Colon the forward turret of Oregon launched a pair of 13 inch shells that bracketed the wake of Cristobal Colon just astern of the ship 55 Vizcaya explodes Vizcaya exploded at 1 20 p m Captain Jose de Paredes declining to see his crew needlessly killed abruptly turned the Cristobal Colon toward the mouth of the Turquino River and ordered the scuttle valves opened and the colors struck as she grounded 55 56 Captain Cook of Brooklyn went on board to receive the surrender Oregon was in charge of the wreck of Cristobal Colon wreck with orders to save her if possible All of the prisoners were to be transferred to USS Resolute Despite all efforts Cristobal Colon was taken by the sea and sank in shoal water As the ships of the US fleet pushed through the carnage and rescued as many Spanish survivors as possible one officer was fished out by sailors of Iowa The man proved to be Captain Don Antonio Eulate of Vizcaya He thanked his rescuers and presented his sword to Captain Robley Evans who handed it back as an act of chivalry 57 By the end of the battle the Spanish fleet had been completely destroyed The Spanish lost more than 300 killed and 150 wounded out of 2 227 men or approximately 22 of the fleet 1 800 officers and men were taken prisoner by the Americans and roughly 150 returned to Santiago de Cuba The American fleet lost only one killed and one wounded the former being Yeoman George Henry Ellis of the Brooklyn 53 48 The Spanish ships were devastated by the overwhelming barrage of firepower by the Americans However according to historian David Trask despite the overwhelming victory only 1 3 of all rounds fired by the Americans found their mark 58 Sampson Schley controversy EditThe American victory bred controversy in the ranks of the naval officer corps over the question of the commanding officer who deserved credit for the victory Should it be Sampson who was in operational command of the fleet but absent when Cervera s force engaged the Americans or Schley who remained in tactical command during Sampson s absence and who saw the fight to a successful close from the bridge of Brooklyn The controversy between the two officers began almost immediately after the conclusion of the battle citation needed At the conclusion of the battle Sampson s flagship New York approached Brooklyn Schley sent the message by signal flag The enemy has surrendered and We have gained a great victory Against common practice at the end of a victorious battle Sampson did not respond with the expected congratulatory remark but rather according to historian Joseph G Dawson the answering signal was terse and seemed needlessly brusque 59 After the messages were exchanged more tension grew between the two officers when Schley requested for he and his crew to have the honor of the surrender of the Cristobal Colon With disregard to Schley and the other commanding officers Sampson cabled Secretary Long The fleet under my command offers the nation as a Fourth of July present the whole of Cevera s fleet He invoked General William T Sherman s message to President Abraham Lincoln after taking Atlanta in 1864 but made no reference to Schley 60 A day after the news reached the United States The New York Times published an article with the headline Sampson s Fourth of July Victory which expressed gratitude towards Sampson for his leadership during the battle 61 In Sampson s hometown of Palmyra New York a respectful 100 shots were fired for his victory Following the newspaper headlines were interviews and telegraphs from Sampson s wife sister and two sons Each message displayed praise and congratulations for his accomplishments in the battle Less than two weeks before Sampson s battle report was due reporters sensed that there was tension between the two officers On July 5 Kentucky Representative Albert S Berry went on record in favor of Schley by declaring Schley is the real hero of the incident Sampson commands the fleet in those waters but it was Commodore Schley in command when Cervera and his fleet made the plucky attempt at escape and it was under Schley that every one of that Spanish fleet met its destruction Berry still did not impugn Sampson but believed that Schley deserved much of the credit for the American victory The next day a news report from the Baltimore American declared that Schley was the real hero 62 The controversy quickly became a public spectacle inflamed by journalistic sensationalism popular interest in the recent war and in the war s celebration of military heroism On August 9 1898 the Springfield Republic claimed the controversy to be largely a product of writers determined