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Philippine–American War

Philippine–American War
Clockwise from top left: U.S. troops in Manila, Gregorio del Pilar and his troops around 1898, Americans guarding the Pasig River bridge in 1898, the Battle of Santa Cruz, Filipino soldiers at Malolos, the Battle of Quingua
DatePhilippine–American War:
February 4, 1899 – July 2, 1902
(3 years, 4 months and 4 weeks)[i]
Moro Rebellion:
February 4, 1899 – June 15, 1913
(14 years, 4 months, 1 week and 4 days)
Location
Result

American victory

Territorial
changes
The Philippines becomes an unincorporated territory of the United States and, later, a U.S. Commonwealth (until 1946).
Belligerents

1899–1902:
 United States

1899–1902:
 Philippine Republic

Limited foreign support:
 Japanese Empire[1]
 German Empire[2]

1902–1913:
 United States

1902–1913:
Tagalog Republic (until 1906)
Maguindanao Sultanate (until 1905)
 Sulu Sultanate
Commanders and leaders
Units involved

1902–1913
Irreconcilables
Babaylanes
Pulajanes
Moro people
Strength
  • ≈126,000 total[3][4]
  • ≈24,000 to ≈44,000 field strength[5]
≈80,000–100,000
regular and irregular[5]
Casualties and losses
4,200 killed,[6] 2,818 wounded, several succumbed to disease [7] About 10,000 killed[8] (Emilio Aguinaldo estimate),
16,000–20,000 killed[9] (American estimate)
Filipino civilians: 200,000–250,000 died, most because of famine and disease[ii]
  1. ^ There is disagreement regarding the official ending date of the conflict; see here for further information.
  2. ^ While there are many estimates for civilian deaths, with some at around 1 million and others going well over a million for the war, modern historians generally place the death toll between 200,000 and 250,000;[10][11] see "Casualties".

The Philippine–American War,[12] known alternatively as the Philippine Insurrection, Filipino–American War,[a] or Tagalog Insurgency,[13][14][15] was fought between the First Philippine Republic and the United States from February 4, 1899, until July 2, 1902.[16] Tensions arose after the United States annexed the Philippines under the Treaty of Paris at the conclusion of the Spanish–American War rather than acknowledging the Philippines' declaration of independence.[17][18] The war can be seen as a continuation of the Philippine struggle for independence that began in 1896 with the Philippine Revolution against Spanish rule.[19]

Fighting between the forces of the United States and the forces of the Philippine Republic broke out on February 4, 1899, in what became known as the Battle of Manila. On February 4, 1899, The Philippine Council of Government issued a proclamation urging the people to continue the war.[20] Philippine President Emilio Aguinaldo was captured on March 23, 1901, and the war was officially declared ended by the US on July 2, 1902. However, some Philippine groups—some led by veterans of the Katipunan[which?], a Philippine revolutionary society that had launched the revolution against Spain—continued to fight for several more years. Other groups, including the Muslim Moro peoples of the southern Philippines and quasi-Catholic Pulahan religious movements, continued hostilities in remote areas. The resistance in the Moro-dominated provinces in the south, called the Moro Rebellion by the Americans, ended with their final defeat at the Battle of Bud Bagsak on June 15, 1913.[21]

The war resulted in at least 200,000 Filipino civilian deaths, mostly from famine and diseases such as cholera.[22][23][24] Some estimates for civilian dead reach up to a million.[9] Atrocities were committed during the conflict by both sides,[25] including torture, mutilation, and executions. In retaliation for Filipino guerrilla warfare tactics, the U.S. carried out reprisals and scorched earth campaigns and forcibly relocated many civilians to concentration camps, where thousands died.[26][27][28] The war and subsequent occupation by the U.S. changed the culture of the islands, leading to the rise of Protestantism, disestablishment of the Catholic Church, and the rise of English to the islands as the primary language of government, education, business, and industry.[29] The U.S. annexation and war sparked political backlash from anti-imperialists in the U.S. Senate, who argued that the war was a definite example of U.S. imperialism, and that it was an inherent contradiction of the founding principles of the United States contained in the Declaration of Independence.[30][31][32]

In 1902, the United States Congress passed the Philippine Organic Act, which provided for the creation of the Philippine Assembly, with members to be elected by Filipino males (women did not have the right to vote until a 1937 plebiscite).[33][34] This act was superseded by the 1916 Jones Act (Philippine Autonomy Act), which contained the first formal and official declaration of the United States government's commitment to eventually grant independence to the Philippines.[35] The 1934 Tydings–McDuffie Act (Philippine Independence Act) created the Commonwealth of the Philippines the following year, increasing self-governance, and established a process towards full independence (originally scheduled for 1944, but delayed by World War II and the Japanese occupation of the Philippines). The United States eventually granted full Philippine independence in 1946 through the Treaty of Manila.[36]

Background edit

Philippine Revolution edit

Andrés Bonifacio was a warehouseman and clerk from Manila. On July 7, 1892, he established the Katipunan, a revolutionary organization formed to gain independence from Spanish colonial rule by armed revolt. In August 1896, the Katipunan was discovered by the Spanish authorities and thus launched its revolution. Fighters in Cavite province won early victories. One of the most influential and popular leaders from Cavite was Emilio Aguinaldo, mayor of Cavite El Viejo (modern-day Kawit), who gained control of much of the eastern portion of Cavite province. Eventually, Aguinaldo and his faction gained control of the revolution. After Aguinaldo was elected president of a revolutionary government superseding the Katipunan at the Tejeros Convention on March 22, 1897, his government had Bonifacio executed for treason after a show trial on May 10, 1897.[37]

Aguinaldo's exile and return edit

 
Emilio Aguinaldo in the field

By late 1897, after a succession of defeats for the revolutionary forces, the Spanish had regained control over most of rebel territory. Aguinaldo and Spanish Governor-General Fernando Primo de Rivera entered into armistice negotiations while Spanish forces surrounded Aguinaldo's hideout and base in Biak-na-Bato in Bulacan province. Aguinaldo reorganized his "Republic of the Philippines" in the meantime. On December 14, 1897, an agreement was reached in which the Spanish colonial government would pay Aguinaldo $MXN800,000[b] in Manila—in three installments if Aguinaldo would go into exile outside of the Philippines.[39][40]

Upon receiving the first installment, Aguinaldo and 25 of his closest associates left their headquarters at Biak-na-Bato and made their way to Hong Kong, in accord with the agreement. Before his departure, Aguinaldo denounced the Philippine Revolution, exhorted Filipino rebel combatants to disarm, and declared those who continued hostilities and waging war to be bandits.[41] Despite Aguinaldo's denunciation, some revolutionaries continued their armed revolt against the Spanish colonial government.[42][43][44] Aguinaldo claimed that the Spanish never paid the agreed second and third installments.[45]

On April 22, 1898, while in exile, Aguinaldo had a private meeting in Singapore with United States Consul E. Spencer Pratt, after which he decided to again lead the revolution.[46] According to Aguinaldo, Pratt had communicated with Commodore George Dewey (commander of the Asiatic Squadron of the United States Navy) by telegram and passed assurances from Dewey to Aguinaldo that the United States would recognize the independence of the Philippines. Pratt reportedly stated that there was no necessity for entering into a written agreement because the word of the Admiral and of the United States Consul were equivalent to the official word of the United States.[47] With these assurances, Aguinaldo returned to the Philippines.

Pratt later contested Aguinaldo's account of these events and denied any "dealings of a political character" with the leader.[48] Dewey denounced Aguinaldo's account as a falsehood,[49] asserting that he had made no promises regarding the future:

From my observation of Aguinaldo and his advisers I decided that it would be unwise to co-operate with him or his adherents in an official manner. ... In short, my policy was to avoid any entangling alliance with the insurgents, while I appreciated that, pending the arrival of our troops, they might be of service.[50]

 
Personifying the United States, Uncle Sam chases a bee representing Emilio Aguinaldo.

Filipino historian Teodoro Agoncillo claimed that the Americans first approached Aguinaldo in Hong Kong and Singapore to persuade him to cooperate with Dewey in wresting power from the Spanish. He conceded that Dewey may not have promised Aguinaldo American recognition and Philippine independence (Dewey had no authority to make such promises). He asserted that Dewey and Aguinaldo had an informal alliance to fight Spain, that Dewey breached that alliance by making secret arrangements for a Spanish surrender to American forces, and that he later treated Aguinaldo badly. Agoncillo concluded that the American attitude towards Aguinaldo "... showed that they came to the Philippines not as a friend, but as an enemy masking as a friend."[51]

Aguinaldo traveled from Singapore and arrived in Hong Kong on May 1,[52] the day that Dewey's naval forces destroyed Rear-Admiral Patricio Montojo's Spanish Pacific Squadron at the Battle of Manila Bay. Aguinaldo departed Hong Kong aboard USRC McCulloch on May 17 and arrived in Cavite on May 19.[53]

Less than three months after Aguinaldo's return, the Philippine Revolutionary Army had conquered nearly all of the Philippines. With the exception of Manila, which was surrounded by revolutionary forces some 12,000 strong, the Filipinos controlled the islands. Aguinaldo declared independence at his house in Cavite El Viejo on June 12, 1898.

The Philippine Declaration of Independence was not recognized by either the United States or Spain, and the Spanish government ceded the Philippines to the United States in the 1898 Treaty of Paris, which was signed on December 10, 1898, in consideration for an indemnity for Spanish expenses and assets lost.[54]

Upon his return in May 1898, Aguinaldo established a "Dictatorial Government" with himself as "Dictator", under which Philippine independence was declared. About a month later, he established a "Revolutionary Government" in its place and retook the title of President. He then organized a congress in Malolos, Bulacan, to draft a constitution. This led to the formal establishment of the Philippine Republic by late January 1899.[55] This government was later known as the First Philippine Republic, and also as the Malolos Republic after its capital. Aguinaldo, who had again been ratified as president by the Malolos congress on January 1,[56] is today officially considered as "the first President of the Republic of the Philippines" by the Philippine government.[57]

Origins of the conflict edit

Battle of Manila edit

On July 9, General Anderson informed Major General Henry Clark Corbin, the Adjutant General of the U.S. Army, that Aguinaldo "has declared himself Dictator and President, and is trying to take Manila without our assistance", opining that that would not be probable but, if done, would allow him to resist any U.S. attempt to establish a provisional government.[58] On July 15, Aguinaldo issued three organic decrees assuming civil authority.[59]

On July 18, Anderson wrote that he suspected Aguinaldo to be secretly negotiating with the Spanish authorities.[58] In a July 21 letter to the Adjutant General, Anderson wrote that Aguinaldo had "put in operation an elaborate system of military government, under his assumed authority as Dictator, and has prohibited any supplies being given us, except by his order", and that Anderson had demanded that Aguinaldo must aid in fulfilling Anderson's demands for necessary supplies.[60]

On July 24, Aguinaldo wrote a letter to Anderson in effect warning him not to disembark American troops in places liberated by Filipinos from Spain without first informing him in writing about the places and purpose of the action. Murat Halstead, official historian of the Philippine Expedition, wrote that General Merritt remarked shortly after his arrival on June 25:

As General Aguinaldo did not visit me on my arrival, nor offer his services as a subordinate military leader, and as my instructions from the President fully contemplated the occupation of the islands by the American land forces, and stated that 'the powers of the military occupant are absolute and supreme and immediately operate upon the political condition of the inhabitants,' I did not consider it wise to hold any direct communication with the insurgent leader until I should be in possession of the city of Manila, especially as I would not until then be in a position to issue a proclamation and enforce my authority, in the event that his pretensions should clash with my designs.[61]

U.S. commanders suspected that Aguinaldo and his forces were informing the Spanish of American movements. U.S. Army Major John R. M. Taylor later wrote, after translating and analyzing insurgent documents:

The officers of the United States Army who believed that the insurgents were informing the Spaniards of the American movements were right. Sastrón has printed a letter from Pío del Pilar, dated July 30, to the Spanish officer commanding at Santa Ana, in which Pilar said that Aguinaldo had told him that the Americans would attack the Spanish lines on August 2 and advised that the Spaniards should not give way, but hold their positions. Pilar added, however, that if the Spaniards should fall back on the walled city and surrender Santa Ana to himself, he would hold it with his own men. Aguinaldo's information was correct, and on August 2 eight American soldiers were killed or wounded by the Spanish fire.[62]

The secret agreement made by Commodore Dewey and Brigadier General Wesley Merritt with Spanish Governor-General Fermín Jáudenes and with his predecessor Basilio Augustín was for Spanish forces to surrender only to the Americans. To save face, the Spanish surrender would take place after a mock battle in Manila that the Spanish would lose; the revolutionaries would not be allowed to enter the city. On the eve of the battle, Anderson telegraphed Aguinaldo, "Do not let your troops enter Manila without the permission of the American commander. On this side of the Pasig River you will be under fire."[63] On August 13, American forces captured Manila.[64]

Before the attack on Manila, American and Filipino forces had been allies in all but name. After the capture of Manila, Spanish and Americans entered in a partnership that excluded the insurgents. Fighting between American and Filipino troops had almost broken out as the former moved to dislodge the latter from strategic positions around Manila. Aguinaldo had been told by the Americans that his army could not participate and would be fired upon if it entered the city. The insurgents were infuriated, but Aguinaldo bided his time. Relations continued to deteriorate, however, as it became clear to Filipinos that the Americans were in the islands to stay.[65]

End of the Spanish–American War edit

 
1898 US political cartoon. U.S. President William McKinley is shown holding the Philippines, depicted as a native child, as the world looks on. The implied options for McKinley are to keep the Philippines, or give it back to Spain, which the cartoon compares to throwing a child off a cliff.

On August 12, 1898, The New York Times reported that a peace protocol had been signed in Washington that afternoon between the U.S. and Spain, suspending hostilities.[66] The full text of the protocol was not made public until November 5, but Article III read: "The United States will occupy and hold the City, Bay, and Harbor of Manila, pending the conclusion of a treaty of peace, which shall determine the control, disposition, and government of the Philippines."[67][68] After conclusion of this agreement, U.S. President William McKinley proclaimed a suspension of hostilities with Spain.[69]

In a clash at Cavite between US soldiers and insurgents on August 25, 1898, George Hudson of the Utah regiment was killed, Corporal William Anderson was mortally wounded, and four troopers of the Fourth Cavalry were slightly wounded.[70][71] This provoked General Anderson to send Aguinaldo a letter saying, "In order to avoid the very serious misfortune of an encounter between our troops, I demand your immediate withdrawal with your guard from Cavite. One of my men has been killed and three wounded by your people. This is positive and does not admit of explanation or delay."[71] Internal insurgent communications reported that the Americans were drunk at the time. Halstead writes that Aguinaldo expressed his regret and promised to punish the offenders.[70] In internal insurgent communications, Apolinario Mabini initially proposed to investigate and punish any offenders identified. Aguinaldo modified this, ordering, "... say that he was not killed by your soldiers, but by them themselves [the Americans] since they were drunk according to your telegram".[72] An insurgent officer in Cavite at the time reported on his record of services that he: "took part in the movement against the Americans on the afternoon of the 24th of August, under the orders of the commander of the troops and the adjutant of the post".[73]

Elections were held by the Revolutionary Government between June and September 10, seating a legislature known as the Malolos Congress. In a session between September 15 and November 13, 1898, the Malolos Constitution was adopted. It was promulgated on January 21, 1899, creating the First Philippine Republic with Emilio Aguinaldo as president.[74]

Article V of the peace protocol signed on August 12 had mandated negotiations to conclude a treaty of peace to begin in Paris not later than October 1, 1898.[75] President McKinley sent a five-man commission, initially instructed to demand no more than Luzon, Guam, and Puerto Rico; which would have provided a limited U.S. empire.[76] In Paris, the commission was besieged with advice, particularly from American generals and European diplomats, to demand the entire Philippine archipelago.[76] The unanimous recommendation was that "it would certainly be cheaper and more humane to take the entire Philippines than to keep only part of it."[77] Furthermore, the sudden rise of the Empire of Japan as a great power following its victory against China in the First Sino-Japanese War of 1895 had led to fears that the Philippines were poised to fall into Japanese hands if the United States did not take control of the islands.[78][79][80] On October 28, 1898, McKinley wired the commission that "cessation of Luzon alone, leaving the rest of the islands subject to Spanish rule, or to be the subject of future contention, cannot be justified on political, commercial, or humanitarian grounds. The cessation must be the whole archipelago or none. The latter is wholly inadmissible, and the former must therefore be required."[81] The Spanish negotiators were furious over the "immodist demands of a conqueror", but their wounded pride was assuaged by an offer of twenty million dollars for "Spanish improvements" to the islands. The Spaniards capitulated, and on December 10, 1898, the U.S. and Spain signed the Treaty of Paris, formally ending the Spanish–American War. In Article III, Spain ceded the Philippine archipelago to the United States, as follows: "Spain cedes to the United States the archipelago known as the Philippine Islands, and comprehending the islands lying within the following line: [... geographic description elided ...]. The United States will pay to Spain the sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) within three months after the exchange of the ratifications of the present treaty."[82][83]

The U.S. experienced a movement for Philippine independence; some said that the U.S. had no right to a land where many of the people wanted self-government. In 1898, industrialist Andrew Carnegie offered to pay the U.S. government $20 million to give the Philippines its independence.[84]

Benevolent assimilation edit

 
U.S. soldiers and insurrecto prisoners, Manila, 1899

On December 21, 1898, McKinley issued a proclamation of "benevolent assimilation, substituting the mild sway of justice and right for arbitrary rule" for "the greatest good of the governed".[85] Referring to the Treaty of Paris, it said that "as a result of the victories of American arms, the future control, disposition, and government of the Philippine Islands are ceded to the United States." It enjoined military commander Major General Elwell Stephen Otis to inform Filipinos that "in succeeding to the sovereignty of Spain" the authority of the United States "is to be exerted for the securing of the persons and property of the people of the islands and for the confirmation of all their private rights and relations". The proclamation specified that "it will be the duty of the commander of the forces of occupation to announce and proclaim in the most public manner that we come, not as invaders or conquerors, but as friends, to protect the natives in their homes, in their employments, and in their personal and religious rights".[86]

The Spanish yielded Iloilo to the insurgents on December 26. An American brigade under General Marcus P. Miller arrived on December 28 and opened communications with the insurgents.[87] A Filipino official styling himself "Presidente Lopez of the Federal Government of the Visayas", stated landing required "express orders from the central government of Luzon" and refused permission to land.[88][89] That news reached Washington on January 1, 1899.[88][90]

Otis, who had been appointed Military Governor of the Philippines, had delayed publication of McKinley's proclamation. On January 4, Otis published an amended version edited so as not to convey the meanings of the terms sovereignty, protection, and right of cessation, which were present in the original version.[91] On January 6, 1899, General Otis was quoted in The New York Times as stating "convinced that the U.S. government intends to seek the establishment of a liberal government, in which the people will be as fully represented as the maintenance of law and order will permit, susceptible of development, on lines of increased representation, and the bestowal of increased powers, into a government as free and independent as is enjoyed by the most favored provinces in the world."[92]

Unknown to Otis, the War Department had sent an enciphered copy of the Benevolent Assimilation proclamation to General Miller for informational purposes. Miller assumed that it was for distribution and, unaware that a politically bowdlerized version had been published by Otis, published the original in both Spanish and Tagalog translations which eventually made their way to Aguinaldo.[93] Even before Aguinaldo received the unaltered version and observed the changes in the copy he had received from Otis, he was upset that Otis had altered his own title to "Military Governor of the Philippines" from "... in the Philippines", a change that Otis had made without authorization.[94]

The original proclamation was given by supporters to Aguinaldo who, on January 5, issued a counter-proclamation:[95]

Such procedures, so foreign to the dictates of culture and the usages observed by civilized nations, gave me the right to act without observing the usual rules of intercourse. Nevertheless, in order to be correct to the end, I sent to General Otis commissioners charged to solicit him to desist from his rash enterprise, but they were not listened to. My government can not remain indifferent in view of such a violent and aggressive seizure of a portion of its territory by a nation which arrogated to itself the title champion of oppressed nations. Thus it is that my government is disposed to open hostilities if the American troops attempt to take forcible possession of the Visayan Islands. I denounce these acts before the world, in order that the conscience of mankind may pronounce its infallable verdict as to who are the true oppressors of nations and the tormentors of human kind.[96][97]

After some copies of that proclamation had been distributed, Aguinaldo ordered the recall of undistributed copies and issued another proclamation, which was published the same day in El Heraldo de la Revolucion, the official newspaper of the Philippine Republic. His statement in part said:

As in General Otis's proclamation he alluded to some instructions edited by His Excellency the President of the United States, referring to the administration of the matters in the Philippine Islands, I in the name of God, the root and fountain of all justice, and that of all the right which has been visibly granted to me to direct my dear brothers in the difficult work of our regeneration, protest most solemnly against this intrusion of the United States Government on the sovereignty of these islands. I equally protest in the name of the Filipino people against the said intrusion, because as they have granted their vote of confidence appointing me president of the nation, although I don't consider that I deserve such, therefore I consider it my duty to defend to death its liberty and independence.[98][99]

Otis, taking these two proclamations as tantamount to war, strengthened American observation posts and alerted his troops. Aguinaldo's proclamations energized the masses with a vigorous determination to fight what was perceived as an ally turned enemy. Some 40,000 Filipinos fled Manila within a period of 15 days.[98][100]

Meanwhile, Felipe Agoncillo, who had been commissioned by the Philippine Revolutionary Government as Minister Plenipotentiary to negotiate treaties with foreign governments, and who had unsuccessfully sought to be seated at the negotiations between the U.S. and Spain in Paris, had traveled to Washington. On January 6, he filed a request for an interview with the President to discuss affairs in the Philippines. The next day the government officials were surprised to learn that messages to General Otis to deal mildly with the rebels and not to force a conflict had become known to Agoncillo, and cabled by him to Aguinaldo.[88]

On January 8, Agoncillo stated:[88]

In my opinion the Filipino people, whom I represent, will never consent to become a colony dependency of the United States. The soldiers of the Filipino army have pledged their lives that they will not lay down their arms until General Aguinaldo tells them to do so, and they will keep that pledge, I feel confident.