to get a brilliant hero out of the Santiago battle at any cost 63 Many journalists felt that Sampson s careful thorough and comprehensive leadership did not fit the mold of the brash American hero in the era of Rooseveltian masculinity Just as early motion picture makers such as Thomas Edison made films celebrating Schley s leadership at Santiago journalists by and large placed Schley on a pedestal for winning the battle because he was the man standing on the bridge who led the fleet towards the enemy and victory in combat The controversy also sharply divided the Navy s officer corps Alfred Thayer Mahan author of The Influence of Sea Power upon History 1660 1783 threw his considerable influence behind Sampson He argued that it did not matter who was in command during the battle because the stringent methods laid down by Sampson brought about the ultimate victory 64 In Mahan s eyes the press and the public were robbing Sampson of the credit that he deserved since it was through his overall command that Schley had the means to defeat the enemy citation needed Within the Navy the controversy sharpened when Long proposed promotions for the two officers Prior to the war both men had held the rank of captain and both men were promoted to rear admiral to reflect their wartime commands After the war Long proposed for both officers to be promoted to vice admiral Sampson had ranked number ten in the Naval Register and Schley ranked number eight 65 Upon promotion Sampson would be moved eight numbers up and Schley only six and would rank Sampson higher in the register than Schley Alexander McClure editor of the Philadelphia Times warned President McKinley that the promotion of Sampson over Schley would be a great injustice in the eyes of the public His warning was ignored and the promotion of Sampson over Schley became permanent on March 3 1899 66 Shortly thereafter The New York Sun published an article that quoted Brooklyn s navigator Lieutenant Commander Albon C Hodgson as saying that Schley gave orders to turn hard aport when first met by the Spanish fleet That turn in which Brooklyn had nearly collided with the battleship Texas was a key critique of Schley s antagonist that Sampson and his supporters had been using to construct an argument of cowardice against Schley Hodgson asked if he meant to starboard and Schley replied no According to that testimony Schley apparently said damn the Texas let her look out for herself Schley denying any such remark requested for Hodgson to write a formal statement retracting his accusations He pointed out that such a statement would damage the reputation of not only Schley but also Hodgson The latter complied and retracted his statement but requested Schley to write a statement explaining why he retracted his claim Schley did not answer that request 67 Long grew increasingly frustrated by the issue and its detrimental effects within the service In November 1899 he ordered all officers to refrain from discussing the matter in public However debate continued in private and those against Schley were determined to destroy his reputation through a court of inquiry that would investigate Schley s actions and ultimately give credit to the appropriate officer Schley had nothing to gain from a court of inquiry but was forced to seek a hearing on his own accord in order to clear his name Outraged by the publication of Edgar S Maclay s History of the United States Navy which Schley supporters deemed slanderous to the admiral s reputation Schley sought and received the court of inquiry 68 A court of inquiry opened on September 12 1901 at the Washington Navy Yard to investigate 24 charges against Schley from his search for Cervera off Cienfuegos to the conclusion of the battle of Santiago de Cuba Contrary to public opinion the court concluded after 40 days of deliberations closely followed by the public and the press that Schley did not project the right image of a naval officer because of his failure to act decisively between his departure from Key West to the time of the battle In the court s findings Schley was criticized for his route to the battle and for possibly endangering the Texas It also referenced the injustice to Lt Cmdr Hodgson when he published only a portion of the correspondence that passed between the officers about the matter Admiral George Dewey president of the court of inquiry and a so called supporter of Schley offered a dissenting opinion 69 Disappointed with the court s conclusions Schley appealed his case to President Theodore Roosevelt The president called for an end to all public disputes Tensions died down temporarily