The Filipino committees in London, Paris, and Madrid about this time telegraphed to President McKinley:

We protest against the disembarkation of American troops at Iloilo. The treaty of peace still unratified, the American claim to sovereignty is premature. Pray reconsider the resolution regarding Iloilo. Filipinos wish for the friendship of America and abhor militarism and deceit.[101]

On January 8, Aguinaldo received the following message from Teodoro Sandiko:

To the President of the Revolutionary Government, Malolos, from Sandico, Manila. 8 Jan., 1899, 9.40 p.m..: In consequence of the order of General Rios to his officers, as soon as the Filipino attack begins the Americans should be driven into the Intramuros district and the walled city should be set on fire. Pipi.[102]

The New York Times reported on January 8, that two Americans who had been guarding a waterboat in Iloilo had been attacked, one fatally, and that insurgents were threatening to destroy the business section of the city by fire; and on January 10 that a peaceful solution to the Iloilo issues may result but that Aguinaldo had issued a proclamation threatening to drive the Americans from the islands.[103][104]

By January 10, insurgents were ready to take the offensive, but wanted to provoke the Americans into firing the first shot. They increased their hostile demonstrations and entered forbidden territory. Their attitude is illustrated by an extract from a telegram sent by Colonel Cailles to Aguinaldo on January 10, 1899:[105]

Most urgent. An American interpreter has come to tell me to withdraw our forces in Maytubig fifty paces. I shall not draw back a step, and in place of withdrawing, I shall advance a little farther. He brings a letter from his general, in which he speaks to me as a friend. I said that from the day I knew that Maquinley (McKinley) opposed our independence I did not want any dealings with any American. War, war, is what we want. The Americans after this speech went off pale.

Aguinaldo approved the hostile attitude of Cailles, replying:[105]

I approve and applaud what you have done with the Americans, and zeal and valour always, also my beloved officers and soldiers there. I believe that they are playing us until the arrival of their reinforcements, but I shall send an ultimatum and remain always on the alert. – E. A. Jan. 10, 1899.

War edit

 
Filipino soldiers outside Manila in 1899

Path to war edit

The First Philippine Republic was declared on January 21, 1899.[106] Lack of recognition by the United States led to rising tensions and, eventually, to hostilities. On January 31, 1899, the Minister of Interior of the Republic, Teodoro Sandiko, signed a decree saying that President Aguinaldo had directed that all idle lands be planted to provide food, in view of impending war with the Americans.[107]

On the evening of February 4, Private William W. Grayson fired the war's first shots along Sociego Street towards a sub-post of blockhouse 7 located at the turn towards the blockhouse.[108][c] According the National Historical Commission of the Philippines, two unarmed soldiers were killed.[110] According to Grayson's account, his patrol ordered four Filipino soldiers to "Halt!" and, when the men responded by cocking their rifles, they fired on them and then retreated.[111][d] The outbreak of violence triggered the 1899 Battle of Manila. Later that day, Aguinaldo declared "That peace and friendly relations with the Americans be broken and that the latter be treated as enemies, within the limits prescribed by the laws of war."[113]

 
Historical marker installed by the Philippines Historical Committee in 1941 to commemorate the shot that started the war

The following day, Filipino General Isidoro Torres came through the lines under a flag of truce to deliver a message from Aguinaldo to General Otis that the fighting had begun accidentally, and that Aguinaldo wished for the hostilities to cease immediately and for the establishment of a neutral zone. Otis dismissed these overtures, and replied that the "fighting, having begun, must go on to the grim end".[114] On February 5, General Arthur MacArthur ordered his troops to advance against Filipino troops.[115]

 
Wounded American soldiers at Santa Mesa, Manila in 1899

In the U.S., President McKinley had created a commission chaired by Jacob G. Schurman on January 20[e] and tasked it to study the situation in the Philippines and make recommendations on how the U.S. should proceed. Members included General Otis and two other civilian appointees. The three civilian members of the commission arrived in Manila on March 4, 1899, a month after hostilities began.[116]

General Otis viewed the arrival of his fellow commission members as an intrusion and boycotted commission meetings.[117] The civilian members of the commission spent a month meeting with Ilustrados who had deserted Aguinaldo's Malolos Republic government and studying the Malolos Constitution and other documents of Aguinaldo's revolutionary government. Meanwhile, with U.S. forces advancing northwards from Manila, the seat of Aguinaldo's revolutionary government had been moved from Malolos to San Isidro, Nueva Ecija. When Malolos fell at the end of March, it moved further north to San Fernando, Pampanga.[118]

The commission published a proclamation containing assurances that the U.S. did not intend exploitation of Filipinos, but their "advancement to a position among the most civilized peoples of the world", and announced "that the United States is ... anxious to establish in the Philippine Islands an enlightened system of government under which the Philippine people may enjoy the largest measure of home rule and the amplest liberty."[119]

Though not authorized to discuss an armistice, civilian commission members held informal discussions with a representative of Aguinaldo. Progress on a path without war ended after General Luna arrested Aguinaldo's then-cabinet and replaced it with a more hawkish one headed by Apolinario Mabini.[f] On June 2, 1899, the First Philippine Republic declared war on the United States.[120]

American strategy edit

 
The Battle of Caloocan, February 10, 1899. Major General Arthur MacArthur with binoculars.

American annexation was justified in the name of liberating and protecting the peoples in the former Spanish colonies. Senator Albert J. Beveridge, a prominent American imperialist, said: "Americans altruistically went to war with Spain to liberate Cubans, Puerto Ricans, and Filipinos from their tyrannical yoke. If they lingered on too long in the Philippines, it was to protect the Filipinos from European predators waiting in the wings for an American withdrawal and to tutor them in American-style democracy."[121]

On February 11, 1899, one week after the first shots were fired, Iloilo was bombarded by American naval forces from the USS Petrel and the USS Baltimore. Filipino forces lit the town on fire before retreating. The city was captured by ground forces led by Brigadier General Marcus Miller, with no loss of American lives. 25 to 30 Filipinos were wounded. The "native" part of the city was almost entirely destroyed.[122]

Months later, after finally securing Manila, American forces moved northward, engaging in combat at the brigade and battalion level in pursuit of the fleeing insurgent forces.[123] In response to the use of guerrilla warfare tactics by Filipino forces, beginning in September 1899,[124] American military strategy shifted to suppression of the resistance. Tactics became focused on the control of key areas with internment and segregation of the civilian population in "zones of protection" from the guerrillas.[125] Many of the interned civilians died from dysentery.[126]

General Otis gained notoriety for some of his actions. Although his superiors had directed Otis to avoid military conflict, he did little to prevent war. Otis refused to accept anything but unconditional surrender from the Philippine Army. He often made major military decisions without first consulting Washington. He acted aggressively in dealing with the Filipinos under the assumption that their resistance would collapse quickly.[127] Even after this assumption proved false, he continued to insist that the insurgency had been defeated, and that the remaining casualties were caused by "isolated bands of outlaws".[128]

Otis was also active in suppressing information about American military tactics. When letters describing American atrocities reached the American media, Otis had each press clipping forwarded to the original writer's commanding officer, who would convince or force the soldier to retract his statements.[129]

Filipino war strategy edit

 
20th Kansas Volunteers marching through Caloocan at night, 1899

Estimates of the Filipino forces vary between 80,000 and 100,000, with tens of thousands of auxiliaries. Most of the forces were armed only with bolo knives, bows and arrows, spears and other primitive weapons, which were vastly inferior to the guns and other weapons of the American forces.[130]

A fairly rigid indigenous caste system existed in the Philippines before the Spanish colonial era, which partially survived among the natives during Spanish rule. The goal, or end-state, sought by the First Philippine Republic was a sovereign, independent, stable nation led by an oligarchy composed of members of the educated class (known as the ilustrado class). Local chieftains, landowners, businessmen and cabezas de barangay were the principales who controlled local politics. The war was at its peak when ilustrados, principales, and peasants were unified in opposition to annexation by the United States. The peasants, who represented the majority of the fighting forces, had interests different from their ilustrado leaders and the principales of their villages. Coupled with the ethnic and geographic fragmentation, aligning the interests of people from different social castes was a daunting task.[131] The challenge for Aguinaldo and his generals was to sustain unified Filipino public opposition; this was the revolutionaries' strategic center of gravity.[132]

The Filipino operational center of gravity was the ability to sustain its force of 100,000 irregulars in the field. The Filipino general Francisco Macabulos described the Filipinos' war aim as, "not to vanquish the U.S. Army but to inflict on them constant losses". In the early stages of the war, the Philippine Revolutionary Army employed the conventional military tactics typical of an organized armed resistance. The hope was to inflict enough American casualties to result in McKinley's defeat by William Jennings Bryan in the 1900 presidential election. They hoped that Bryan, who held strong anti-imperialist views, would withdraw the American forces from the Philippines.[133]

McKinley's election victory in 1900 was demoralizing for the insurgents, and convinced many Filipinos that the United States would not depart quickly.[133] Coupled with a series of devastating losses on the battlefield against American forces equipped with superior technology and training, Aguinaldo became convinced that he needed to change his approach. Beginning on September 14, 1899, Aguinaldo accepted the advice of General Gregorio del Pilar and authorized the use of guerrilla warfare tactics in subsequent military operations in Bulacan.[124]

Guerrilla war phase edit

For most of 1899, the revolutionary leadership had viewed guerrilla warfare strategically only as a tactical option of final recourse, not as a means of operation which better suited their disadvantaged situation. On November 13, 1899, Aguinaldo decreed that guerrilla warfare would henceforth be the strategy.[134] This made American occupation of the Philippine archipelago all the more difficult over the next few years. During the first four months of the guerrilla war, the Americans had nearly 500 casualties.[135] The Philippine Army began staging bloody ambushes and raids, such as the guerrilla victories at Paye, Catubig, Makahambus, Pulang Lupa, and Mabitac. At first, it seemed that the Filipinos might be able to fight the Americans to a stalemate and force them to withdraw. President McKinley considered withdrawal when the guerrilla raids began.

Martial law edit

On December 20, 1900, MacArthur, who had succeeded Elwell Otis as U.S. Military Governor on May 5,[136] placed the Philippines under martial law, invoking U.S. Army General Order 100. He announced that guerrilla abuses would no longer be tolerated and outlined the rights which would govern the U.S. Army's treatment of guerrillas and civilians. In particular, guerrillas who wore no uniform but peasant dress and shifted from civilian to military status would be held accountable; secret committees that collected revolutionary taxes and those accepting U.S. protection in occupied towns while assisting guerrillas would be treated as "war rebels or war traitors". Filipino leaders who continued to work towards Philippine independence were deported to Guam.[137]

Decline and fall of the First Philippine Republic edit

 
A group of Filipino combatants laying down their weapons during their surrender, c. 1900

The Philippine Army continued suffering defeats from the better armed United States Army during the conventional warfare phase, forcing Aguinaldo to continually change his base of operations throughout the course of the war.

On June 24, 1900, MacArthur as U.S. Military Governor published a proclamation offering full and complete amnesty to all insurgents who surrendered within ninety days.

On August 3, 1900, Aguinaldo issued a decree urging a continuation of the war and offering payment of rewards for rifles and ammunition brought in by prisoners or deserters from opposing forces.[138]

 
The 24th U.S. Infantry (primarily made up of African American soldiers) at drill in Camp Walker, Cebu, 1902

On March 23, 1901, General Frederick Funston and his troops captured Aguinaldo in Palanan, Isabela, with the help of some Filipinos (called the Macabebe Scouts after their home locale[139][140]) who had joined the Americans. The Americans pretended to be captives of the Scouts, who were dressed in Philippine Army uniforms. Once Funston and his "captors" entered Aguinaldo's camp, they quickly overwhelmed Aguinaldo's forces.[141]

On April 1, 1901, at Malacañang Palace in Manila, Aguinaldo swore an oath accepting the authority of the United States over the Philippines and pledging his allegiance to the American government. On April 19, he issued a Proclamation of Formal Surrender to the United States, telling his followers to lay down their weapons and give up the fight.

"Let the stream of blood cease to flow; let there be an end to tears and desolation," Aguinaldo said. "The lesson which the war holds out and the significance of which I realized only recently, leads me to the firm conviction that the complete termination of hostilities and a lasting peace are not only desirable but also absolutely essential for the well-being of the Philippines."[142][143]

The capture of Aguinaldo dealt a severe blow to the Filipino cause, but not as much as the Americans had hoped. General Miguel Malvar took over the leadership of the Filipino government.[144] He originally had taken a defensive stance against the Americans, but launched an offensive against the American-held towns in the Batangas region.[21] General Vicente Lukbán in Samar, and other army officers, continued the war in their respective areas.[21]

General Bell relentlessly pursued Malvar and his men, forcing the surrender of many of the Filipino soldiers. Finally, Malvar surrendered, along with his sick wife and children and some of his officers, on April 16, 1902.[145][146] By the end of the month nearly 3,000 of Malvar's men had also surrendered. With the surrender of Malvar, the Filipino war effort dwindled.[147]

Establishment of U.S. civil government edit

 
Governor General William Howard Taft addressing the audience at the Philippine Assembly in the Manila Grand Opera House

On March 3, 1901, the U.S. Congress passed the Army Appropriation Act containing (along with the Platt Amendment on Cuba) the Spooner Amendment which provided the president with legislative authority to establish a civil government in the Philippines.[148] Up until this time, the president had been administering the Philippines by virtue of his war powers.[149] On July 1, 1901, civil government was inaugurated with William Howard Taft as civil governor.[150][151] Hostilities continued, and the civil governor shared power and control with the U.S. military government.

A centralized public school system was installed in 1901, using English as the medium of instruction. This created a heavy shortage of teachers, and the Philippine Commission authorized the secretary of public instruction to engage 600 teachers from the U.S.—the so-called Thomasites. Free primary schools that instructed on duties of citizenship and avocation was introduced.[152] The Catholic Church was officially disestablished, and much church land was purchased and redistributed.

An anti-sedition law was established in 1901, followed by an anti-brigandage law in 1902.[153]

Resistance edit

Guerilla activity continued in some areas, notably in Samar under Lukbán and in Batangas under Malvar. In Samar, the Balangiga massacre led to the March across Samar; Lukban was captured on 18 February 1902. Some sources assert that Malvar succeeded to the titular presidency of the Philippine Republic government after Aguinaldo's capture; he surrendered in April 1902.[154]

Official end of the war edit

The Philippine Organic Act—approved on July 1, 1902—approved, ratified, and confirmed McKinley's previous executive order establishing the Second Philippine Commission. The act also stipulated that a bicameral legislature would be established composed of a popularly elected lower house, the Philippine Assembly, and an upper house consisting of an appointed Philippine Commission. The act extended the Bill of Rights to Filipinos.[155][156][157] On July 2, the United States Secretary of War telegraphed that since the insurrection against the United States had ended and provincial civil governments had been established throughout most of the Philippine Archipelago, the office of military governor was terminated.[16][158] On July 4, Theodore Roosevelt, who had succeeded to the U.S. presidency, proclaimed a full and complete pardon and amnesty to all persons in the Philippine Archipelago who had participated in the conflict.[158][159][16][160]

On April 9, 2002, Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo proclaimed that the Philippine–American War had ended on April 16, 1902, with the surrender of Malvar.[161][162] She declared the centennial anniversary of that date as a national working holiday and as a special non-working holiday in the province of Batangas and in the cities of Batangas, Lipa, and Tanauan.[161][162][146]

The Kiram-Bates Treaty secured the Sultanate of Sulu.[163] American forces also established control over interior mountainous areas that had resisted Spanish conquest.[164]

Casualties edit

 
A stack of coffins containing dead American soldiers
 
Filipino casualties on the first day of the war

Filipino casualties were much greater than among Americans. The United States Department of State states that the war "resulted in the death of over 4,200 American and over 20,000 Filipino combatants", and that "as many as 200,000 Filipino civilians died from violence, famine, and disease".[165][9] The total number of Filipinos who died remains a matter of debate. Modern sources cite a figure of 200,000 dead civilian Filipinos, with most losses attributable to famine and disease.[22][166][167] A cholera epidemic at the war's end killed between 150,000 and 200,000 people.[168]

Some estimates reach 1,000,000 dead.[169][9][170] In 1903 the population of the Philippines was counted by American authorities. The survey yielded 7,635,426 people, including 56,138 foreign born.[171] In 1887, a Spanish census recorded a population of 5,984,717 excluding non-Christians.[172]

Rudolph Rummel estimates that 16,000 to 20,000 Filipino soldiers and 34,000 civilians were killed, with up to an additional 200,000 civilian deaths, mostly from a cholera epidemic.[173][174][10]

Atrocities edit

American atrocities edit

 
General Jacob H. Smith's infamous order "KILL EVERY ONE OVER TEN" became the caption in the New York Journal cartoon on May 5, 1902. The Old Glory draped an American shield on which a vulture replaced the bald eagle. The caption at the bottom proclaimed, "Criminals Because They Were Born Ten Years Before We Took the Philippines".
 
1902 Life magazine cover, depicting water curing by U.S. Army troops in the Philippines

Throughout the war, numerous atrocities were committed by the U.S. military, including the targeting of civilians. American soldiers and other witnesses sent letters home that described some of these atrocities. For example, In November 1901, the Manila correspondent of the Philadelphia Ledger wrote:

The present war is no bloodless, opera bouffe engagement; our men have been relentless, have killed to exterminate men, women, children, prisoners and captives, active insurgents and suspected people from lads of ten up, the idea prevailing that the Filipino as such was little better than a dog...[175]

Reports from returning soldiers stated that upon entering a village, American soldiers would ransack every house and church and rob the inhabitants of everything of value, while Filipinos who approached the battle line waving a flag of truce were fired upon.[176]

Some of the authors were critical of leaders such as General Otis and the overall conduct of the war. In 1899, the American Anti-Imperialist League published a pamphlet of letters allegedly written by U.S. soldiers.[177] When some of these letters circulated in newspapers, they became national news, which forced the War Department to investigate. Examples:

  • A soldier from New York: "The town of Titatia was surrendered to us a few days ago, and two companies occupy the same. Last night one of our boys was found shot and his stomach cut open. Immediately orders were received from General Wheaton to burn the town and kill every native in sight; which was done to a finish. About 1,000 men, women and children were reported killed. I am probably growing hard-hearted, for I am in my glory when I can sight my gun on some dark skin and pull the trigger."[178]
  • Corporal Sam Gillis: "We make everyone get into his house by seven p.m., and we only tell a man once. If he refuses we shoot him. We killed over 300 natives the first night. They tried to set the town on fire. If they fire a shot from the house we burn the house down and every house near it, and shoot the natives, so they are pretty quiet in town now."[129]

General Otis' investigation of the content of these letters consisted of sending a copy of them to the author's superior and having him force the author to write a retraction. Soldiers such as Private Charles Brenner refused and he was court-martialed. The charge was "for writing and conniving at the publication of an article which ... contains willful falsehoods concerning himself and a false charge against Captain Bishop."[129] Not all such letters that discussed atrocities were intended to criticize General Otis or American actions. Many portrayed U.S. actions as the result of Filipino provocation and thus entirely justified.

 
A man from Batangas riddled with beriberi contracted in a U.S. Army concentration camp, circa 1902

In September 1901, enraged by a guerrilla ambush on U.S. troops in Samar, General Jacob H. Smith retaliated by ordering an indiscriminate attack upon its inhabitants, openly disregarding General Order 100,[179] and issuing an order to "kill everyone over the age of ten" and turn the island into a "howling wilderness".[180] Major Littleton Waller countermanded the order to his own men saying, "we are not making war on women and children".[181] Still, 2,000 to 2,500 Filipino civilians were killed in the expedition across Samar.[182] This became a caption in the New York Journal-American cartoon on May 5, 1902. Smith was eventually court-martialed by the American military and forced to retire.[182][183]

In late 1901, Brigadier General J. Franklin Bell took command of American operations in Batangas and Laguna provinces.[184] In response to Malvar's guerrilla warfare tactics, Bell employed counterinsurgency tactics (described by some as a scorched earth campaign) that took a heavy toll on guerrilla fighters and civilians.[185] "Zones of protection" were established,[125][186] and civilians were given identification papers and forced into concentration camps (called reconcentrados) surrounded by free-fire zones.[186] At the Lodge Committee, in an attempt to counter the negative reception in America to General Bell's camps, Colonel Arthur Wagner, the U.S. Army's chief public relations office, insisted the camps were to "protect friendly natives from the insurgents, and assure them an adequate food supply" while teaching them "proper sanitary standards". Wagner's assertion was undermined by a letter from a commander of one of the camps, who described them as "suburbs of Hell".[187]

 
Aftermath of the First Battle of Bud Dajo in March 1906, in which up to 900 civilians, including women and children, were killed

Methods of torture such as the water cure were frequently employed during interrogation,[188] and entire villages were burned or otherwise destroyed.[189]

During the First Battle of Bud Dajo in March 1906, 800–900 Moros, including women and children, were killed by U.S. Marines under the command of General Leonard Wood. The description of the engagement as a "battle" is disputed because of the overwhelming firepower of the attackers and the lopsided casualties; 99% of Moros were killed in the attack, with only six survivors. Author Vic Hurley wrote, "By no stretch of the imagination could Bud Dajo be termed a 'battle'".[190] Mark Twain commented, "In what way was it a battle? It has no resemblance to a battle ... We cleaned up our four days' work and made it complete by butchering these helpless people."[191]

Filipino atrocities edit

U.S. Army General Otis alleged that Filipino insurgents tortured American prisoners in "fiendish fashion". According to Otis, many were buried alive or were buried up to their necks in ant hills. He claimed others had their genitals removed and stuffed into their mouths and were then executed by suffocation or bled to death.[192] Stories in other newspapers described deliberate attacks by Filipino sharpshooters upon American surgeons, chaplains, ambulances, hospitals, and wounded soldiers.[193] An incident was described in The San Francisco Call that occurred in Escalante, Negros Occidental, where several crewmen of a landing party from the CS Recorder were fired upon and later disemboweled by Filipino insurgents, while the insurgents displayed a flag of truce.[194]

It was reported that Spanish priests were mutilated before their congregations, and Filipinos who refused to support Aguinaldo were slaughtered in the thousands. American newspaper headlines announced the "Murder and Rapine" by the "Fiendish Filipinos". General Joseph Wheeler insisted that Filipinos had mutilated their own dead, murdered women and children, and burned down villages, solely to discredit American soldiers.[192] Apolinario Mabini, in his autobiography, confirms these offenses, stating that Aguinaldo did not punish Filipino troops who engaged in war rape, burned and looted villages, or stole and destroyed private property.[195]

Other events dubbed atrocities included those attributed by the Americans to Filipino commander Lukbán, who allegedly masterminded the Balangiga massacre in Samar province, a surprise Filipino attack that killed almost fifty American soldiers.[196] Media reports stated that many bodies were mutilated.[197]

Testimony before the Lodge Committee stated that natives were given the water cure, "... in order to secure information of the murder of Private O'Herne of Company I, who had been not only killed, but roasted and otherwise tortured before death ensued."[198]

In his History of the Filipino People, Agoncillo writes that Filipino troops could match/exceed American brutality. Kicking, slapping, and spitting at faces were common. In some cases, ears and noses were cut off and salt applied to the wounds. In other cases, captives were buried alive. These atrocities occurred regardless of Aguinaldo's orders and circulars concerning the treatment of prisoners.[199]

Worcester recounts two specific Filipino atrocities as follows:

A detachment, marching through Leyte, found an American who had disappeared a short time before crucified, head down. His abdominal wall had been carefully opened so that his intestines might hang down in his face. Another American prisoner, found on the same trip, had been buried in the ground with only his head projecting. His mouth had been propped open with a stick, a trail of sugar laid to it through the forest, and a handful thrown into it. Millions of ants had done the rest.[200]

Campaigns edit

Political atmosphere edit

First Philippine Commission edit

The Schurman Commission concluded that "... The Filipinos are wholly unprepared for independence ... there being no Philippine nation, but only a collection of different peoples."[201] In the report that they issued to McKinley the following year, the commissioners acknowledged Filipino aspirations for independence; they declared, however, that the Philippines was not ready for it. Specific recommendations included the establishment of civilian control over Manila (Otis would have veto power over the city's government), creation of civilian government as rapidly as possible, especially in areas already declared "pacified",[202] including the establishment of a bicameral legislature, autonomous governments on the provincial and municipal levels, and a system of free public elementary schools.[155]

On November 2, 1900, Schurman signed the following statement:

Should our power by any fatality be withdrawn, the commission believe that the government of the Philippines would speedily lapse into anarchy, which would excuse, if it did not necessitate, the intervention of other powers and the eventual division of the islands among them. Only through American occupation, therefore, is the idea of a free, self-governing, and united Philippine commonwealth at all conceivable. And the indispensable need from the Filipino point of view of maintaining American sovereignty over the archipelago is recognized by all intelligent Filipinos and even by those insurgents who desire an American protectorate. The latter, it is true, would take the revenues and leave us the responsibilities. Nevertheless, they recognize the indubitable fact that the Filipinos cannot stand alone. Thus the welfare of the Filipinos coincides with the dictates of national honour in forbidding our abandonment of the archipelago. We cannot from any point of view escape the responsibilities of government which our sovereignty entails; and the commission is strongly persuaded that the performance of our national duty will prove the greatest blessing to the peoples of the Philippine Islands. [...][203]

Second Philippine Commission edit

The Second Philippine Commission, appointed by President McKinley on March 16, 1900, and headed by William Howard Taft, was granted legislative as well as limited executive powers.[204] On September 1, the Taft Commission began to exercise legislative functions.[205] Between September 1900 and August 1902, it issued 499 laws.[206] The commission established a civil service and a judicial system that included a Supreme Court, and a legal code was drawn up to replace obsolete Spanish ordinances. The 1901 municipal code provided for popularly elected presidents, vice presidents, and councilors to serve on municipal boards. The municipal board members were responsible for collecting taxes, maintaining municipal properties, and undertaking necessary construction projects; they also elected provincial governors.[29][157][155]

American opposition edit

Some Americans, notably William Jennings Bryan, Mark Twain, Andrew Carnegie, Ernest Crosby, and other members of the American Anti-Imperialist League, strongly objected to the annexation of the Philippines. Anti-imperialist movements claimed that the United States had become a colonial power.[207][208]

Some anti-imperialists opposed annexation on racist grounds. Among these was Senator Benjamin Tillman of South Carolina, who feared that annexation of the Philippines would lead to an influx of non-white immigrants into the United States. Others worried that annexing the Philippines would lead to the non-white population having a say in the American government.[209]

As news of atrocities committed in subduing the Philippines arrived in the United States, support for the war flagged.[210][211]

Mark Twain edit

Mark Twain opposed the war using his influence in the press. He said the war betrayed the ideals of American democracy by not allowing the Filipino people to choose their own destiny:

There is the case of the Philippines. I have tried hard, and yet I cannot for the life of me comprehend how we got into that mess. Perhaps we could not have avoided it—perhaps it was inevitable that we should come to be fighting the natives of those islands—but I cannot understand it, and have never been able to get at the bottom of the origin of our antagonism to the natives. I thought we should act as their protector—not try to get them under our heel. We were to relieve them from Spanish tyranny to enable them to set up a government of their own, and we were to stand by and see that it got a fair trial. It was not to be a government according to our ideas, but a government that represented the feeling of the majority of the Filipinos, a government according to Filipino ideas. That would have been a worthy mission for the United States. But now—why, we have got into a mess, a quagmire from which each fresh step renders the difficulty of extrication immensely greater. I'm sure I wish I could see what we were getting out of it, and all it means to us as a nation.[212]

In a diary passage, Twain refers to American troops as "our uniformed assassins" and describes their killing of "six hundred helpless and weaponless savages" in the Philippines as "a long and happy picnic with nothing to do but sit in comfort and fire the Golden Rule into those people down there and imagine letters to write home to the admiring families, and pile glory upon glory".[213]

Filipino opposition edit

 
Aguinaldo (seated 3d from right) and other insurgent leaders., c. 1900

Some of Aguinaldo's associates supported America, even before hostilities began. Pedro Paterno, Aguinaldo's prime minister and the author of the 1897 armistice treaty with Spain, advocated the incorporation of the Philippines into the United States in 1898. Other associates sympathetic to the U.S. included Trinidad Pardo de Tavera and Benito Legarda, prominent members of Congress; Gregorio Araneta, Aguinaldo's Secretary of Justice; and Felipe Buencamino, Aguinaldo's Secretary of Foreign Affairs. Buencamino is recorded to have said in 1902: "I am an American and all the money in the Philippines, the air, the light, and the sun I consider American." Many supporters subsequently held posts in the colonial government.[214]

U.S. Army Captain Matthew Arlington Batson formed the Macabebe Scouts[215] as a native guerrilla force to fight the insurgency from among a tribe of that name having a history of antipathy with Tagalogs.[216]

Aftermath edit

Post-1902 conflicts edit

 
"Knocking Out the Moros": illustration depicting the Battle of Bud Bagsak in June 1913, which ended the Moro Rebellion in Jolo

After military rule was terminated on July 4, 1902,[16] the Philippine Constabulary was established as an archipelago-wide police force to control brigandage and deal with the remnants of the insurgent movement. Commanded by Brigadier General Henry Tureman Allen, the Philippine Constabulary gradually took responsibility for suppressing hostile forces' activities.[29] Remnants of Aguinaldo's Republic, and remnants or holdovers of the Katipunan organization, which had predated the American presence, and other resistance groups all remained active, fighting for nearly a decade after the official end of the war.[217] After the close of the war, however, Governor General Taft preferred to rely on the Philippine Constabulary and to treat this as a law enforcement concern. Thus the actions of these remaining guerrilla resistance movements were labeled as brigandage or banditry, and dismissed by the American government as bandits, fanatics and cattle rustlers.

In 1902, Macario Sakay established the Republika ng Katagalugan, claiming to succeed the First Philippine Republic, in Morong along Katipunan lines as opposed to Aguinaldo's Republic. This republic ended in 1906 when Sakay and his top followers surrendered based on offer of amnesty from the American authorities. Instead they were arrested by constabulary forces under captain Harry Bandholtz and executed the following year.[218][219][220]: 200–202 [221]

Beginning in 1903, brigandage by organized groups became a problem in some outlying provinces in the Visayas. Among these groups were the Pulahan (Spanish: Pulajanes), who were from the highlands of Samar and Leyte. The term is derived from the native word pula, meaning "red", as they were distinguished by their red garments.[222] The Pulajanes subscribed to a blend of Roman Catholic and folk beliefs. For example, they believed certain amulets called agimat would render them bulletproof. The last of these groups were defeated or had surrendered to the Philippine Constabulary by 1911.[222][217]

The American government had signed the Kiram-Bates Treaty with the Sultanate of Sulu at the outbreak of the war, which was supposed to prevent resistance in that part of the Philippines (which included parts of Mindanao, the Sulu Archipelago, Palawan, and Sabah).[223] However, after the First Philippine Republic collapsed, the United States canceled the treaty, and began to colonize Moro land, which provoked the Moro Rebellion,[224] beginning with the Battle of Bayan in May 1902. The rebellion continued until the Battle of Bud Bagsak in June 1913, in which Moro forces under Datu Amil were defeated by US troops led by General John J. Pershing. The battle marked the end of the Moro conflict; negotiations between the US authorities and Sulu Sultanate continued until the latter's dissolution in March 1915.[225]

A 1907 law prohibited the display of flags and other symbols "used during the late insurrection in the Philippine Islands".[153][226][227] Some historians consider these unofficial extensions to be part of the war.[228]

Cultural impact edit

The influence of the Roman Catholic Church was reduced when the secular United States Government disestablished the Church and purchased and redistributed Church lands, one of the earliest attempts at land reform in the Philippines.[29] The land amounted to 170,917 hectares (422,350 acres), for which the Church asked $12,086,438.11 in March 1903.[229] The purchase was completed on December 22, 1903, at a sale price of $7,239,784.66.[230] The land redistribution program was stipulated in at least three laws: the Philippine Organic Act,[157] the Public Lands Act,[231] and the Friar Lands Act.[232][233] Section 10 of the Public Land Act limited purchases to a maximum of 16 hectares for an individual or 1024 hectares for a corporation or like association.[231][234] Land was also offered for lease to landless farmers, at prices ranging from fifty centavos to one peso and fifty centavos per hectare per annum.[231][234] Section 28 of the Public lands Act stipulated that lease contracts ran for a maximum of 25 years, renewable for another 25 years.[231][234]

In 1901, at least five hundred teachers (365 males and 165 females) arrived from the U.S. aboard the U.S. Army Transport Thomas. The name "Thomasite" was adopted for these teachers, who established education as one of America's contributions to the Philippines. Among the assignments given were Albay, Catanduanes, Camarines Norte, Camarines Sur, Sorsogon, and Masbate, which are the present day Bicol Region, which was heavily resistant to American rule. Twenty-seven of the original Thomasites either died of tropical diseases or were murdered by Filipino rebels during their first 20 months of residence. Despite the hardships, the Thomasites persisted, teaching and building learning institutions. They opened the Philippine Normal School (now Philippine Normal University) and the Philippine School of Arts and Trades (PSAT) in 1901 and reopened the Philippine Nautical School, established in 1839 by the Board of Commerce of Manila under Spain. By the end of 1904, primary courses were mostly taught by Filipinos under American supervision.[235]

According to historian Daniel Immerwahr, the first 15 American officers to hold the office of Chief of Staff of the United States Army all served in the Philippine–American War.[236] Some veterans of the war, including Douglas MacArthur, Chester W. Nimitz, and Walter Krueger were senior commanders in the US campaign to liberate the Philippines from the Empire of Japan during World War II.

In the media edit

Multiple films were based on the war: Baler (2008), Amigo (2010), El Presidente (2012), Heneral Luna (2015), Goyo: The Boy General (2018 sequel). The film Sakay portrays the latter part of the life of Filipino patriot and hero Macario Sakay. Malvar: Tuloy ang Laban is a biographical film about the life of Emilio Aguinaldo; it has been in development since 2000 and, as of June 2022, was pending release. the 1985 film Virgin Forest is set during the war and involves his capture.

The 1945 film Los últimos de Filipinas and the 2016 film 1898, Los últimos de Filipinas depict the siege of Baler.

In the U,S., the 1926 film Across the Pacific and the 1949 film Last Stand in the Philippines are about or are set against a background of the war. The 1939 film The Real Glory is set against the backdrop of the Moro Rebellion beginning in 1906.

Philippine independence and sovereignty (1946) edit

 
Manuel L. Quezón, the first president of the Commonwealth of the Philippines (from 1935 to 1944) and former revolutionary military commander

The Schurman Commission declared that the Philippines was not ready for independence. Specific recommendations included the rapid establishment of civilian government, including establishment of a bicameral legislature, autonomous governments on the provincial and municipal levels, and a new system of free public elementary schools.[29]

From the beginning, United States presidents and their representatives in the islands defined their colonial mission as tutelage: preparing the Philippines for eventual independence.[237] Except for a small group of "retentionists", the issue was not whether the Philippines would be granted self-rule, but when and under what conditions.[237] Thus, political development in the islands was rapid in light of the complete lack of representative institutions under the Spanish. The Philippine Organic Act of July 1902 stipulated that, with the achievement of peace, a legislature would be established composed of a popularly elected lower house, the Philippine Assembly, and an upper house consisting of the Philippine Commission, which was to be appointed by the United States president.[29]

The Jones Act, passed by the U.S. Congress in 1916 to serve as the organic law in the Philippines, promised eventual independence and instituted an elected Philippine Senate. The Tydings–McDuffie Act (officially the Philippine Independence Act; Public Law 73–127) approved on March 24, 1934, provided for self-government and for independence after ten years. World War II intervened, bringing the Japanese occupation between 1941 and 1945. In 1946, the Treaty of Manila between the governments of the U.S. and the Republic of the Philippines provided for the recognition of the independence of the Philippines and the relinquishment of American sovereignty over the islands.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Spanish: Guerra filipina-estadounidense; Tagalog: Digmaang Pilipino–Amerikano
  2. ^ The Mexican dollar at the time was worth about 50 US cents,[38] equivalent to about $18.31 today. The peso fuerte and the Mexican dollar were interchangeable at par.
  3. ^ The first shot was long believed to have been fired at the corner of Sociego and Silencio streets and a monument had been erected at that location in 1941. However, the National Historical Commission determined based on a private study submitted to them that the shots had instead been fired along Sociego Street, and ordered the relocation of the monument.[109][108]
  4. ^ Grayson claimed that he killed a Filipino lieutenant and another Filipino soldier,[112] but neither American nor Filipino official reports mentioned anyone being hit.[111]
  5. ^ The First Philippine Commission, sometimes referred to as the Schurman Commission
  6. ^ See the Schurman Commission § Survey visit to the Philippines article for more detail.

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b . Diplomatic relations. Manila: Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines. 2016. Archived from the original on August 27, 2015. Retrieved December 25, 2016. On February 4, 1899, the Philippine-American War broke out. A handful of Japanese shishi, or ultranationalists, fought alongside President Aguinaldo's army. They landed in Manila, led by Captain Hara Tei and joined Aguinaldo's forces in Bataan.
  2. ^ "AGUINALDO WAS BUT A PUPPET IN GERMAN HANDS". San Francisco Call. August 14, 1898. p. 3. Retrieved January 22, 2023 – via cdnc.ucr.edu.
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  237. ^ a b Escalante 2007, pp. 48–54.