but arose after the publication of Long s personal memoir in which the former secretary of the navy credited Sampson fully and believed that Schley contributed little to the battle s outcome Sampson died in 1902 and Schley in 1911 but the controversy left an internecine struggle within the Navy that in some ways tarnished its image after what had otherwise seemed a glorious naval victory citation needed Aftermath EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The end of the Spanish American War was in many ways a new beginning for the US Navy and marked a watershed moment in American and Spanish history The defeat of the Spanish Navy gave the US nearly uncontested control of the seas surrounding Cuba With resupply of the Spanish garrison nearly impossible Spain ultimately sued for peace and surrendered in August and the war was over Some of the terms of surrender were as follows 3 Que los Estados Unidos convienen en transportar todas las fuerzas espanolas en dicho territorio al Reino de Espana con la menor demora posible That the United States agrees to carry all Spanish forces in that territory to the Kingdom of Spain with the least possible delay 5 Las autoridades espanoles convienen en quitar o ayudar a que sean quitadas por la Marina americana todas las minas y demas entorpecimientos a la navegacion que existen ahora en la bahia de Santiago de Cuba y su entrada The Spanish authorities agree to remove or help to remove with the American Navy all mines or other obstructions to navigation that now exist in the Bay of Santiago de Cuba and its entrance 9 Que las fuerzas espanolas saldran de Santiago de Cuba con honores de guerra depositando despues sus armas en un lugar mutuamente convenido That the Spanish forces will leave Santiago de Cuba with the honors of war afterwards depositing their weapons in a mutually agreed upon place 70 page needed The terms upon which both sides came to an agreement during the 1898 Treaty of Paris 1898 negotiations decided the fate of the remaining Spanish troops vessels and the matter of Cuba s sovereignty Spanish prisoners of war who were not wounded were sent to Seavey s Island at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery Maine where they were confined at Camp Long from July to September 1898 The Americans treated Spain s officers soldiers and sailors with great respect Ultimately Spanish prisoners were returned to Spain with their honors of war on American ships The battle was the end of any noteworthy Spanish naval presence in the New World 71 It forced Spain to reassess its strategy in Cuba and resulted in an ever tightening blockade of the island Fighting continued until August When the Treaty of Paris was signed all surviving Spanish capital ships were now husbanded to defend their homeland and left only isolated units of auxiliary vessels to defend the coast Uncontested US control of the seas around Cuba made resupply of the Spanish garrison impossible and its surrender inevitable 51 Admiral Cervera received different treatment from the sailors taken to Portsmouth For a time he was held at Annapolis Maryland where he was received with great enthusiasm by the people of that city 72 The Battle of Santiago de Cuba brought Cervera peace of mind that he had fulfilled an officer s duties and that his fleet had upheld Spanish honor His bravery in the face of the enemy s superiority garnered respect from Spanish and American sailors and officers alike The Spanish prisoners of war were released upon the signing of the 1898 Treaty of Paris and the remaining Spanish forces left Cuba Civil order was left to the military government that the United States established The US Army under the overall administration of General Leonard Wood governed the island for some time afterwards and with help removed many of the mines that had been laid in the bay In the imperial vacuum left by Spain s New World empire the United States now exerted considerable influence both in annexing formal territories such as Puerto Rico Guam and the Philippines and in subsequent American military interventions throughout the Caribbean over the next half century Spanish Navy POWs at Seavey s Island The sunken Reina Mercedes in the channel at Santiago de Cuba The late 19th century was a transitional period for the US Navy and for the growth of American power The war and the conquest of territory seemed to validate American navalism and tipped the scale of US naval policy towards the full embrace of Mahanian sea power The Spanish American War and subsequent interventions in Latin America known collectively as the Banana Wars were indicative of