References edit

  • Agoncillo, Teodoro A. (1990) [1960]. History of the Filipino People (Eighth ed.). Quezon City: Garotech Publishing. ISBN 978-9718711064.
  • Agoncillo, Teodoro Andal (1997), Malolos: The Crisis of the Republic, University of the Philippines Press, ISBN 978-971-542-096-9
  • Aguinaldo, Don Emilio (1899). True version of the Philippine revolution. Tarlac, Philippines: self-published.
  • Battjes, Mark E. (2011). (PDF). United States Army Combined Arms Center, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas: Combat Studies Institute Press. ISBN 978-0-9837226-6-3. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 15, 2018. Retrieved December 11, 2016.
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  • Boot, Max (2014). The Savage Wars of Peace: Small Wars And The Rise Of American Power (Revised ed.). New York City: Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-03866-4.
  • Brands, Henry William (1992). Bound to Empire: The United States and the Philippines. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-507104-2.
  • Brody, David (2010). Visualizing American Empire: Orientalism and Imperialism in the Philippines. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226075341.
  • Burdeos, Ray L. (2008). Filipinos in the U.S. Navy & Coast Guard During the Vietnam War. AuthorHouse. ISBN 978-1-4343-6141-7.
  • Constantino, Renato (1975). The Philippines: A Past Revisited. Renato Constantino. ISBN 978-971-8958-00-1. (note: page number info in short footnotes citing this work may be incorrect—work is underway to correct this)
  • Deady, Timothy K. (2005). (PDF). Parameters. 35 (1). Carlisle, Pennsylvania: United States Army War College: 53–68. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 10, 2016. Retrieved December 10, 2016.
  • Dolan, Ronald E., ed. (1991). "Philippines: A Country Study". Washington, D.C.: United States Library of Congress.
  • Escalante, Rene R. (2007). The Bearer of Pax Americana: The Philippine Career of William H. Taft 1900–1903. Quezon City: New Day Publishers. ISBN 978-971-10-1166-6.
  • Francisco, Luzviminda; Jenkins, Shirley; Taruc, Luis; Constantino, Renato; et al. (1999). Schirmer, Daniel B.; Shalom, Stephen Rosskamm (eds.). The Philippines Reader: A History of Colonialism, Neocolonialism, Dictatorship, and Resistance. Brooklyn, New York: South End Press. ISBN 978-0896082755.
  • Golay, Frank H. (1997), Face of empire: United States-Philippine relations, 1898–1946, Ateneo de Manila University Press, ISBN 978-971-550-254-2.
  • Golay, Frank Hindman (2004). Face of Empire: United States-Philippine Relations, 1898–1946. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press. ISBN 978-1881261179.
  • Guevara, Sulpico, ed. (2005), The laws of the first Philippine Republic (the laws of Malolos) 1898–1899., Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Library (published 1972), retrieved March 26, 2008. (English translation by Sulpicio Guevara.)
  • Hack, Karl; Rettig, Tobias (2006). Colonial Armies in Southeast Asia (Routledge Studies in the Modern History of Asia). Abingdon-on-Thames, United Kingdom: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-33413-6.
  • Halstead, Murat (1898). The Story of the Philippines and Our New Possessions, Including the Ladrones, Hawaii, Cuba and Porto Rico. Chicago: Our Possessions Publishing Company.
  • Ileto, Reynaldo Clemeña (1997). Pasyon and revolution: popular movements in the Philippines, 1840–1910. Quezon City: Ateneo de Manila University Press. ISBN 978-9715502320.
  • Jaycox, Faith (2005). The Progressive Era: Eyewitness History (Eyewitness History Series). New York City: Infobase Publishing. ISBN 978-0-8160-5159-5.
  • Jernegan, Prescott F (2009), The Philippine Citizen, BiblioBazaar, LLC, ISBN 978-1-115-97139-3
  • Kalaw, Maximo Manguiat (1927). The Development of Philippine politics (1872-1920). Manila: Oriental Commercial Company, Inc.
  • Karnow, Stanley (1989). In Our Image: America's Empire in the Philippines. New York City: Random House. ISBN 978-030777543-6.
  • Keenan, Jerry (2001). Encyclopedia of the Spanish–American & Philippine–American wars. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-57607-093-2.
  • Linn, Brian McAllister (2000a). The Philippine War, 1899–1902. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-1225-3.
  • Linn, Brian McAllister (2000b). The U.S. Army and counterinsurgency in the Philippine war, 1899–1902. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0807849484.
  • Lone, Stewart (2007). Daily Lives of Civilians in Wartime Asia: From the Taiping Rebellion to the Vietnam War. Santa Barbara, California: Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0313336843.
  • Miller, Stuart Creighton (1982). Benevolent assimilation: the American conquest of the Philippines, 1899—1903. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-03081-9.
  • Miller, Stuart Creighton (1984), Benevolent Assimilation: The American Conquest of the Philippines, 1899–1903 (4th edition, reprint ed.), Yale University Press, ISBN 978-0-300-03081-5
  • "Race-Making and Colonial Violence in the U.S. Empire: The Philippine–American War as Race War", Diplomatic History, Vol. 30, No. 2 (April 2006), 169–210. (version[permanent dead link] at Japanfocus.org).
  • Ramsey, Robert D. III (2007). (PDF). United States Army Combined Arms Center, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas: Combat Studies Institute Press. ISBN 978-0-16-078950-2. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 16, 2019. Retrieved December 11, 2016.
  • Randolph, Carman Fitz (2009). "Chapter I, The Annexation of the Philippines". The Law and Policy of Annexation. Charleston, South Carolina: BiblioBazaar, LLC. ISBN 978-1-103-32481-1.
  • Schurman, Jacob Gould; Dewey, George; Denby, Charles Harvey; Worcester, Dean Conant (1900). Report of the Philippine Commission to the President. Vol. I. Washington, D.C.: United States Government Publishing Office.
  • Seekins, Donald M. (1993), "The First Phase of United States Rule, 1898–1935", in Dolan, Ronald E. (ed.), Philippines: A Country Study (4th ed.), Washington, D.C.: Federal Research Division, Library of Congress, retrieved December 25, 2007
  • Sexton, William Thaddeus (1939). Soldiers in the Sun. Charleston, South Carolina: Nabu Press. ISBN 978-1179372662.
  • Silbey, David J. (2008). A War of Frontier and Empire: The Philippine–American War, 1899–1902. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-0-8090-9661-9.
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  • Storey, Moorfield; Codman, Julian (1902). Secretary Root's record. "Marked severities" in Philippine warfare. An analysis of the law and facts bearing on the action and utterances of President Roosevelt and Secretary Root. Boston: George H. Ellis Company. See also Moorfield Storey and Julian Codman (1902). Secretary Root's Record:"Marked Severities" in Philippine Warfare – Wikisource.
  • Taylor, John R.M., ed. (1907), (PDF), Compilation of Philippine Insurgent Records, Combined Arms Research Library, originally from War Department, Bureau of Insular Affairs, archived from the original (PDF) on October 3, 2008, retrieved June 2, 2012
  • Tucker, Spencer C., ed. (2009). The encyclopedia of the Spanish–American and Philippine–American wars: a political, social, and military history. Vol. I–III. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-85109-951-1.
  • Wolff, Leon (2006), Little brown brother: how the United States purchased and pacified the Philippine Islands at the century's turn, History Book Club (published 2005), ISBN 978-1-58288-209-3(Introduction, Decolonizing the History of the Philippine–American War, by Paul A. Kramer dated December 8, 2005)
  • Worcester, Dean Conant (1914). The Philippines: Past and Present. Vol. II. New York: Macmillan Publishers.
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  • Worcester, Dean Conant (1914), "IV. The Premeditated Insurgent Attack", The Philippines: Past and Present (vol. 1 of 2), Macmillan, pp. 75–89, ISBN 1-4191-7715-X
  • Zaide, Sonia M. (1994), The Philippines: A Unique Nation, All-Nations Publishing Co., ISBN 978-971-642-071-5
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Further reading edit

  • Delmendo, Sharon (2004). The star-entangled banner: one hundred years of America in the Philippines. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press. ISBN 0-8135-3411-9.
  • Jacobson, Matthew Frye (2000). Barbarian virtues: the United States encounters foreign peoples at home and abroad, 1876–1917. New York City: Hill & Wang. ISBN 978-0-8090-1628-0.
  • Jones, Gregg (2012). Honor in the Dust Theodore Roosevelt, War in the Philippines, and the Rise and Fall of America's Imperial Dream. New York City: New American Library. ISBN 978-0-451-22904-5.
  • Legarda, Benito J. Jr. (2001). The Hills of Sampaloc: the Opening Actions of the Philippine–American War, February 4–5, 1899. Makati: Bookmark. ISBN 978-971-569-418-6.
  • Stewart, Richard W. General Editor, Ch. 16, Transition, Change, and the Road to war, 1902–1917" January 12, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, in "American Military History, Volume I: The United States Army and the Forging of a Nation, 1775–1917" December 27, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Center of Military History, United States Army, ISBN 0-16-072362-0.
  • Stratemeyer, Edward. (1898). Under Dewey at Manila – Wikisource.
  • Stratemeyer, Edward (as Ralph Bonehill). (1899). A Sailor Boy with Dewey – Wikisource.
  • Stratemeyer, Edward. (1900). The Campaign of the Jungle – Wikisource.
  • Stratemeyer, Edward. (1901). Under MacArthur in Luzon – Wikisource.
  • The "Lodge Committee" (a.k.a. Philippine Investigating Committee) hearings and a great deal of documentation were published in three volumes (3000 pages) as S. Doc. 331, 57th Cong., 1st Session An abridged version of the oral testimony can be found in: American Imperialism and the Philippine Insurrection: Testimony Taken from Hearings on Affairs in the Philippine Islands before the Senate Committee on the Philippines—1902; edited by Henry F Graff; Publisher: Little, Brown; 1969.
  • Young, L.S.; Northrop, H.D. (1899). The Life of Admiral Dewey and the Conquest of the Philippines. P. W. Ziegler.
  • Wilcox, Marrion. Harper's History of the War. Harper, New York and London 1900, reprinted 1979. [Alternate title: Harper's History of the War in the Philippines]. Also reprinted in the Philippines by Vera-Reyes.

External links edit

  • The American Peril – An Examination of the Spanish–American War and the Philippine Insurrection by Dan Carlin
  • Arnaldo Dumindin
  • historicaltextarchive.com
  • Philippine Centennial Celebration[permanent dead link] MSC Computer Training Center.
  • The Matter of the Philippines, from Birth of an American Empire, [1][permanent dead link]
  • "El Primer Genocido". Retrieved January 2, 2017.[dead link](Spanish) (archived from on 2006-10-15)
  • A brief description of the war between the United States and the Philippines, which began in 1899.
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived February 13, 2008)by Mariano "Anong" Santos, Pinoy Newsmagazine, August 2006 (archived on 2008-02-13)
  • "Imperial Amnesia" by John B. Judis, Foreign Policy, July/August 2004
  • The Philippine Revolutionary Records at (archived on 2009-05-25).
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived May 11, 2011)(archived on 2011-05-11)
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived May 11, 2011)(archived on 2011-05-11)
  • Booknotes interview with Stanley Karnow on In Our Image: America's Empire in the Philippines, May 28, 1989.
  • No. 15 Spanish 12-pounder September 21, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Photo of a bronze cannon captured by the Americans in Manila.
  • Philippine–American War – 1899–1902 (videos)
  • Reenactment of Spanish–American War (video) on YouTube
  • Spanish–American War Reenactment Groups

philippine, american, clockwise, from, left, troops, manila, gregorio, pilar, troops, around, 1898, americans, guarding, pasig, river, bridge, 1898, battle, santa, cruz, filipino, soldiers, malolos, battle, quinguadate, february, 1899, july, 1902, years, month. Philippine American WarClockwise from top left U S troops in Manila Gregorio del Pilar and his troops around 1898 Americans guarding the Pasig River bridge in 1898 the Battle of Santa Cruz Filipino soldiers at Malolos the Battle of QuinguaDatePhilippine American War February 4 1899 July 2 1902 3 years 4 months and 4 weeks i Moro Rebellion February 4 1899 June 15 1913 14 years 4 months 1 week and 4 days LocationPhilippinesResultAmerican victory American occupation of the Philippines fully established dissolution of the First Philippine RepublicTerritorialchangesThe Philippines becomes an unincorporated territory of the United States and later a U S Commonwealth until 1946 Belligerents1899 1902 United States Military Government1899 1902 Philippine Republic Negros Republic Zamboanga RepublicLimited foreign support Japanese Empire 1 German Empire 2 1902 1913 United States Insular Government1902 1913 Tagalog Republic until 1906 Maguindanao Sultanate until 1905 Sulu SultanateCommanders and leadersWilliam McKinley X Theodore Roosevelt Jacob G Schurman William Howard Taft Arthur MacArthur Jr Elwell Stephen Otis Adna Chaffee Henry Lawton Frederick N Funston J Franklin Bell Leonard Wood Tasker H Bliss John J PershingEmilio Aguinaldo Apolinario Mabini Pedro Paterno Antonio Luna X Artemio Ricarte Jose Alejandrino Miguel Malvar Gregorio del Pilar Vicente Alvarez Gregorio Aglipay Dionisio Seguela Macario Sakay Datu Ali Jamalul Kiram IIUnits involved1899 1902 United States Army United States Volunteers United States Marine Corps United States Navy Macabebe Scouts1902 1913 United States Marine Corps Philippine Scouts Philippine Constabulary1899 1902 Philippine Republican Army Philippine Republican Navy Babaylanes Pulajanes Supported by Ishin Shishi 1 1902 1913 Irreconcilables Babaylanes Pulajanes Moro peopleStrength 126 000 total 3 4 24 000 to 44 000 field strength 5 80 000 100 000regular and irregular 5 Casualties and losses4 200 killed 6 2 818 wounded several succumbed to disease 7 About 10 000 killed 8 Emilio Aguinaldo estimate 16 000 20 000 killed 9 American estimate Filipino civilians 200 000 250 000 died most because of famine and disease ii There is disagreement regarding the official ending date of the conflict see here for further information While there are many estimates for civilian deaths with some at around 1 million and others going well over a million for the war modern historians generally place the death toll between 200 000 and 250 000 10 11 see Casualties The Philippine American War 12 known alternatively as the Philippine Insurrection Filipino American War a or Tagalog Insurgency 13 14 15 was fought between the First Philippine Republic and the United States from February 4 1899 until July 2 1902 16 Tensions arose after the United States annexed the Philippines under the Treaty of Paris at the conclusion of the Spanish American War rather than acknowledging the Philippines declaration of independence 17 18 The war can be seen as a continuation of the Philippine struggle for independence that began in 1896 with the Philippine Revolution against Spanish rule 19 Fighting between the forces of the United States and the forces of the Philippine Republic broke out on February 4 1899 in what became known as the Battle of Manila On February 4 1899 The Philippine Council of Government issued a proclamation urging the people to continue the war 20 Philippine President Emilio Aguinaldo was captured on March 23 1901 and the war was officially declared ended by the US on July 2 1902 However some Philippine groups some led by veterans of the Katipunan which a Philippine revolutionary society that had launched the revolution against Spain continued to fight for several more years Other groups including the Muslim Moro peoples of the southern Philippines and quasi Catholic Pulahan religious movements continued hostilities in remote areas The resistance in the Moro dominated provinces in the south called the Moro Rebellion by the Americans ended with their final defeat at the Battle of Bud Bagsak on June 15 1913 21 The war resulted in at least 200 000 Filipino civilian deaths mostly from famine and diseases such as cholera 22 23 24 Some estimates for civilian dead reach up to a million 9 Atrocities were committed during the conflict by both sides 25 including torture mutilation and executions In retaliation for Filipino guerrilla warfare tactics the U S carried out reprisals and scorched earth campaigns and forcibly relocated many civilians to concentration camps where thousands died 26 27 28 The war and subsequent occupation by the U S changed the culture of the islands leading to the rise of Protestantism disestablishment of the Catholic Church and the rise of English to the islands as the primary language of government education business and industry 29 The U S annexation and war sparked political backlash from anti imperialists in the U S Senate who argued that the war was a definite example of U S imperialism and that it was an inherent contradiction of the founding principles of the United States contained in the Declaration of Independence 30 31 32 In 1902 the United States Congress passed the Philippine Organic Act which provided for the creation of the Philippine Assembly with members to be elected by Filipino males women did not have the right to vote until a 1937 plebiscite 33 34 This act was superseded by the 1916 Jones Act Philippine Autonomy Act which contained the first formal and official declaration of the United States government s commitment to eventually grant independence to the Philippines 35 The 1934 Tydings McDuffie Act Philippine Independence Act created the Commonwealth of the Philippines the following year increasing self governance and established a process towards full independence originally scheduled for 1944 but delayed by World War II and the Japanese occupation of the Philippines The United States eventually granted full Philippine independence in 1946 through the Treaty of Manila 36 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Philippine Revolution 1 2 Aguinaldo s exile and return 2 Origins of the conflict 2 1 Battle of Manila 2 2 End of the Spanish American War 2 3 Benevolent assimilation 3 War 3 1 Path to war 3 2 American strategy 3 3 Filipino war strategy 3 4 Guerrilla war phase 3 5 Martial law 3 6 Decline and fall of the First Philippine Republic 3 7 Establishment of U S civil government 3 8 Resistance 3 9 Official end of the war 4 Casualties 5 Atrocities 5 1 American atrocities 5 2 Filipino atrocities 6 Campaigns 7 Political atmosphere 7 1 First Philippine Commission 7 2 Second Philippine Commission 7 3 American opposition 7 3 1 Mark Twain 7 4 Filipino opposition 8 Aftermath 8 1 Post 1902 conflicts 8 2 Cultural impact 8 2 1 In the media 8 3 Philippine independence and sovereignty 1946 9 See also 10 Notes 11 Citations 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksBackground editSee also History of the Philippines 1898 1946 Philippine Revolution edit Main article Philippine Revolution Andres Bonifacio was a warehouseman and clerk from Manila On July 7 1892 he established the Katipunan a revolutionary organization formed to gain independence from Spanish colonial rule by armed revolt In August 1896 the Katipunan was discovered by the Spanish authorities and thus launched its revolution Fighters in Cavite province won early victories One of the most influential and popular leaders from Cavite was Emilio Aguinaldo mayor of Cavite El Viejo modern day Kawit who gained control of much of the eastern portion of Cavite province Eventually Aguinaldo and his faction gained control of the revolution After Aguinaldo was elected president of a revolutionary government superseding the Katipunan at the Tejeros Convention on March 22 1897 his government had Bonifacio executed for treason after a show trial on May 10 1897 37 Aguinaldo s exile and return edit Main article Hong Kong Junta nbsp Emilio Aguinaldo in the fieldBy late 1897 after a succession of defeats for the revolutionary forces the Spanish had regained control over most of rebel territory Aguinaldo and Spanish Governor General Fernando Primo de Rivera entered into armistice negotiations while Spanish forces surrounded Aguinaldo s hideout and base in Biak na Bato in Bulacan province Aguinaldo reorganized his Republic of the Philippines in the meantime On December 14 1897 an agreement was reached in which the Spanish colonial government would pay Aguinaldo MXN800 000 b in Manila in three installments if Aguinaldo would go into exile outside of the Philippines 39 40 Upon receiving the first installment Aguinaldo and 25 of his closest associates left their headquarters at Biak na Bato and made their way to Hong Kong in accord with the agreement Before his departure Aguinaldo denounced the Philippine Revolution exhorted Filipino rebel combatants to disarm and declared those who continued hostilities and waging war to be bandits 41 Despite Aguinaldo s denunciation some revolutionaries continued their armed revolt against the Spanish colonial government 42 43 44 Aguinaldo claimed that the Spanish never paid the agreed second and third installments 45 On April 22 1898 while in exile Aguinaldo had a private meeting in Singapore with United States Consul E Spencer Pratt after which he decided to again lead the revolution 46 According to Aguinaldo Pratt had communicated with Commodore George Dewey commander of the Asiatic Squadron of the United States Navy by telegram and passed assurances from Dewey to Aguinaldo that the United States would recognize the independence of the Philippines Pratt reportedly stated that there was no necessity for entering into a written agreement because the word of the Admiral and of the United States Consul were equivalent to the official word of the United States 47 With these assurances Aguinaldo returned to the Philippines Pratt later contested Aguinaldo s account of these events and denied any dealings of a political character with the leader 48 Dewey denounced Aguinaldo s account as a falsehood 49 asserting that he had made no promises regarding the future From my observation of Aguinaldo and his advisers I decided that it would be unwise to co operate with him or his adherents in an official manner In short my policy was to avoid any entangling alliance with the insurgents while I appreciated that pending the arrival of our troops they might be of service 50 nbsp Personifying the United States Uncle Sam chases a bee representing Emilio Aguinaldo Filipino historian Teodoro Agoncillo claimed that the Americans first approached Aguinaldo in Hong Kong and Singapore to persuade him to cooperate with Dewey in wresting power from the Spanish He conceded that Dewey may not have promised Aguinaldo American recognition and Philippine independence Dewey had no authority to make such promises He asserted that Dewey and Aguinaldo had an informal alliance to fight Spain that Dewey breached that alliance by making secret arrangements for a Spanish surrender to American forces and that he later treated Aguinaldo badly Agoncillo concluded that the American attitude towards Aguinaldo showed that they came to the Philippines not as a friend but as an enemy masking as a friend 51 Aguinaldo traveled from Singapore and arrived in Hong Kong on May 1 52 the day that Dewey s naval forces destroyed Rear Admiral Patricio Montojo s Spanish Pacific Squadron at the Battle of Manila Bay Aguinaldo departed Hong Kong aboard USRC McCulloch on May 17 and arrived in Cavite on May 19 53 Less than three months after Aguinaldo s return the Philippine Revolutionary Army had conquered nearly all of the Philippines With the exception of Manila which was surrounded by revolutionary forces some 12 000 strong the Filipinos controlled the islands Aguinaldo declared independence at his house in Cavite El Viejo on June 12 1898 The Philippine Declaration of Independence was not recognized by either the United States or Spain and the Spanish government ceded the Philippines to the United States in the 1898 Treaty of Paris which was signed on December 10 1898 in consideration for an indemnity for Spanish expenses and assets lost 54 Upon his return in May 1898 Aguinaldo established a Dictatorial Government with himself as Dictator under which Philippine independence was declared About a month later he established a Revolutionary Government in its place and retook the title of President He then organized a congress in Malolos Bulacan to draft a constitution This led to the formal establishment of the Philippine Republic by late January 1899 55 This government was later known as the First Philippine Republic and also as the Malolos Republic after its capital Aguinaldo who had again been ratified as president by the Malolos congress on January 1 56 is today officially considered as the first President of the Republic of the Philippines by the Philippine government 57 Origins of the conflict editBattle of Manila edit Main article Battle of Manila 1898 On July 9 General Anderson informed Major General Henry Clark Corbin the Adjutant General of the U S Army that Aguinaldo has declared himself Dictator and President and is trying to take Manila without our assistance opining that that would not be probable but if done would allow him to resist any U S attempt to establish a provisional government 58 On July 15 Aguinaldo issued three organic decrees assuming civil authority 59 On July 18 Anderson wrote that he suspected Aguinaldo to be secretly negotiating with the Spanish authorities 58 In a July 21 letter to the Adjutant General Anderson wrote that Aguinaldo had put in operation an elaborate system of military government under his assumed authority as Dictator and has prohibited any supplies being given us except by his order and that Anderson had demanded that Aguinaldo must aid in fulfilling Anderson s demands for necessary supplies 60 On July 24 Aguinaldo wrote a letter to Anderson in effect warning him not to disembark American troops in places liberated by Filipinos from Spain without first informing him in writing about the places and purpose of the action Murat Halstead official historian of the Philippine Expedition wrote that General Merritt remarked shortly after his arrival on June 25 As General Aguinaldo did not visit me on my arrival nor offer his services as a subordinate military leader and as my instructions from the President fully contemplated the occupation of the islands by the American land forces and stated that the powers of the military occupant are absolute and supreme and immediately operate upon the political condition of the inhabitants I did not consider it wise to hold any direct communication with the insurgent leader until I should be in possession of the city of Manila especially as I would not until then be in a position to issue a proclamation and enforce my authority in the event that his pretensions should clash with my designs 61 U S commanders suspected that Aguinaldo and his forces were informing the Spanish of American movements U S Army Major John R M Taylor later wrote after translating and analyzing insurgent documents The officers of the United States Army who believed that the insurgents were informing the Spaniards of the American movements were right Sastron has printed a letter from Pio del Pilar dated July 30 to the Spanish officer commanding at Santa Ana in which Pilar said that Aguinaldo had told him that the Americans would attack the Spanish lines on August 2 and advised that the Spaniards should not give way but hold their positions Pilar added however that if the Spaniards should fall back on the walled city and surrender Santa Ana to himself he would hold it with his own men Aguinaldo s information was correct and on August 2 eight American soldiers were killed or wounded by the Spanish fire 62 The secret agreement made by Commodore Dewey and Brigadier General Wesley Merritt with Spanish Governor General Fermin Jaudenes and with his predecessor Basilio Augustin was for Spanish forces to surrender only to the Americans To save face the Spanish surrender would take place after a mock battle in Manila that the Spanish would lose the revolutionaries would not be allowed to enter the city On the eve of the battle Anderson telegraphed Aguinaldo Do not let your troops enter Manila without the permission of the American commander On this side of the Pasig River you will be under fire 63 On August 13 American forces captured Manila 64 Before the attack on Manila American and Filipino forces had been allies in all but name After the capture of Manila Spanish and Americans entered in a partnership that excluded the insurgents Fighting between American and Filipino troops had almost broken out as the former moved to dislodge the latter from strategic positions around Manila Aguinaldo had been told by the Americans that his army could not participate and would be fired upon if it entered the city The insurgents were infuriated but Aguinaldo bided his time Relations continued to deteriorate however as it became clear to Filipinos that the Americans were in the islands to stay 65 End of the Spanish American War edit nbsp 1898 US political cartoon U S President William McKinley is shown holding the Philippines depicted as a native child as the world looks on The implied options for McKinley are to keep the Philippines or give it back to Spain which the cartoon compares to throwing a child off a cliff On August 12 1898 The New York Times reported that a peace protocol had been signed in Washington that afternoon between the U S and Spain suspending hostilities 66 The full text of the protocol was not made public until November 5 but Article III read The United States will occupy and hold the City Bay and Harbor of Manila pending the conclusion of a treaty of peace which shall determine the control disposition and government of the Philippines 67 68 After conclusion of this agreement U S President William McKinley proclaimed a suspension of hostilities with Spain 69 In a clash at Cavite between US soldiers and insurgents on August 25 1898 George Hudson of the Utah regiment was killed Corporal William Anderson was mortally wounded and four troopers of the Fourth Cavalry were slightly wounded 70 71 This provoked General Anderson to send Aguinaldo a letter saying In order to avoid the very serious misfortune of an encounter between our troops I demand your immediate withdrawal with your guard from Cavite One of my men has been killed and three wounded by your people This is positive and does not admit of explanation or delay 71 Internal insurgent communications reported that the Americans were drunk at the time Halstead writes that Aguinaldo expressed his regret and promised to punish the offenders 70 In internal insurgent communications Apolinario Mabini initially proposed to investigate and punish any offenders identified Aguinaldo modified this ordering say that he was not killed by your soldiers but by them themselves the Americans since they were drunk according to your telegram 72 An insurgent officer in Cavite at the time reported on his record of services that he took part in the movement against the Americans on the afternoon of the 24th of August under the orders of the commander of the troops and the adjutant of the post 73 Elections were held by the Revolutionary Government between June and September 10 seating a legislature known as the Malolos Congress In a session between September 15 and November 13 1898 the Malolos Constitution was adopted It was promulgated on January 21 1899 creating the First Philippine Republic with Emilio Aguinaldo as president 74 Article V of the peace protocol signed on August 12 had mandated negotiations to conclude a treaty of peace to begin in Paris not later than October 1 1898 75 President McKinley sent a five man commission initially instructed to demand no more than Luzon Guam and Puerto Rico which would have provided a limited U S empire 76 In Paris the commission was besieged with advice particularly from American generals and European diplomats to demand the entire Philippine archipelago 76 The unanimous recommendation was that it would certainly be cheaper and more humane to take the entire Philippines than to keep only part of it 77 Furthermore the sudden rise of the Empire of Japan as a great power following its victory against China in the First Sino Japanese War of 1895 had led to fears that the Philippines were poised to fall into Japanese hands if the United States did not take control of the islands 78 79 80 On October 28 1898 McKinley wired the commission that cessation of Luzon alone leaving the rest of the islands subject to Spanish rule or to be the subject of future contention cannot be justified on political commercial or humanitarian grounds The cessation must be the whole archipelago or none The latter is wholly inadmissible and the former must therefore be required 81 The Spanish negotiators were furious over the immodist demands of a conqueror but their wounded pride was assuaged by an offer of twenty million dollars for Spanish improvements to the islands The Spaniards capitulated and on December 10 1898 the U S and Spain signed the Treaty of Paris formally ending the Spanish American War In Article III Spain ceded the Philippine archipelago to the United States as follows Spain cedes to the United States the archipelago known as the Philippine Islands and comprehending the islands lying within the following line geographic description elided The United States will pay to Spain the sum of twenty million dollars 20 000 000 within three months after the exchange of the ratifications of the present treaty 82 83 The U S experienced a movement for Philippine independence some said that the U S had no right to a land where many of the people wanted self government In 1898 industrialist Andrew Carnegie offered to pay the U S government 20 million to give the Philippines its independence 84 Benevolent assimilation edit nbsp U S soldiers and insurrecto prisoners Manila 1899On December 21 1898 McKinley issued a proclamation of benevolent assimilation substituting the mild sway of justice and right for arbitrary rule for the greatest good of the governed 85 Referring to the Treaty of Paris it said that as a result of the victories of American arms the future control disposition and government of the Philippine Islands are ceded to the United States It enjoined military commander Major General Elwell Stephen Otis to inform Filipinos that in succeeding to the sovereignty of Spain the authority of the United States is to be exerted for the securing of the persons and property of the people of the islands and for the confirmation of all their private rights and relations The proclamation specified that it will be the duty of the commander of the forces of occupation to announce and proclaim in the most public manner that we come not as invaders or conquerors but as friends to protect the natives in their homes in their employments and in their personal and religious rights 86 The Spanish yielded Iloilo to the insurgents on December 26 An American brigade under General Marcus P Miller arrived on December 28 and opened communications with the insurgents 87 A Filipino official styling himself Presidente Lopez of the Federal Government of the Visayas stated landing required express orders from the central government of Luzon and refused permission to land 88 89 That news reached Washington on January 1 1899 88 90 Otis who had been appointed Military Governor of the Philippines had delayed publication of McKinley s proclamation On January 4 Otis published an amended version edited so as not to convey the meanings of the terms sovereignty protection and right of cessation which were present in the original version 91 On January 6 1899 General Otis was quoted in The New York Times as stating convinced that the U S government intends to seek the establishment of a liberal government in which the people will be as fully represented as the maintenance of law and order will permit susceptible of development on lines of increased representation and the bestowal of increased powers into a government as free and independent as is enjoyed by the most favored provinces in the world 92 Unknown to Otis the War Department had sent an enciphered copy of the Benevolent Assimilation proclamation to General Miller for informational purposes Miller assumed that it was for distribution and unaware that a politically bowdlerized version had been published by Otis published the original in both Spanish and Tagalog translations which eventually made their way to Aguinaldo 93 Even before Aguinaldo received the unaltered version and observed the changes in the copy he had received from Otis he was upset that Otis had altered his own title to Military Governor of the Philippines from in the Philippines a change that Otis had made without authorization 94 The original proclamation was given by supporters to Aguinaldo who on January 5 issued a counter proclamation 95 Such procedures so foreign to the dictates of culture and the usages observed by civilized nations gave me the right to act without observing the usual rules of intercourse Nevertheless in order to be correct to the end I sent to General Otis commissioners charged to solicit him to desist from his rash enterprise but they were not listened to My government can not remain indifferent in view of such a violent and aggressive seizure of a portion of its territory by a nation which arrogated to itself the title champion of oppressed nations Thus it is that my government is disposed to open hostilities if the American troops attempt to take forcible possession of the Visayan Islands I denounce these acts before the world in order that the conscience of mankind may pronounce its infallable verdict as to who are the true oppressors of nations and the tormentors of human kind 96 97 After some copies of that proclamation had been distributed Aguinaldo ordered the recall of undistributed copies and issued another proclamation which was published the same day in El Heraldo de la Revolucion the official newspaper of the Philippine Republic His statement in part said As in General Otis s proclamation he alluded to some instructions edited by His Excellency the President of the United States referring to the administration of the matters