American commitment to the Monroe Doctrine articulated by the Roosevelt Corollary which committed the United States through the Navy and Marine Corps particularly to be an international police force in the Western Hemisphere Imperialist sentiments followed the victory of the US Navy and the newfound celebrity status of some of its commanders Part of the impetus for new territorial expansion was the need for foreign naval bases and the need for a larger navy to take and maintain control of such bases The Philippines Guam Puerto Rico and others had become locations for US overseas naval bases and coaling stations but native resistance remained high The resistance in the Philippines developed into a colonial war between local guerrillas and US forces under Major General Elwell S Otis who was appointed military governor of the Philippines after the Spanish American War The territorial conflict was ironic because the roles of the Spanish American War were now reversed The US had fought to free Cuba from Spain s colonial power but now aimed to colonize the Philippines Ultimately the Spanish American War brought to light deeply rooted conflicts between the principles of democracy and the urges of the buffing American imperialism Two of the Spanish ships Infanta Maria Teresa and Cristobal Colon were later re floated and taken over by the US Both eventually foundered and were lost Reina Mercedes abandoned in Santiago Bay because of engine troubles was an unprotected cruiser captured by the US Navy and used as a receiving ship until 1957 as USS Reina Mercedes All of the various flags warship pennants national combat flags the royal standard admirals flags and so on retrieved from the Spanish ships in the days following the battle are part of the United States Navy Trophy Flag Collection at the U S Naval Academy Museum in Annapolis Maryland The collection was given to the care of the US Naval Academy by an act of Congress in 1949 73 In 1998 in recognition of the hundredth anniversary of the battle and the Spanish American War the US Secretary of the Navy authorized the return of the National Combat Flag from the Spanish flagship Infanta Maria Teresa to the Spanish Navy via their Chief of Staff who was to meet with the US Navy Chief of Naval Operations in Newport Rhode Island However the return of the flag was aborted when the curator of the Naval Academy Museum citing the congressional language from 1949 refused to surrender the banner Notes Edit a b c d Nofi 1996 p 174 a b c Nofi 1996 p 185 See USS Merrimac 1894 Trask 1981 pp 24 28 Trask 1981 pp 14 24 DiGiantomasso John 2012 Battle of Santiago July 3 1898 The Spanish American War Centennial Website Retrieved December 6 2019 Hoganson Kristin L 2000 Fighting for American Manhood How Gender Politics Provoked the Spanish American and Philippine American Wars New Haven and London Yale University Press p 89 Campbell W Joseph 2013 The Year That Defined American Journalism 1897 and the Clash of Paradigms New York London Routledge p 9 American newspapers probably were never more popular or integral than they were in the late 1890s Office of the Historian Foreign Service Institute United States Department of State 2016 U S Diplomacy and Yellow Journalism 1895 1898 Retrieved December 7 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Kinzer Stephen 2017 The True Flag Theodore Roosevelt Mark Twain and the Birth of American Empire New York Henry Holt and Company p 2 In 1898 Americans plunged into the farthest reaching debate in our history The United States had to decide whether to join the race for colonies The United States had been a colony yet suddenly it found itself with the chance to rule faraway lands This prospect thrilled some Americans It horrified others Their debate gripped the United States LaFeber Walter 1967 The New Empire An Interpretation of American Expansion 1860 1898 Ithaca NY Cornell University Press ISBN 9780801490484 Trask 1981 pp 60 71 Nofi 1996 p 79 Nofi 1996 pp 78 80 Leeke 2009 pp 84 86 Nofi 1996 p 80 Trask 1981 p 105 Leeke 2009 p 88 Graham George Edward Schley Winfield Scott 1902 Schley and Santiago An Historical Account of the Blockade and the Final Destruction of the Spanish Fleet under Command of Admiral Pasquale Cervera July 3 1898 Chicago W B Conkey Carter Alden R 1992 The Spanish American War New York Franklin Watts Inc pp 98 101 ISBN 9780531200780 a b c Nofi 1996 p 78 Trask 1981 p 106 Leeke 2009 pp 89 90 Nofi 1996 p 81 Rentfrow James C 2014 Home Squadron The U S Navy on the North Atlantic Station Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press p 137 a b Leeke 2009 p 92 Gannon 1958 p 