in the Philippine Islands I in the name of God the root and fountain of all justice and that of all the right which has been visibly granted to me to direct my dear brothers in the difficult work of our regeneration protest most solemnly against this intrusion of the United States Government on the sovereignty of these islands I equally protest in the name of the Filipino people against the said intrusion because as they have granted their vote of confidence appointing me president of the nation although I don t consider that I deserve such therefore I consider it my duty to defend to death its liberty and independence 98 99 Otis taking these two proclamations as tantamount to war strengthened American observation posts and alerted his troops Aguinaldo s proclamations energized the masses with a vigorous determination to fight what was perceived as an ally turned enemy Some 40 000 Filipinos fled Manila within a period of 15 days 98 100 Meanwhile Felipe Agoncillo who had been commissioned by the Philippine Revolutionary Government as Minister Plenipotentiary to negotiate treaties with foreign governments and who had unsuccessfully sought to be seated at the negotiations between the U S and Spain in Paris had traveled to Washington On January 6 he filed a request for an interview with the President to discuss affairs in the Philippines The next day the government officials were surprised to learn that messages to General Otis to deal mildly with the rebels and not to force a conflict had become known to Agoncillo and cabled by him to Aguinaldo 88 On January 8 Agoncillo stated 88 In my opinion the Filipino people whom I represent will never consent to become a colony dependency of the United States The soldiers of the Filipino army have pledged their lives that they will not lay down their arms until General Aguinaldo tells them to do so and they will keep that pledge I feel confident The Filipino committees in London Paris and Madrid about this time telegraphed to President McKinley We protest against the disembarkation of American troops at Iloilo The treaty of peace still unratified the American claim to sovereignty is premature Pray reconsider the resolution regarding Iloilo Filipinos wish for the friendship of America and abhor militarism and deceit 101 On January 8 Aguinaldo received the following message from Teodoro Sandiko To the President of the Revolutionary Government Malolos from Sandico Manila 8 Jan 1899 9 40 p m In consequence of the order of General Rios to his officers as soon as the Filipino attack begins the Americans should be driven into the Intramuros district and the walled city should be set on fire Pipi 102 The New York Times reported on January 8 that two Americans who had been guarding a waterboat in Iloilo had been attacked one fatally and that insurgents were threatening to destroy the business section of the city by fire and on January 10 that a peaceful solution to the Iloilo issues may result but that Aguinaldo had issued a proclamation threatening to drive the Americans from the islands 103 104 By January 10 insurgents were ready to take the offensive but wanted to provoke the Americans into firing the first shot They increased their hostile demonstrations and entered forbidden territory Their attitude is illustrated by an extract from a telegram sent by Colonel Cailles to Aguinaldo on January 10 1899 105 Most urgent An American interpreter has come to tell me to withdraw our forces in Maytubig fifty paces I shall not draw back a step and in place of withdrawing I shall advance a little farther He brings a letter from his general in which he speaks to me as a friend I said that from the day I knew that Maquinley McKinley opposed our independence I did not want any dealings with any American War war is what we want The Americans after this speech went off pale Aguinaldo approved the hostile attitude of Cailles replying 105 I approve and applaud what you have done with the Americans and zeal and valour always also my beloved officers and soldiers there I believe that they are playing us until the arrival of their reinforcements but I shall send an ultimatum and remain always on the alert E A Jan 10 1899 War edit nbsp Filipino soldiers outside Manila in 1899Path to war edit The First Philippine Republic was declared on January 21 1899 106 Lack of recognition by the United States led to rising tensions and eventually to hostilities On January 31 1899 the Minister of Interior of the Republic Teodoro Sandiko signed a decree saying that President Aguinaldo had directed that all idle lands be planted to provide food in view of impending war with the Americans 107 On the evening of February 4 Private William W Grayson fired the war s first shots along Sociego Street towards a sub post of blockhouse 7 located at the turn towards the blockhouse 108 c According the National Historical Commission of the Philippines two unarmed soldiers were killed 110 According to Grayson s account his patrol ordered four Filipino soldiers to Halt and when the men responded by cocking their rifles they fired on them and then retreated 111 d The outbreak of violence triggered the 1899 Battle of Manila Later that day Aguinaldo declared That peace and friendly relations with the Americans be broken and that the latter be treated as enemies within the limits prescribed by the laws of war 113 nbsp Historical marker installed by the Philippines Historical Committee in 1941 to commemorate the shot that started the warThe following day Filipino General Isidoro Torres came through the lines under a flag of truce to deliver a message from Aguinaldo to General Otis that the fighting had begun accidentally and that Aguinaldo wished for the hostilities to cease immediately and for the establishment of a neutral zone Otis dismissed these overtures and replied that the fighting having begun must go on to the grim end 114 On February 5 General Arthur MacArthur ordered his troops to advance against Filipino troops 115 nbsp Wounded American soldiers at Santa Mesa Manila in 1899In the U S President McKinley had created a commission chaired by Jacob G Schurman on January 20 e and tasked it to study the situation in the Philippines and make recommendations on how the U S should proceed Members included General Otis and two other civilian appointees The three civilian members of the commission arrived in Manila on March 4 1899 a month after hostilities began 116 General Otis viewed the arrival of his fellow commission members as an intrusion and boycotted commission meetings 117 The civilian members of the commission spent a month meeting with Ilustrados who had deserted Aguinaldo s Malolos Republic government and studying the Malolos Constitution and other documents of Aguinaldo s revolutionary government Meanwhile with U S forces advancing northwards from Manila the seat of Aguinaldo s revolutionary government had been moved from Malolos to San Isidro Nueva Ecija When Malolos fell at the end of March it moved further north to San Fernando Pampanga 118 The commission published a proclamation containing assurances that the U S did not intend exploitation of Filipinos but their advancement to a position among the most civilized peoples of the world and announced that the United States is anxious to establish in the Philippine Islands an enlightened system of government under which the Philippine people may enjoy the largest measure of home rule and the amplest liberty 119 Though not authorized to discuss an armistice civilian commission members held informal discussions with a representative of Aguinaldo Progress on a path without war ended after General Luna arrested Aguinaldo s then cabinet and replaced it with a more hawkish one headed by Apolinario Mabini f On June 2 1899 the First Philippine Republic declared war on the United States 120 American strategy edit nbsp The Battle of Caloocan February 10 1899 Major General Arthur MacArthur with binoculars American annexation was justified in the name of liberating and protecting the peoples in the former Spanish colonies Senator Albert J Beveridge a prominent American imperialist said Americans altruistically went to war with Spain to liberate Cubans Puerto Ricans and Filipinos from their tyrannical yoke If they lingered on too long in the Philippines it was to protect the Filipinos from European predators waiting in the wings for an American withdrawal and to tutor them in American style democracy 121 On February 11 1899 one week after the first shots were fired Iloilo was bombarded by American naval forces from the USS Petrel and the USS Baltimore Filipino forces lit the town on fire before retreating The city was captured by ground forces led by Brigadier General Marcus Miller with no loss of American lives 25 to 30 Filipinos were wounded The native part of the city was almost entirely destroyed 122 Months later after finally securing Manila American forces moved northward engaging in combat at the brigade and battalion level in pursuit of the fleeing insurgent forces 123 In response to the use of guerrilla warfare tactics by Filipino forces beginning in September 1899 124 American military strategy shifted to suppression of the resistance Tactics became focused on the control of key areas with internment and segregation of the civilian population in zones of protection from the guerrillas 125 Many of the interned civilians died from dysentery 126 General Otis gained notoriety for some of his actions Although his superiors had directed Otis to avoid military conflict he did little to prevent war Otis refused to accept anything but unconditional surrender from the Philippine Army He often made major military decisions without first consulting Washington He acted aggressively in dealing with the Filipinos under the assumption that their resistance would collapse quickly 127 Even after this assumption proved false he continued to insist that the insurgency had been defeated and that the remaining casualties were caused by isolated bands of outlaws 128 Otis was also active in suppressing information about American military tactics When letters describing American atrocities reached the American media Otis had each press clipping forwarded to the original writer s commanding officer who would convince or force the soldier to retract his statements 129 Filipino war strategy edit nbsp 20th Kansas Volunteers marching through Caloocan at night 1899Estimates of the Filipino forces vary between 80 000 and 100 000 with tens of thousands of auxiliaries Most of the forces were armed only with bolo knives bows and arrows spears and other primitive weapons which were vastly inferior to the guns and other weapons of the American forces 130 A fairly rigid indigenous caste system existed in the Philippines before the Spanish colonial era which partially survived among the natives during Spanish rule The goal or end state sought by the First Philippine Republic was a sovereign independent stable nation led by an oligarchy composed of members of the educated class known as the ilustrado class Local chieftains landowners businessmen and cabezas de barangay were the principales who controlled local politics The war was at its peak when ilustrados principales and peasants were unified in opposition to annexation by the United States The peasants who represented the majority of the fighting forces had interests different from their ilustrado leaders and the principales of their villages Coupled with the ethnic and geographic fragmentation aligning the interests of people from different social castes was a daunting task 131 The challenge for Aguinaldo and his generals was to sustain unified Filipino public opposition this was the revolutionaries strategic center of gravity 132 The Filipino operational center of gravity was the ability to sustain its force of 100 000 irregulars in the field The Filipino general Francisco Macabulos described the Filipinos war aim as not to vanquish the U S Army but to inflict on them constant losses In the early stages of the war the Philippine Revolutionary Army employed the conventional military tactics typical of an organized armed resistance The hope was to inflict enough American casualties to result in McKinley s defeat by William Jennings Bryan in the 1900 presidential election They hoped that Bryan who held strong anti imperialist views would withdraw the American forces from the Philippines 133 McKinley s election victory in 1900 was demoralizing for the insurgents and convinced many Filipinos that the United States would not depart quickly 133 Coupled with a series of devastating losses on the battlefield against American forces equipped with superior technology and training Aguinaldo became convinced that he needed to change his approach Beginning on September 14 1899 Aguinaldo accepted the advice of General Gregorio del Pilar and authorized the use of guerrilla warfare tactics in subsequent military operations in Bulacan 124 Guerrilla war phase edit For most of 1899 the revolutionary leadership had viewed guerrilla warfare strategically only as a tactical option of final recourse not as a means of operation which better suited their disadvantaged situation On November 13 1899 Aguinaldo decreed that guerrilla warfare would henceforth be the strategy 134 This made American occupation of the Philippine archipelago all the more difficult over the next few years During the first four months of the guerrilla war the Americans had nearly 500 casualties 135 The Philippine Army began staging bloody ambushes and raids such as the guerrilla victories at Paye Catubig Makahambus Pulang Lupa and Mabitac At first it seemed that the Filipinos might be able to fight the Americans to a stalemate and force them to withdraw President McKinley considered withdrawal when the guerrilla raids began Martial law edit On December 20 1900 MacArthur who had succeeded Elwell Otis as U S Military Governor on May 5 136 placed the Philippines under martial law invoking U S Army General Order 100 He announced that guerrilla abuses would no longer be tolerated and outlined the rights which would govern the U S Army s treatment of guerrillas and civilians In particular guerrillas who wore no uniform but peasant dress and shifted from civilian to military status would be held accountable secret committees that collected revolutionary taxes and those accepting U S protection in occupied towns while assisting guerrillas would be treated as war rebels or war traitors Filipino leaders who continued to work towards Philippine independence were deported to Guam 137 Decline and fall of the First Philippine Republic edit Main article First Philippine Republic nbsp A group of Filipino combatants laying down their weapons during their surrender c 1900The Philippine Army continued suffering defeats from the better armed United States Army during the conventional warfare phase forcing Aguinaldo to continually change his base of operations throughout the course of the war On June 24 1900 MacArthur as U S Military Governor published a proclamation offering full and complete amnesty to all insurgents who surrendered within ninety days On August 3 1900 Aguinaldo issued a decree urging a continuation of the war and offering payment of rewards for rifles and ammunition brought in by prisoners or deserters from opposing forces 138 nbsp The 24th U S Infantry primarily made up of African American soldiers at drill in Camp Walker Cebu 1902On March 23 1901 General Frederick Funston and his troops captured Aguinaldo in Palanan Isabela with the help of some Filipinos called the Macabebe Scouts after their home locale 139 140 who had joined the Americans The Americans pretended to be captives of the Scouts who were dressed in Philippine Army uniforms Once Funston and his captors entered Aguinaldo s camp they quickly overwhelmed Aguinaldo s forces 141 On April 1 1901 at Malacanang Palace in Manila Aguinaldo swore an oath accepting the authority of the United States over the Philippines and pledging his allegiance to the American government On April 19 he issued a Proclamation of Formal Surrender to the United States telling his followers to lay down their weapons and give up the fight Let the stream of blood cease to flow let there be an end to tears and desolation Aguinaldo said The lesson which the war holds out and the significance of which I realized only recently leads me to the firm conviction that the complete termination of hostilities and a lasting peace are not only desirable but also absolutely essential for the well being of the Philippines 142 143 The capture of Aguinaldo dealt a severe blow to the Filipino cause but not as much as the Americans had hoped General Miguel Malvar took over the leadership of the Filipino government 144 He originally had taken a defensive stance against the Americans but launched an offensive against the American held towns in the Batangas region 21 General Vicente Lukban in Samar and other army officers continued the war in their respective areas 21 General Bell relentlessly pursued Malvar and his men forcing the surrender of many of the Filipino soldiers Finally Malvar surrendered along with his sick wife and children and some of his officers on April 16 1902 145 146 By the end of the month nearly 3 000 of Malvar s men had also surrendered With the surrender of Malvar the Filipino war effort dwindled 147 Establishment of U S civil government edit nbsp Governor General William Howard Taft addressing the audience at the Philippine Assembly in the Manila Grand Opera HouseOn March 3 1901 the U S Congress passed the Army Appropriation Act containing along with the Platt Amendment on Cuba the Spooner Amendment which provided the president with legislative authority to establish a civil government in the Philippines 148 Up until this time the president had been administering the Philippines by virtue of his war powers 149 On July 1 1901 civil government was inaugurated with William Howard Taft as civil governor 150 151 Hostilities continued and the civil governor shared power and control with the U S military government A centralized public school system was installed in 1901 using English as the medium of instruction This created a heavy shortage of teachers and the Philippine Commission authorized the secretary of public instruction to engage 600 teachers from the U S the so called Thomasites Free primary schools that instructed on duties of citizenship and avocation was introduced 152 The Catholic Church was officially disestablished and much church land was purchased and redistributed An anti sedition law was established in 1901 followed by an anti brigandage law in 1902 153 Resistance edit Guerilla activity continued in some areas notably in Samar under Lukban and in Batangas under Malvar In Samar the Balangiga massacre led to the March across Samar Lukban was captured on 18 February 1902 Some sources assert that Malvar succeeded to the titular presidency of the Philippine Republic government after Aguinaldo s capture he surrendered in April 1902 154 Official end of the war edit The Philippine Organic Act approved on July 1 1902 approved ratified and confirmed McKinley s previous executive order establishing the Second Philippine Commission The act also stipulated that a bicameral legislature would be established composed of a popularly elected lower house the Philippine Assembly and an upper house consisting of an appointed Philippine Commission The act extended the Bill of Rights to Filipinos 155 156 157 On July 2 the United States Secretary of War telegraphed that since the insurrection against the United States had ended and provincial civil governments had been established throughout most of the Philippine Archipelago the office of military governor was terminated 16 158 On July 4 Theodore Roosevelt who had succeeded to the U S presidency proclaimed a full and complete pardon and amnesty to all persons in the Philippine Archipelago who had participated in the conflict 158 159 16 160 On April 9 2002 Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo proclaimed that the Philippine American War had ended on April 16 1902 with the surrender of Malvar 161 162 She declared the centennial anniversary of that date as a national working holiday and as a special non working holiday in the province of Batangas and in the cities of Batangas Lipa and Tanauan 161 162 146 The Kiram Bates Treaty secured the Sultanate of Sulu 163 American forces also established control over interior mountainous areas that had resisted Spanish conquest 164 Casualties edit nbsp A stack of coffins containing dead American soldiers nbsp Filipino casualties on the first day of the warFilipino casualties were much greater than among Americans The United States Department of State states that the war resulted in the death of over 4 200 American and over 20 000 Filipino combatants and that as many as 200 000 Filipino civilians died from violence famine and disease 165 9 The total number of Filipinos who died remains a matter of debate Modern sources cite a figure of 200 000 dead civilian Filipinos with most losses attributable to famine and disease 22 166 167 A cholera epidemic at the war s end killed between 150 000 and 200 000 people 168 Some estimates reach 1 000 000 dead 169 9 170 In 1903 the population of the Philippines was counted by American authorities The survey yielded 7 635 426 people including 56 138 foreign born 171 In 1887 a Spanish census recorded a population of 5 984 717 excluding non Christians 172 Rudolph Rummel estimates that 16 000 to 20 000 Filipino soldiers and 34 000 civilians were killed with up to an additional 200 000 civilian deaths mostly from a cholera epidemic 173 174 10 Atrocities editAmerican atrocities edit See also United States war crimes Philippine American War and United States Senate Committee on the Philippines Investigation nbsp General Jacob H Smith s infamous order KILL EVERY ONE OVER TEN became the caption in the New York Journal cartoon on May 5 1902 The Old Glory draped an American shield on which a vulture replaced the bald eagle The caption at the bottom proclaimed Criminals Because They Were Born Ten Years Before We Took the Philippines nbsp 1902 Life magazine cover depicting water curing by U S Army troops in the PhilippinesThroughout the war numerous atrocities were committed by the U S military including the targeting of civilians American soldiers and other witnesses sent letters home that described some of these atrocities For example In November 1901 the Manila correspondent of the Philadelphia Ledger wrote The present war is no bloodless opera bouffe engagement our men have been relentless have killed to exterminate men women children prisoners and captives active insurgents and suspected people from lads of ten up the idea prevailing that the Filipino as such was little better than a dog 175 Reports from returning soldiers stated that upon entering a village American soldiers would ransack every house and church and rob the inhabitants of everything of value while Filipinos who approached the battle line waving a flag of truce were fired upon 176 Some of the authors were critical of leaders such as General Otis and the overall conduct of the war In 1899 the American Anti Imperialist League published a pamphlet of letters allegedly written by U S soldiers 177 When some of these letters circulated in newspapers they became national news which forced the War Department to investigate Examples A soldier from New York The town of Titatia was surrendered to us a few days ago and two companies occupy the same Last night one of our boys was found shot and his stomach cut open Immediately orders were received from General Wheaton to burn the town and kill every native in sight which was done to a finish About 1 000 men women and children were reported killed I am probably growing hard hearted for I am in my glory when I can sight my gun on some dark skin and pull the trigger 178 Corporal Sam Gillis We make everyone get into his house by seven p m and we only tell a man once If he refuses we shoot him We killed over 300 natives the first night They tried to set the town on fire If they fire a shot from the house we burn the house down and every house near it and shoot the natives so they are pretty quiet in town now 129 General Otis investigation of the content of these letters consisted of sending a copy of them to the author s superior and having him force the author to write a retraction Soldiers such as Private Charles Brenner refused and he was court martialed The charge was for writing and conniving at the publication of an article which contains willful falsehoods concerning himself and a false charge against Captain Bishop 129 Not all such letters that discussed atrocities were intended to criticize General Otis or American actions Many portrayed U S actions as the result of Filipino provocation and thus entirely justified nbsp A man from Batangas riddled with beriberi contracted in a U S Army concentration camp circa 1902In September 1901 enraged by a guerrilla ambush on U S troops in Samar General Jacob H Smith retaliated by ordering an indiscriminate attack upon its inhabitants openly disregarding General Order 100 179 and issuing an order to kill everyone over the age of ten and turn the island into a howling wilderness 180 Major Littleton Waller countermanded the order to his own men saying we are not making war on women and children 181 Still 2 000 to 2 500 Filipino civilians were killed in the expedition across Samar 182 This became a caption in the New York Journal American cartoon on May 5 1902 Smith was eventually court martialed by the American military and forced to retire 182 183 In late 1901 Brigadier General J Franklin Bell took command of American operations in Batangas and Laguna provinces 184 In response to Malvar s guerrilla warfare tactics Bell employed counterinsurgency tactics described by some as a scorched earth campaign that took a heavy toll on guerrilla fighters and civilians 185 Zones of protection were established 125 186 and civilians were given identification papers and forced into concentration camps called reconcentrados surrounded by free fire zones 186 At the Lodge Committee in an attempt to counter the negative reception in America to General Bell s camps Colonel Arthur Wagner the U S Army s chief public relations office insisted the camps were to protect friendly natives from the insurgents and assure them an adequate food supply while teaching them proper sanitary standards Wagner s assertion was undermined by a letter from a commander of one of the camps who described them as suburbs of Hell 187 nbsp Aftermath of the First Battle of Bud Dajo in March 1906 in which up to 900 civilians including women and children were killedMethods of torture such as the water cure were frequently employed during interrogation 188 and entire villages were burned or otherwise destroyed 189 During the First Battle of Bud Dajo in March 1906 800 900 Moros including women and children were killed by U S Marines under the command of General Leonard Wood The description of the engagement as a battle is disputed because of the overwhelming firepower of the attackers and the lopsided casualties 99 of Moros were killed in the attack with only six survivors Author Vic Hurley wrote By no stretch of the imagination could Bud Dajo be termed a battle 190 Mark Twain commented In what way was it a battle It has no resemblance to a battle We cleaned up our four days work and made it complete by butchering these helpless people 191 Filipino atrocities edit U S Army General Otis alleged that Filipino insurgents tortured American prisoners in fiendish fashion According to Otis many were buried alive or were buried up to their necks in ant hills He claimed others had their genitals removed and stuffed into their mouths and were then executed by suffocation or bled to death 192 Stories in other newspapers described deliberate attacks by Filipino sharpshooters upon American surgeons chaplains ambulances hospitals and wounded soldiers 193 An incident was described in The San Francisco Call that occurred in Escalante Negros Occidental where several crewmen of a landing party from the CS Recorder were fired upon and later disemboweled by Filipino insurgents while the insurgents displayed a flag of truce 194 It was reported that Spanish priests were mutilated before their congregations and Filipinos who refused to support Aguinaldo were slaughtered in the thousands American newspaper headlines announced the Murder and Rapine by the Fiendish Filipinos General Joseph Wheeler insisted that Filipinos had mutilated their own dead murdered women and children and burned down villages solely to discredit American soldiers 192 Apolinario Mabini in his autobiography confirms these offenses stating that Aguinaldo did not punish Filipino troops who engaged in war rape burned and looted villages or stole and destroyed private property 195 Other events dubbed atrocities included those attributed by the Americans to Filipino commander Lukban who allegedly masterminded the Balangiga massacre in Samar province a surprise Filipino attack that killed almost fifty American soldiers 196 Media reports stated that many bodies were mutilated 197 Testimony before the Lodge Committee stated that natives were given the water cure in order to secure information of the murder of Private O Herne of Company I who had been not only killed but roasted and otherwise tortured before death ensued 198 In his History of the Filipino People Agoncillo writes that Filipino troops could match exceed American brutality Kicking slapping and spitting at faces were common In some cases ears and noses were cut off and salt applied to the wounds In other cases captives were buried alive These atrocities occurred regardless of Aguinaldo s orders and circulars concerning the treatment of prisoners 199 Worcester recounts two specific Filipino atrocities as follows A detachment marching through Leyte found an American who had disappeared a short time before crucified head down His abdominal wall had been carefully opened so that his intestines might hang down in his face Another American prisoner found on the same trip had been buried in the ground with only his head projecting His mouth had been propped open with a stick a trail of sugar laid to it through the forest and a handful thrown into it Millions of ants had done the rest 200 Campaigns editMain article Campaigns of the Philippine American WarPolitical atmosphere editFirst Philippine Commission edit Main article Schurman Commission The Schurman Commission concluded that The Filipinos are wholly unprepared for independence there being no Philippine nation but only a collection of different peoples 201 In the report that they issued to McKinley the following year the commissioners acknowledged Filipino aspirations for independence they declared however that the Philippines was not ready for it Specific recommendations included the establishment of civilian control over Manila Otis would have veto power over the city s government creation of civilian government as rapidly as possible especially in areas already declared pacified 202 including the establishment of a bicameral legislature autonomous governments on the provincial and municipal levels and a system of free public elementary schools 155 On November 2 1900 Schurman signed the following statement Should our power by any fatality be withdrawn the commission believe that the government of the Philippines would speedily lapse into anarchy which would excuse if it did not necessitate the intervention of other powers and the eventual division of the islands among them Only through American occupation therefore is the idea of a free self governing and united Philippine commonwealth at all conceivable And the indispensable need from the Filipino point of view of maintaining American sovereignty over the archipelago is recognized by all intelligent Filipinos and even by those insurgents who desire an American protectorate The latter it is true would take the revenues and leave us the responsibilities Nevertheless they recognize the indubitable fact that the Filipinos cannot stand alone Thus the welfare of the Filipinos coincides with the dictates of national honour in forbidding our abandonment of the archipelago We cannot from any point of view escape the responsibilities of government which our sovereignty entails and the commission is strongly persuaded that the performance of our national duty will prove the greatest blessing to the peoples of the Philippine Islands 203 Second Philippine Commission edit Main article Taft Commission The Second Philippine Commission appointed by President McKinley on March 16 1900 and headed by William Howard Taft was granted legislative as well as limited executive powers 204 On September 1 the Taft Commission began to exercise legislative functions 205 Between September 1900 and August 1902 it issued 499 laws 206 The commission established a civil service and a judicial system that included a Supreme Court and a legal code was drawn up to replace obsolete Spanish ordinances The 1901 municipal code provided for popularly elected presidents vice presidents and councilors to serve on municipal boards The municipal board members were responsible for collecting taxes maintaining municipal properties and undertaking necessary construction projects they also elected provincial governors 29 157 155 American opposition edit Some Americans notably William Jennings Bryan Mark Twain Andrew Carnegie Ernest Crosby and other members of the American Anti Imperialist League strongly objected to the annexation of the Philippines Anti imperialist movements claimed that the United States had become a colonial power 207 208 Some anti imperialists opposed annexation on racist grounds Among these was Senator Benjamin Tillman of South Carolina who feared that annexation of the Philippines would lead to an influx of non white immigrants into the United States Others worried that annexing the Philippines would lead to the non white population having a say in the American government 209 As news of atrocities committed in subduing the Philippines arrived in the United States support for the war flagged 210 211 Mark Twain edit Mark Twain opposed the war using his influence in the press He said the war betrayed the ideals of American democracy by not allowing the Filipino people to choose their own destiny There is the case of the Philippines I have tried hard and yet I cannot for the life of me comprehend how we got into that mess Perhaps we could not have avoided it perhaps it was inevitable that we should come to be fighting the natives of those islands but I cannot understand it and have never been able to get at the bottom of the origin of our antagonism to the natives I thought we should act as their protector not try to get them under our heel We were to relieve them from Spanish tyranny to enable them to set up a government of their own and we were to stand by and see that it got a fair trial It was not to be a government according to our ideas but a government that represented the feeling of the majority of the Filipinos a government according to Filipino ideas That would have been a worthy mission for the United States But now why we have got into a mess a quagmire from which each fresh step renders the difficulty of extrication immensely greater I m sure I wish I could see what we were getting out of it and all it means to us as a nation 212 In a diary passage Twain refers to American troops as our uniformed assassins and describes their killing of six hundred helpless and weaponless savages in the Philippines as a long and happy picnic with nothing to do but sit in comfort and fire the Golden Rule into those people down there and imagine letters to write home to the admiring families and pile glory upon glory 213 Filipino opposition edit nbsp Aguinaldo seated 3d from right and other insurgent leaders c 1900Some of Aguinaldo s associates supported America even before hostilities began Pedro Paterno Aguinaldo s prime minister and the author of the 1897 armistice treaty with Spain advocated the incorporation of the Philippines into the United States in 1898 Other associates sympathetic to the U S included Trinidad Pardo de Tavera and Benito Legarda prominent members of Congress Gregorio Araneta Aguinaldo s Secretary of Justice and Felipe Buencamino Aguinaldo s Secretary of Foreign Affairs Buencamino is recorded to have said in 1902 I am an American and all the money in the Philippines the air the light and the sun I consider American Many supporters subsequently held posts in the colonial government 214 U S Army Captain Matthew Arlington Batson formed the Macabebe Scouts 215 as a native guerrilla force to fight the insurgency from among a tribe of that name having a history of antipathy with Tagalogs 216 Aftermath editPost 1902 conflicts edit Further information Moro Rebellion nbsp Knocking Out the Moros illustration depicting the Battle of Bud Bagsak in June 1913 which ended the Moro Rebellion in JoloAfter military rule was terminated on July 4 1902 16 the Philippine Constabulary was established as an archipelago wide police force to control brigandage and deal with the remnants of the insurgent movement Commanded by Brigadier General Henry Tureman Allen the Philippine Constabulary gradually took responsibility for suppressing hostile forces activities 29 Remnants of Aguinaldo s Republic and remnants or holdovers of the Katipunan organization which had predated the American presence and other resistance groups all remained active fighting for nearly a decade after the official end of the war 217 After the close of the war however Governor General Taft preferred to rely on the Philippine Constabulary and to treat this as a law enforcement concern Thus the actions of these remaining guerrilla resistance movements were labeled as brigandage or banditry and dismissed by the American government as bandits fanatics and cattle rustlers In 1902 Macario Sakay established the Republika ng Katagalugan claiming to succeed the First Philippine Republic in Morong along Katipunan lines as opposed to Aguinaldo s Republic This republic ended in 1906 when Sakay and his top followers surrendered based on offer of amnesty from the American authorities Instead they were arrested by constabulary forces under captain Harry Bandholtz and executed the following year 218 219 220 200 202 221 Beginning in 1903 brigandage by organized groups became a problem in some outlying provinces in the Visayas Among these groups were the Pulahan Spanish Pulajanes who were from the highlands of Samar and Leyte The term is derived from the native word pula meaning red as they were distinguished by their red garments 222 The Pulajanes subscribed to a blend of Roman Catholic and folk beliefs For example they believed certain amulets called agimat would render them bulletproof The last of these groups were defeated or had surrendered to the Philippine Constabulary by 1911 222 217 The American government had signed the Kiram Bates Treaty with the Sultanate of Sulu at the outbreak of the war which was supposed to prevent resistance in that part of the Philippines which included parts of Mindanao the Sulu Archipelago Palawan and Sabah 223 However after the First Philippine Republic collapsed the United States canceled the treaty and began to colonize Moro land which provoked the Moro Rebellion 224 beginning with the Battle of Bayan in May 1902 The rebellion continued until the Battle of Bud Bagsak in June 1913 in which Moro forces under Datu Amil were defeated by US troops led by General John J Pershing The battle marked the end of the Moro conflict negotiations between the US authorities and Sulu Sultanate continued until the latter s dissolution in March 1915 225 A 1907 law prohibited the display of flags and other symbols used during the late insurrection in the Philippine Islands 153 226 227 Some historians consider these unofficial extensions to be part of the war 228 Cultural impact edit The influence of the Roman Catholic Church was reduced when the secular United States Government disestablished the Church and purchased and redistributed Church lands one of the earliest attempts at land reform in the Philippines 29 The land amounted to 170 917 hectares 422 350 acres for which the Church asked 12 086 438 11 in March 1903 229 The purchase was completed on December 22 1903 at a sale price of 7 239 784 66 230 The land redistribution program was stipulated in at least three laws the Philippine Organic Act 157 the Public Lands Act 231 and the Friar Lands Act 232 233 Section 10 of the Public Land Act limited purchases to a maximum of 16 hectares for an individual or 1024 hectares for a corporation or like association 231 234 Land was also offered for lease to landless farmers at prices ranging from fifty centavos to one peso and fifty centavos per hectare per annum 231 234 Section 28 of the Public lands Act stipulated that lease contracts ran for a maximum of 25 years renewable for another 25 years 231 234 In 1901 at least five hundred teachers 365 males and 165 females arrived from the U S aboard the U S Army Transport Thomas The name Thomasite was adopted for these teachers who established education as one of America s contributions to the Philippines Among the assignments given were Albay Catanduanes Camarines Norte Camarines Sur Sorsogon and Masbate which are the present day Bicol Region which was heavily resistant to American rule Twenty seven of the original Thomasites either died of tropical diseases or were murdered by Filipino rebels during their first 20 months of residence Despite the hardships the Thomasites persisted teaching and building learning institutions They opened the Philippine Normal School now Philippine Normal University and the Philippine School of Arts and Trades PSAT in 1901 and reopened the Philippine Nautical School established in 1839 by the Board of Commerce of Manila under Spain By the end of 1904 primary courses were mostly taught by Filipinos under American supervision 235 According to historian Daniel Immerwahr the first 15 American officers to hold the office of Chief of Staff of the United States Army all served in the Philippine American War 236 Some veterans of the war including Douglas MacArthur Chester W Nimitz and Walter Krueger were senior commanders in the US campaign to liberate the Philippines from the Empire of Japan during World War II In the media edit Multiple films were based on the war Baler 2008 Amigo 2010 El Presidente 2012 Heneral Luna 2015 Goyo The Boy General 2018 sequel The film Sakay portrays the latter part of the life of Filipino patriot and hero Macario Sakay Malvar Tuloy ang Laban is a biographical film about the life of Emilio Aguinaldo it has been in development since 2000 and as of June 2022 update was pending release the 1985 film Virgin Forest is set during the war and involves his capture The 1945 film Los ultimos de Filipinas and the 2016 film 1898 Los ultimos de Filipinas depict the siege of Baler In the U S the 1926 film Across the Pacific and the 1949 film Last Stand in the Philippines are about or are set against a background of the war The 1939 film The Real Glory is set against the backdrop of the Moro Rebellion beginning in 1906 Philippine independence and sovereignty 1946 edit Further information History of the Philippines 1946 1965 nbsp Manuel L Quezon the first president of the Commonwealth of the Philippines from 1935 to 1944 and former revolutionary military commanderThe Schurman Commission declared that the Philippines was not ready for independence Specific recommendations included the rapid establishment of civilian government including establishment of a bicameral legislature autonomous governments on the provincial and municipal levels and a new system of free public elementary schools 29 From the beginning United States presidents and their representatives in the islands defined their colonial mission as tutelage preparing the Philippines for eventual independence 237 Except for a small group of retentionists the issue was not whether the Philippines would be granted self rule but when and under what conditions 237 Thus political development in the islands was rapid in light of the complete lack of representative institutions under the Spanish The Philippine Organic Act of July 1902 stipulated that with the achievement of peace a legislature would be established composed of a popularly elected lower house the Philippine Assembly and an upper house consisting of the Philippine Commission which was to be appointed by the United States president 29 The Jones Act passed by the U S Congress in 1916 to serve as the organic law in the Philippines promised eventual independence and instituted an elected Philippine Senate The Tydings McDuffie Act officially the Philippine Independence Act Public Law 73 127 approved on March 24 1934 provided for self government and for independence after ten years World War II intervened bringing the Japanese occupation between 1941 and 1945 In 1946 the Treaty of Manila between the governments of the U S and the Republic of the Philippines provided for the recognition of the independence of the Philippines and the relinquishment of American sovereignty over the islands See also editCampaigns of the Philippine American War Foreign interventions by the United States Anti Americanism in the Philippines History of the Philippines 1898 1946 List of Philippine American War Medal of Honor recipients List of wars between democracies Philippines United States relations Timeline of the Philippine American War United States involvement in regime changeNotes edit Spanish Guerra filipina estadounidense Tagalog Digmaang Pilipino Amerikano The Mexican dollar at the time was worth about 50 US cents 38 equivalent to about 18 31 today The peso fuerte and the Mexican dollar were interchangeable at par The first shot was long believed to have been fired at the corner of Sociego and Silencio streets and a monument had been erected at that location in 1941 However the National Historical Commission determined based on a private study submitted to them that the shots had instead been fired along Sociego Street and ordered the relocation of the monument 109 108 Grayson claimed that he killed a Filipino lieutenant and another Filipino soldier 112 but neither American nor Filipino official reports mentioned anyone being hit 111 The First Philippine Commission sometimes referred to as the Schurman Commission See the Schurman Commission Survey visit to the Philippines article for more detail Citations edit a b Diplomatic relations between the Philippines and Japan Diplomatic relations Manila Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines 2016 Archived from the original on August 27 2015 Retrieved December 25 2016 On February 4 1899 the Philippine American War broke out A handful of Japanese shishi or ultranationalists fought alongside President Aguinaldo s army They landed in Manila led by Captain Hara Tei and joined Aguinaldo s forces in Bataan AGUINALDO WAS BUT A PUPPET IN GERMAN HANDS San Francisco Call August 14 1898 p 3 Retrieved January 22 2023 via cdnc ucr edu Historian Paul Kramer revisits the Philippine American War The JHU Gazette 35 29 Baltimore Maryland Johns Hopkins University Press April 10 2006 Retrieved December 25 2016 Deady 2005 p 62 p 10 of the pdf a b Deady 2005 p 55 p 3 of the pdf Hack amp Rettig 2006 p 172 Karnow 1989 p 194 Aguinaldo E 2016 A Second Look at America Classic Reprint Fb amp c Limited p 131 ISBN 978 1 333 84114 0 Retrieved November 17 2022 a b c d Burdeos 2008 p 14 a b Ramsey 2007 p 103 Smallman Raynor Matthew Cliff Andrew D 1998 The Philippines insurrection and the 1902 4 cholera epidemic Part I Epidemiological diffusion processes in war Journal of Historical Geography 24 1 69 89 doi 10 1006 jhge 1997 0077 Philippines Background Note U S Bilateral Relations Fact Sheets Background Notes Washington D C United States Department of State 2004 Retrieved December 25 2016 Multiple sources Philippines Background Note 2009 2017 state gov Retrieved March 17 2021 Although Americans have historically used the term the Philippine Insurrection Filipinos and an increasing number of American historians refer to these hostilities as the Philippine American War 1899 1902 and in 1999 the U S Library of Congress reclassified its references to use this term Archived content Information released online from January 20 2009 to January 20 2017 Plante Trevor K 2000 Researching Service in the U S Army During the Philippine Insurrection Prologue Vol 32 no 3 National Archives and Records Administration Battjes 2011 p 74 Silbey 2008 p xv a b c d Worcester 1914 p 293 Philippine independence declared History Retrieved March 15 2022 Randolph 2009 Philippine American War Facts History amp Significance Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved March 15 2022 Kalaw 1927 pp 199 200 a b c Agoncillo 1990 pp 247 297 a b Clodfelter Micheal Warfare and Armed Conflict A Statistical Reference to Casualty and Other Figures 1618 1991 Leon Wolff Little Brown Brother 1961 p 360 Philip Sheldon Foner The Spanish Cuban American War and the Birth of American Imperialism 1972 p 626 Philippines EARLY HISTORY www country data com Spencer C Tucker 2009 The Encyclopedia of the Spanish American and Philippine American Wars A Political Social and Military History Abc Clio p 477 ISBN 978 1851099528 Cocks Catherine Holloran Peter C Lessoff Alan 2009 Historical Dictionary of the Progressive Era Scarecrow Press p 332 ISBN 978 0810862937 Kenneth C Davis 2015 The Hidden History of America at War Untold Tales from Yorktown to Fallujah Hachette Books p 141 ISBN 978 1401330781 a b c d e f Philippines UNITED STATES RULE countrystudies us The First Philippine Question The Philippines and the University of Michigan 1870 1935 Philippines philippines michiganintheworld history lsa umich edu Retrieved August 23 2023 Crucible of Empire PBS Online www pbs org Retrieved August 23 2023 Opposition to the Philippine American War Stanford History Education Group Retrieved August 23 2023 The Road to Women s Suffrage in the Philippines Bayanihan News August 8 2014 United States Congress August 29 1916 Philippine Autonomy Act thecorpusjuris com In the Instructions of the President to the Philippine Commission Archived February 27 2009 at the Wayback Machine dated April 7 1900 President William McKinley reiterated the intentions of the United States Government to establish and organize governments essentially popular in their form in the municipal and provincial administrative divisions of the Philippine Islands However there was no official mention of any declaration of Philippine Independence July 4 1946 The Philippines Gained Independence from the United States The National WWII Museum New Orleans July 2 2021 Retrieved March 15 2022 Agoncillo 1990 pp 180 181 Halstead 1898 p 126 Halstead 1898 p 177 Aguinaldo 1899 p 4 Constantino 1975 p 192 Miller 1982 p 35 Ocampo Ambeth R January 7 2005 The first Philippine novel Philippine Daily Inquirer Manila Steinberg David Joel 1972 An Ambiguous Legacy Years at War in the Philippines Pacific Affairs 45 2 165 190 doi 10 2307 2755549 JSTOR 2755549 Aguinaldo 1899 p 5 Aguinaldo 1899 pp 10 12 Aguinaldo 1899 p 10 Spencer Pratt and Aguinaldo PDF The New York Times New York City August 26 1899 Blount J H 1913 The American Occupation of the Philippines 1898 1912 G P Putnam s sons pp 189 190 Brands 1992 p 46 Agoncillo 1990 pp 213 214 Aguinaldo 1899 pp 12 13 Aguinaldo 1899 pp 15 16 Treaty of Peace Between the United States and Spain December 10 1898 The Avalon Project New Haven Connecticut Lillian Goldman Law Library Yale Law School 2008 Retrieved December 25 2016 Agoncillo 1990 pp 199 212 Jaycox 2005 p 130 Multiple sources Emilio Aguinaldo Presidential Museam and Library Malacanan Palace Archived from the original on November 4 2012 Retrieved November 14 2017 Proclamation No 1231 s 2016 February 29 2016 General Emilio Aguinaldo the first President of the Republic of the Philippines a b Worcester 1914 p 60 Ch 3 Worcester 1914 p 154 Ch 7 Worcester 1914 p 61 Ch 3 Halstead 1898 p 97 Ch 10 Worcester 1914 p 63 Ch 3 Agoncillo 1990 p 196 Introduction The World of 1898 The Spanish American War Washington D C Hispanic Division United States Library of Congress 2011 Retrieved December 25 2016 Philippines SPANISH AMERICAN WAR countrystudies us War Suspended Peace Assured President Proclaims a Cessation of Hostilities PDF The New York Times August 12 1898 retrieved February 6 2008 Halstead 1898 p 177 Ch 15 Protocol of Peace Embodying the Terms of a Basis for the Establishment of Peace Between the Two Countries August 12 1898 Proclamation 422 Suspension of Hostilities with Spain American Presidency Project University of California August 12 1898 Archived from the original on September 24 2015 a b Halstead 1898 p 315 Ch 28 a b Taylor 1907 p 19 Taylor 1907 p 20 Worcester 1914 p 83 Ch 4 Kalaw 1927 p 132 Halstead 1898 pp 176 178 Ch 15 a b Miller 1982 p 20 Miller 1982 pp 20 21 Smith Ephraim K October 1985 A Question from Which We Could Not Escape William McKinley