33 Gannon 1958 pp 43 45 Murphy W J 2018 1898 A true account of the Naval battle as seen by me on board the Iowa Battle of Santiago Eyewitness Account Naval History and Heritage Command Leeke 2009 p 115 Goode 1899 p 195 Leeke 2009 p 121 Leeke 2009 p 122 Nofi 1996 pp 116 118 a b c Nofi 1996 p 169 Nofi 1996 p 171 Nofi 1996 p 172 a b Nofi 1996 p 173 Nofi 1996 p 175 a b c d e f Nofi 1996 p 176 Trask 1981 p 263 That predefined signal flag indicated The enemy ships are escaping Nofi 1996 pp 175 176 Goode 1899 p 298 Nofi 1996 p 87 Nofi 1996 p 89 Nofi 1996 p 170 a b c Symonds Craig L 1995 The Naval Institute Historical Atlas of the U S Navy Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press pp 114 115 ISBN 9781557507976 a b Goode 1899 p 299 Nofi 1996 p 178 a b Nofi 1996 p 184 Nofi 1996 p 179 a b c d Nofi 1996 p 180 a b c Nofi 1996 p 181 a b c Nofi 1996 p 182 Trask 1981 p 264 Nofi 1996 p 183 Trask 1981 pp 265 266 Dawson 1993 p 59 Dawson 1993 p 60 West 1948 p 286 West 1948 p 287 West 1948 p 291 West 1948 p 290 Sampson and Schley New York Times July 10 1898 Langley 1993 p 89 Langley 1993 p 90 Langley 1993 p 91 Langley 1993 pp 91 93 Muller y Tejeiro Jose 1898 Combates y Capitulacion de Santiago de Cuba Madrid F Marques Office of the Historian Foreign Service Institute United States Department of State 2016 The Spanish American War 1898 Retrieved December 8 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Cervera at Annapolis Chicago Tribune July 17 1898 United States Naval Academy Museum Museum Collections USNA Retrieved December 8 2019 References EditAzoy A C M Signal 250 The Sea Fight Off Santiago New York David McKay Company Inc 1964 Bradford James C Crucible of Empire The Spanish American War amp Its Aftermath Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press 1993 Dawson Joseph G III 1993 Bradford James C ed William T Sampson and Santiago Blockade Victory and Controversy Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press Feuer A B The Spanish American War at Sea Naval Action in the Atlantic Westport Connecticut Praeger 1995 Gannon Joseph 1958 The USS Oregon and the Battle of Santiago New York Comet Press Goldstein Donald M Katherine V Dillon J Michael Wenger and Robert J Cressman The Spanish American War The Story and Photographs Brassey s 2001 ISBN 978 1 57488 303 9 p 121 136 restricted online copy p 121 at Google Books Goode W A M 1899 With Sampson through the War New York Doubleday amp McClure Graham George Edward and Winfield Scott Schley Schley and Santiago an Historical Account of the Blockade and Final Destruction of the Spanish Fleet under Command of Admiral Pasquale Cervera July 3 1898 Chicago W B Conkey 1902 Hobson Richmond Pearson The Sinking of the Merrimac New York Century 1899 LaFeber Walter The New Empire An Interpretation of American Expansion 1860 1898 Ithaca Cornell University Press 1967 Langley Harold D 1993 Bradford James C ed Winfield Scott Schley and Santiago A New Look at an Old Controversy Annapolis MD Naval Institute Press Leeke Jim 2009 Manila and Santiago The New Steel Navy In The Spanish American War Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press Nofi Albert A 1996 The Spanish American War 1898 Conshohocken Pennsylvania Combined Books ISBN 0 938289 57 8 Rentfrow James C Home Squadron The U S Navy on the North Atlantic Station Annapolis Naval Institute Press 2014 Spector Ronald H Admiral of the New Empire The Life and Career of George Dewey Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 1974 Sweetman Jack Great American Naval Battles Annapolis Naval Institute Press 1998 Tejeiro Jose Muller Y Combates Y Capitulacion De Santiago De Cuba Madrid F Marques 1898 Titherington Richard H A History of the Spanish American War of 1898 New York D Appleton 1900 Trask David F 1981 The War with Spain in 1898 New York Macmillan West Richard S Jr 1948 Admirals of American Empire the Combined Story of George Dewey Alfred Thayer Mahan Winfield Scott Schley and William Thomas Sampson Indianapolis Bobbs Merrill Wright General Marcus Leslie s Official History of the Spanish American War Washington D C War Records Office 1900 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Santiago de Cuba Spanish American War Centennial Naval Battle at Santiago Harbor Edison Film Sampson Schley Controversy Tea Party Edison Film Sampson Schley Controversy Battle of SantiagoCoordinates 20 01 11 N 75 48 50 W 20 0198 N 75 8139 W 20 0198 75 8139 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Santiago de Cuba amp oldid 1142016454, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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