and the Decision to Acquire the Philippine Islands Diplomatic History 9 4 363 375 doi 10 1111 j 1467 7709 1985 tb00544 x Retrieved March 6 2024 via academic oup com Schweikart Larry Allen Michael Patrick 2004 A Patriot s History of the United States From Columbus s Great Discovery to the War on Terror Penguin ISBN 978 1 101 21778 8 Bennett William John 2006 America The Last Best Hope Harper Collins ISBN 978 1 59555 111 5 Miller 1982 p 24 Kalaw 1927 pp 430 445Appendix D Multiple sources Draper Andrew Sloan 1899 The Rescue of Cuba An Episode in the Growth of Free Government Silver Burdett pp 170 172 ISBN 978 0722278932 Retrieved January 29 2021 Fantina Robert 2006 Desertion and the American Soldier 1776 2006 Algora Publishing p 83 ISBN 978 0 87586 454 9 Retrieved January 29 2021 Price Matthew C 2008 The Advancement of Liberty How American Democratic Principles Transformed the Twentieth Century Greenwood Publishing Group p 96 ISBN 978 0 313 34618 7 Why Did America Cross the Pacific Reconstructing the U S Decision to Take the Philippines 1898 99 Texas National Security Review November 25 2017 Retrieved January 16 2020 President William McKinley December 21 1898 McKinley s Benevolent Assimilation Proclamation msc edu ph retrieved February 10 2008 United States President 1900 The Abridgment Containing Messages of the President of the United States to the Two Houses of Congress with Reports of Departments and Selections from Accompanying Papers U S Government Printing Office p 1001 Retrieved July 2 2022 a b c d Halstead 1898 p 316 Miller 1984 p 50 Miller 1982 p 51 The text of the amended version published by General Otis is quoted in its entirety in Jose Roca de Togores y Saravia Remigio Garcia National Historical Institute Philippines 2003 Blockade and siege of Manila National Historical Institute pp 148 150 ISBN 978 971 538 167 3 See also s Letter from E S Otis to the inhabitants of the Philippine Islands January 4 1899 Preident to Filipinos Order Expressing His Intentions Proclaimed to Them PDF The New York Times January 6 1899 retrieved February 10 2008 Wolff 2006 p 200 Miller 1982 p 52 Agoncillo 1990 pp 214 215 Agoncillo 1990 p 215 Agoncillo 1997 pp 356 357 a b Agoncillo 1990 p 216 Agoncillo 1997 p 357 Agoncillo 1997 pp 357 358 Halstead 1898 pp 416 417 Taylor 1907 p 39 Bloodshed at Iloilo Two Americans Attacked and One Fatally Wounded by Natives PDF The New York Times January 8 1899 retrieved February 10 2008 The Philippine Climax Peaceful Solution of the Iloilo Issue May Result To day Aguinaldo s Second Address He Threatened to Drive the Americans from the Islands Manifesto Was Recalled PDF The New York Times January 10 1899 retrieved February 10 2008 a b Worcester 1914 p 93 Ch 4 Starr J Barton ed September 1988 The United States Constitution Its Birth Growth and Influence in Asia Hong Kong China Hong Kong University Press p 260 ISBN 978 962 209 201 3 Guevara 1972 p 124 a b The First Shot of the Phil Am war did not happen on Sociego Silencio philamwas com November 17 2023 Board Resolution 07 s 2003 PDF National Historical Commission January 27 2003 via Wikimedia Commons Palafox Quennie Ann J September 6 2012 Betrayal of Trust The San Juan Del Monte Bridge Incident Manila National Historic Commission of the Philippines Archived from the original on December 26 2016 Retrieved December 25 2016 a b Legarda Benito Justo 2001 The Hills of Sampaloc The Opening Actions of the Philippine American War February 4 5 1899 Bookmark p 43 ISBN 978 971 569 418 6 Chaput Donald 1980 Private William W Grayson s war in the Philippines 1899 PDF Nebraska History 61 355 66 Archived from the original on May 22 2013 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint unfit URL link Halstead 1898 p 318Ch 28 The week The Nation Vol 68 no 1766 May 4 1899 p 323 Agoncillo 1990 p 217 Zaide 1994 p 279 Golay 1997 pp 48 49 Agoncillo 1990 p 219 Golay 1997 pp 49 51 Worcester D C 1900 Papers by the various members of the commission on existing and desired conditions e g Efforts toward conciliation and the establishment of peace Peoples of the islands Education Government Condition and needs of the United States in the Philippines from a naval and maritime standpoint etc Report of the Philippine Commission to the President January 31 1900 December 20 1900 U S Government Printing Office pp 3 5 Kalaw 1927 pp 199 200Ch 7 Miller 1982 p 2 Special Dispatch February 14 1899 Iloilo is taken and no American loses his life San Francisco Call Vol 85 no 76 San Francisco p 1 Lone 2007 p 56 a b Worcester 1914 p 285 a b Worcester 1914 pp 290 293 Lone 2007 p 58 Miller 1982 pp 63 66 Miller 1982 p 66 a b c Miller 1982 p 89 Deady 2005 p 55 67 pp 3 14 of the pdf Anderson Benedict 1988 Cacique Democracy in the Philippines Origins and Dreams The Growth of National Sentiment via academia org Deady 2005 p 57 p 5 of the pdf a b Deady 2005 p 58 p 6 of the pdf Linn 2000a pp 186 187 362 notes 5 and 6 Sexton 1939 p 237 Pershing John J 2013 My Life Before the World War 1860 1917 A Memoir University Press of Kentucky p 547 ISBN 978 0 8131 4199 2 Linn 2000b pp 23 24 Foreman J 1906 The Philippine Islands A Political Geographical Ethnographical Social and Commercial History of the Philippine Archipelago Embracing the Whole Period of Spanish Rule with an Account of the Succeeding American Insular Government Philippine culture series C Scribner s sons p 505 Birtle 1998 pp 116 118 Keenan 2001 pp 211 212 Linn 2000a p 275 Aguinaldo y Famy Don Emilio April 19 1901 Aguinaldo s Proclamation of Formal Surrender to the United States The Philippine American War Documents Pasig Philippines Kabayan Central Net Works Inc Retrieved December 25 2016 Brands 1992 p 59 Cruz Maricel V Lawmaker History wrong on Gen Malvar Manila Times January 2 2008 archived on December 11 2008 Tucker 2009 p 217 a b Macapagal Arroyo Gloria April 9 2002 Proclamation No 173 s 2002 Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines Manila Retrieved December 25 2016 Tucker 2009 pp 477 478 Piedad Pugay Chris Antonette The Philippine Bill of 1902 Turning Point in Philippine Legislation National Historical Commission of the Philippines Archived from the original on July 10 2013 Retrieved July 9 2013 Jernegan 2009 pp 57 58 Zaide 1994 p 281Ch 21 Gates John M November 2002 The Pacification of the Philippines The U S Army and Irregular Warfare Archived from the original on August 5 2010 Retrieved February 20 2010 Historical Perspective of the Philippine Educational System RP Department of education archived from the original on July 16 2011 retrieved March 11 2008 a b Hernandez Jose Rhommel B 2016 The Philippines Everything in place In Lee Lai To Zarina Othman eds Regional Community Building in East Asia Countries in Focus Taylor amp Francis p 144 ISBN 9781317265566 Proclamation No 173 s 2002 Official Gazette of the Philippine Government April 9 2002 a b c Seekins 1993 Philippines United States Rule Washington D C United States Library of Congress Retrieved December 25 2016 a b c The Philippine Bill enacted July 1 1902 ChanRobles Virtual Law Library Philippine Laws Statutes amp Codes Manila ChanRobles amp Associates Law Firm 2016 Retrieved December 25 2016 a b Amnesty Proclamation Proclamation 483 Granting Pardon and Amnesty to Participants in Insurrection in the Philippines United States Government July 4 1902 via The American Presidency Project General Amnesty for the Filipinos Proclamation Issued by the President PDF The New York Times July 4 1902 Worcester 1914 p 180Ch 9 General amnesty for the Filipinos proclamation issued by the President PDF The New York Times New York City July 4 1902 a b Presidential Proclamation No 173 S 2002 Official Gazette April 9 2002 a b Speech of President Arroyo during the Commemoration of the Centennial Celebration of the end of the Philippine American War April 16 2002 Official Gazette Government of the Philippines April 16 2002 Kho Madge The Bates Treaty PhilippineUpdate com Retrieved December 2 2007 Aguilar Carino Ma Luisa 1994 The Igorot as Other Four Discourses from the Colonial Period Philippine Studies 42 2 194 209 JSTOR 42633435 The Philippine American War 1899 1902 Archived October 19 2016 at the Wayback Machine U S State Department Office of the Historian Valentino Benjamin A 2005 Final Solutions Mass Killing and Genocide in the Twentieth Century Cornell University Press p 27 ISBN 978 0801472732 Graff American Imperialism and the Philippine Insurrection 1969 David Silbey 2008 A War of Frontier and Empire The Philippine American War 1899 1902 Farrar Straus and Giroux pp 200 01 ISBN 9780809096619 Tucker 2009 p 478 Clem Andrew 2016 The Filipino Genocide Santa Clara University Scholar Commons Retrieved November 4 2021 United States Bureau of the Census Joseph Prentiss Sanger Henry Gannett Victor Hugo Olmsted 1905 Census of the Philippine Islands Taken Under the Direction of the Philippine Commission in the Year 1903 in Four Volumes U S Government Printing Office Archived from the original on February 16 2017 Retrieved September 19 2016 Aurora E Perez 1997 The Population of The Philippines PDF Boot 2014 p 125 Rummel Rudolph J 1998 Statistics of Democide Genocide and Mass Murder Since 1900 LIT Verlag Munster p 201 ISBN 978 3 8258 4010 5 Zinn 2003 p 230 Coulter Clinton R August 1 1899 Our policy in the Philippines San Francisco Call Vol 86 no 62 San Francisco p 6 Letters of soldiers during the Philippine American War via Wikisource Miller 1982 p 88 General Orders No 100 The Lieber Code U S Government Printing Office 1898 1863 via Yale Law School Stone O Kuznick P 2013 The Untold History of the United States Gallery Books p 24 ISBN 978 1 4516 1352 0 Bob Couttie Archived October 17 2015 at the Wayback Machine a b Bruno Thomas A 2011 The Violent End of Insurgency on Samar 1901 1902 PDF Army History 79 Spring 30 46 Fritz David L Before The Howling Wilderness The Military Career of Jacob Heard Smith Military Affairs November December 1979 p 186 Schirmer Daniel B Shalom Stephen Rosskamm 1987 The Philippines Reader A History of Colonialism Neocolonialism Dictatorship and Resistance South End Press p 17 ISBN 978 0 89608 275 5 Francisco et al 1999 p 18 a b Storey amp Codman 1902 pp 32 64 77 79 89 95 Stuart Creighton Miller Benevolent Assimilation The American Conquest of the Philippines 1899 1903 1982 p 244 Storey amp Codman 1902 pp 44 48 49 61 62 65 67 Storey amp Codman 1902 pp 10 38 64 95 Hurley Vic October 2010 Swish of the Kris the Story of the Moros Authorized and Enhanced Edition Cerberus Books ISBN 978 0 615 38242 5 Twain Mark July 20 2017 The Complete Works of Mark Twain Illustrated Edition Novels Short Stories Memoir Travel Books Letters Biography Articles amp Speeches The Adventures of Tom Sawyer amp Huckleberry Finn Life on the Mississippi Yankee in King Arthur s Court e artnow ISBN 978 80 268 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root size s 452 459 Appendix F Zaide 1994 p 280Ch 21 Chronology for the Philippine Islands and Guam in the Spanish American War U S Library of Congress retrieved February 16 2008 Anti Imperialism and Liberty by Michael P Cullinane October 9 2007 Archived from the original on October 9 2007 Retrieved August 30 2022 Platform of the American Antilmperialist League Internet History Sourcebooks Fordham Institute Retrieved August 30 2022 Milestones 1899 1913 Office of the Historian history state gov Retrieved June 6 2021 Welch Richard E Jr May 1974 American Atrocities in the Philippines The Indictment and the Response Pacific Historical Review 43 2 233 253 doi 10 2307 3637551 JSTOR 3637551 Retrieved August 30 2022 Brewer Susan A October 1 2013 Selling Empire American Propaganda and War in the Philippines PDF The Asia Pacific Journal 11 40 1 26 via The Asia Pacific Journal Japan Focus Twain Mark October 6 1900 Mark Twain the greatest American humorist returning home New York World New York City ISBN 9780817315221 Rohter Larry July 9 2010 Dead for a century Twain says what he meant The New York Times New York City Buencamino Felipe 1902 Statement before the Committee on Insular Affairs on conditions in the Philippine islands Washington D C United States Government Publishing Office p 64 New Filipino Horse Four Troops of Macabebes to be Formed with Americans as Officers Archived March 5 2016 at the Wayback Machine New York Times July 17 1900 Beede B R 1994 The War of 1898 and U S Interventions 1898 1934 An Encyclopedia Garland reference library of the humanities Garland p 273 ISBN 978 0 8240 5624 7 a b Otoy Filipino bandit slain by Constabulary San Francisco Call Vol 110 no 134 San Francisco October 12 1911 p 5 Ileto 1997 pp 193 197 Froles Paul Macario Sakay Tulisan or Patriot Philippine History Group of Los Angeles Archived from the original on June 9 2007 Duka Cecilio D 2008 Struggle for Freedom Rex Bookstore Inc ISBN 9789712350450 Kabigting Abad Antonio 1955 General Macario L Sakay Was He a Bandit or a Patriot J B Feliciano and Sons Printers Publishers full citation needed a b Worcester 1914 pp 392 395 The Kiram Bates Treaty August 31 2011 Welman Frans 2012 Face of the New Peoples Army of the Philippines Volume Two Samar Booksmango p 134 ISBN 978 616 222 163 7 Catherine Ceniza Choy Judy Tzu Chun Wu March 13 2017 Gendering the Trans Pacific World BRILL p 184 ISBN 978 90 04 33610 0 Lumbera Bienvenido 2008 Splintering Identity Modes of Filipino Resistance Under Colonial Repression In Patajo Legasto Priscelina ed Philippine Studies Have We Gone Beyond St Louis The University of the Philippines Press p 90 ISBN 9789715425919 Act No 1696 s 1907 Government of the Philippines August 23 1907 Retrieved February 11 2021 Constantino 1975 pp 251 3 Escalante 2007 pp 223 224 Escalante 2007 p 226 a b c d Act No 926 enacted October 7 1903 ChanRobles Virtual Law Library Philippine Laws Statutes amp Codes Manila ChanRobles amp Associates Law Firm 2016 Retrieved December 25 2016 Act No 1120 enacted April 26 1904 ChanRobles Virtual Law Library Philippine Laws Statutes amp Codes Manila ChanRobles amp Associates Law Firm 2016 Retrieved December 25 2016 Escalante 2007 p 218 a b c Escalante 2007 p 219 Thomasites An army like no other Government of the Philippines October 12 2003 Archived from the original on April 29 2008 Retrieved December 25 2016 Immerwahr Daniel February 19 2019 How to Hide an Empire A History of the Greater United States Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 0 374 71512 0 a b Escalante 2007 pp 48 54 References editAgoncillo Teodoro A 1990 1960 History of the Filipino People Eighth ed Quezon City Garotech Publishing ISBN 978 9718711064 Agoncillo Teodoro Andal 1997 Malolos The Crisis of the Republic University of the Philippines Press ISBN 978 971 542 096 9 Aguinaldo Don Emilio 1899 True version of the Philippine revolution Tarlac Philippines self published Battjes Mark E 2011 Protecting Isolating and Controlling Behavior Population and Resource Control Measures in Counterinsurgency Campaigns PDF United States Army Combined Arms Center Fort Leavenworth Kansas Combat Studies Institute Press ISBN 978 0 9837226 6 3 Archived from the original PDF on December 15 2018 Retrieved December 11 2016 Birtle Andrew J 1998 U S Army counterinsurgency and contingency operations doctrine 1860 1941 Washington D C United States Government Publishing Office ISBN 978 0 16 061324 1 Boot Max 2014 The Savage Wars of Peace Small Wars And The Rise Of American Power Revised ed New York City Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 03866 4 Brands Henry William 1992 Bound to Empire The United States and the Philippines Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 507104 2 Brody David 2010 Visualizing American Empire Orientalism and Imperialism in the Philippines Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226075341 Burdeos Ray L 2008 Filipinos in the U S Navy amp Coast Guard During the Vietnam War AuthorHouse ISBN 978 1 4343 6141 7 Constantino Renato 1975 The Philippines A Past Revisited Renato Constantino ISBN 978 971 8958 00 1 note page number info in short footnotes citing this work may be incorrect work is underway to correct this Deady Timothy K 2005 Lessons from a Successful Counterinsurgency The Philippines 1899 1902 PDF Parameters 35 1 Carlisle Pennsylvania United States Army War College 53 68 Archived from the original PDF on December 10 2016 Retrieved December 10 2016 Dolan Ronald E ed 1991 Philippines A Country Study Washington D C United States Library of Congress Escalante Rene R 2007 The Bearer of Pax Americana The Philippine Career of William H Taft 1900 1903 Quezon City New Day Publishers ISBN 978 971 10 1166 6 Francisco Luzviminda Jenkins Shirley Taruc Luis Constantino Renato et al 1999 Schirmer Daniel B Shalom Stephen Rosskamm eds The Philippines Reader A History of Colonialism Neocolonialism Dictatorship and Resistance Brooklyn New York South End Press ISBN 978 0896082755 Golay Frank H 1997 Face of empire United States Philippine relations 1898 1946 Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 978 971 550 254 2 Golay Frank Hindman 2004 Face of Empire United States Philippine Relations 1898 1946 Quezon City Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 978 1881261179 Guevara Sulpico ed 2005 The laws of the first Philippine Republic the laws of Malolos 1898 1899 Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Library published 1972 retrieved March 26 2008 English translation by Sulpicio Guevara Hack Karl Rettig Tobias 2006 Colonial Armies in Southeast Asia Routledge Studies in the Modern History of Asia Abingdon on Thames United Kingdom Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 33413 6 Halstead Murat 1898 The Story of the Philippines and Our New Possessions Including the Ladrones Hawaii Cuba and Porto Rico Chicago Our Possessions Publishing Company Ileto Reynaldo Clemena 1997 Pasyon and revolution popular movements in the Philippines 1840 1910 Quezon City Ateneo de Manila University Press ISBN 978 9715502320 Jaycox Faith 2005 The Progressive Era Eyewitness History Eyewitness History Series New York City Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 0 8160 5159 5 Jernegan Prescott F 2009 The Philippine Citizen BiblioBazaar LLC ISBN 978 1 115 97139 3 Kalaw Maximo Manguiat 1927 The Development of Philippine politics 1872 1920 Manila Oriental Commercial Company Inc Karnow Stanley 1989 In Our Image America s Empire in the Philippines New York City Random House ISBN 978 030777543 6 Keenan Jerry 2001 Encyclopedia of the Spanish American amp Philippine American wars Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 093 2 Linn Brian McAllister 2000a The Philippine War 1899 1902 University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 1225 3 Linn Brian McAllister 2000b The U S Army and counterinsurgency in the Philippine war 1899 1902 Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0807849484 Lone Stewart 2007 Daily Lives of Civilians in Wartime Asia From the Taiping Rebellion to the Vietnam War Santa Barbara California Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0313336843 Miller Stuart Creighton 1982 Benevolent assimilation the American conquest of the Philippines 1899 1903 New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 03081 9 Miller Stuart Creighton 1984 Benevolent Assimilation The American Conquest of the Philippines 1899 1903 4th edition reprint ed Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 03081 5 Race Making and Colonial Violence in the U S Empire The Philippine American War as Race War Diplomatic History Vol 30 No 2 April 2006 169 210 version permanent dead link at Japanfocus org Ramsey Robert D III 2007 Savage Wars of Peace Case Studies of Pacification in the Philippines 1900 1902 PDF United States Army Combined Arms Center Fort Leavenworth Kansas Combat Studies Institute Press ISBN 978 0 16 078950 2 Archived from the original PDF on January 16 2019 Retrieved December 11 2016 Randolph Carman Fitz 2009 Chapter I The Annexation of the Philippines The Law and Policy of Annexation Charleston South Carolina BiblioBazaar LLC ISBN 978 1 103 32481 1 Schurman Jacob Gould Dewey George Denby Charles Harvey Worcester Dean Conant 1900 Report of the Philippine Commission to the President Vol I Washington D C United States Government Publishing Office Seekins Donald M 1993 The First Phase of United States Rule 1898 1935 in Dolan Ronald E ed Philippines A Country Study 4th ed Washington D C Federal Research Division Library of Congress retrieved December 25 2007 Sexton William Thaddeus 1939 Soldiers in the Sun Charleston South Carolina Nabu Press ISBN 978 1179372662 Silbey David J 2008 A War of Frontier and Empire The Philippine American War 1899 1902 Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 0 8090 9661 9 Simmons Edwin Howard 2003 The United States Marines a history 4th ed Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1557508683 Storey Moorfield Codman Julian 1902 Secretary Root s record Marked severities in Philippine warfare An analysis of the law and facts bearing on the action and utterances of President Roosevelt and Secretary Root Boston George H Ellis Company See also Moorfield Storey and Julian Codman 1902 Secretary Root s Record Marked Severities in Philippine Warfare Wikisource Taylor John R M ed 1907 Chapter I Telegraphic Correspondence of Emilio Aguinaldo July 15 1898 to February 28 1899 Annotated PDF Compilation of Philippine Insurgent Records Combined Arms Research Library originally from War Department Bureau of Insular Affairs archived from the original PDF on October 3 2008 retrieved June 2 2012 Tucker Spencer C ed 2009 The encyclopedia of the Spanish American and Philippine American wars a political social and military history Vol I III Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 85109 951 1 Wolff Leon 2006 Little brown brother how the United States purchased and pacified the Philippine Islands at the century s turn History Book Club published 2005 ISBN 978 1 58288 209 3 Introduction Decolonizing the History of the Philippine American War by Paul A Kramer dated December 8 2005 Worcester Dean Conant 1914 The Philippines Past and Present Vol II New York Macmillan Publishers Worcester Dean Conant 1914 III Insurgent Cooperation The Philippines Past and Present vol 1 of 2 Macmillan pp 43 74 ISBN 1 4191 7715 X Worcester Dean Conant 1914 IV The Premeditated Insurgent Attack The Philippines Past and Present vol 1 of 2 Macmillan pp 75 89 ISBN 1 4191 7715 X Zaide Sonia M 1994 The Philippines A Unique Nation All Nations Publishing Co ISBN 978 971 642 071 5 Zinn Howard 2003 A People s History of the United States New York City The New Press ISBN 978 1 56584 826 9 Further reading editDelmendo Sharon 2004 The star entangled banner one hundred years of America in the Philippines New Brunswick New Jersey Rutgers University Press ISBN 0 8135 3411 9 Jacobson Matthew Frye 2000 Barbarian virtues the United States encounters foreign peoples at home and abroad 1876 1917 New York City Hill amp Wang ISBN 978 0 8090 1628 0 Jones Gregg 2012 Honor in the Dust Theodore Roosevelt War in the Philippines and the Rise and Fall of America s Imperial Dream New York City New American Library ISBN 978 0 451 22904 5 Legarda Benito J Jr 2001 The Hills of Sampaloc the Opening Actions of the Philippine American War February 4 5 1899 Makati Bookmark ISBN 978 971 569 418 6 Stewart Richard W General Editor Ch 16 Transition Change and the Road to war 1902 1917 Archived January 12 2012 at the Wayback Machine in American Military History Volume I The United States Army and the Forging of a Nation 1775 1917 Archived December 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine Center of Military History United States Army ISBN 0 16 072362 0 Stratemeyer Edward 1898 Under Dewey at Manila Wikisource Stratemeyer Edward as Ralph Bonehill 1899 A Sailor Boy with Dewey Wikisource Stratemeyer Edward 1900 The Campaign of the Jungle Wikisource Stratemeyer Edward 1901 Under MacArthur in Luzon Wikisource The Lodge Committee a k a Philippine Investigating Committee hearings and a great deal of documentation were published in three volumes 3000 pages as S Doc 331 57th Cong 1st Session An abridged version of the oral testimony can be found in American Imperialism and the Philippine Insurrection Testimony Taken from Hearings on Affairs in the Philippine Islands before the Senate Committee on the Philippines 1902 edited by Henry F Graff Publisher Little Brown 1969 Young L S Northrop H D 1899 The Life of Admiral Dewey and the Conquest of the Philippines P W Ziegler Wilcox Marrion Harper s History of the War Harper New York and London 1900 reprinted 1979 Alternate title Harper s History of the War in the Philippines Also reprinted in the Philippines by Vera Reyes External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Philippine American War nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Philippine American War Library resources about Philippine American War Resources in your library Resources in other libraries The American Peril An Examination of the Spanish American War and the Philippine Insurrection by Dan Carlin War Arnaldo Dumindin Images from the Philippine United States War historicaltextarchive com Philippine Centennial Celebration permanent dead link MSC Computer Training Center The Matter of the Philippines from Birth of an American Empire 1 permanent dead link El Primer Genocido Retrieved January 2 2017 dead link Spanish archived from the original on 2006 10 15 A brief description of the war between the United States and the Philippines which began in 1899 August 13 1898 and RP s short lived republic at the Wayback Machine archived February 13 2008 by Mariano Anong Santos Pinoy Newsmagazine August 2006 archived on 2008 02 13 Imperial Amnesia by John B Judis Foreign Policy July August 2004 The Philippine Revolutionary RecordsatFilipiniana net archived on 2009 05 25 Battle of Paceo 1899 painting by Kurz and Allison at the Wayback Machine archived May 11 2011 archived on 2011 05 11 Battle of Quingua 1899 painting by Kurz and Allison at the Wayback Machine archived May 11 2011 archived on 2011 05 11 of Philippine American War Booknotes interview with Stanley Karnow on In Our Image America s Empire in the Philippines May 28 1989 No 15 Spanish 12 pounder Archived September 21 2012 at the Wayback Machine Photo of a bronze cannon captured by the Americans in Manila Philippine American War 1899 1902 videos Reenactment of Spanish American War video on YouTube Spanish American War Reenactment Groups Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philippine American War amp oldid 1215785149, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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