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Spanish–American War

The Spanish–American War[b] (April 21 – August 13, 1898) was a period of armed conflict between Spain and the United States. Hostilities began in the aftermath of the internal explosion of USS Maine in Havana Harbor in Cuba, leading to United States intervention in the Cuban War of Independence. The war led to the United States emerging predominant in the Caribbean region,[16] and resulted in U.S. acquisition of Spain's Pacific possessions. It led to United States involvement in the Philippine Revolution and later to the Philippine–American War.

Spanish–American War[b]
Part of the Philippine Revolution,
the decolonization of the Americas,
and the Cuban War of Independence

(clockwise from top left)
DateApril 21[c] – August 13, 1898
(3 months, 3 weeks and 2 days)
Location
Result

American victory

Territorial
changes
Spain relinquishes sovereignty over Cuba; cedes Puerto Rico, Guam and the Philippine Islands to the United States. $20 million paid to Spain by the United States for infrastructure owned by Spain.
Belligerents
United States
Cuban Revolutionaries[a]
Filipino Revolutionaries[a]

Spain

Commanders and leaders
Strength
Total: 300,000[5]

Total: 339,783[9]
288,452 (Caribbean)

  • 278,447 in Cuba
  • 10,005 in Puerto Rico
51,331 (Philippines)
Casualties and losses

American:

  • 369 soldiers killed[10]
  • 10 sailors killed[10]
  • 6 marines killed[10]
  • 1,662 wounded[11]
  • 11 prisoners[12]
  • 2,061 dead from disease[10][11]
  • 1 cargo ship sunk[13]
  • 1 cruiser damaged[10]
  • 1 battleship damaged

Spanish:

  • 200 soldiers killed[14]
  • 500–600 sailors killed[14][e]
  • 700–800 wounded[14]
  • 40,000+ prisoners[10][f]
  • 15,000 dead from disease[15]
  • 6 small ships sunk[10]
  • 11 cruisers sunk[10]
  • 2 destroyers sunk[10]

The 19th century represented a clear decline for the Spanish Empire, while the United States went from becoming a newly founded country to being a medium regional power. In the Spanish case, the descent, which already came from previous centuries, accelerated first with the Napoleonic invasion, which in turn would cause the independence of a large part of the American colonies,[17] and later political instability (pronouncements, revolutions, civil wars) bled the country socially and economically. The U.S., on the other hand, expanded economically throughout that century by purchasing territories such as Louisiana and Alaska, militarily by actions such as the Mexican–American War, and by receiving large numbers of immigrants. That process was interrupted only for a few years by the American Civil War and Reconstruction era.[18]

The main issue was Cuban independence. Revolts had been occurring for some years in Cuba against Spanish colonial rule. The United States backed these revolts upon entering the Spanish–American War. There had been war scares before, as in the Virginius Affair in 1873. But in the late 1890s, American public opinion swayed in support of the rebellion because of reports of concentration camps set up to control the populace.[19][20] Yellow journalism exaggerated the atrocities to further increase public fervor and to sell more newspapers and magazines.[21]

The business community had just recovered from a deep depression and feared that a war would reverse the gains. Accordingly, most business interests lobbied vigorously against going to war.[22] President William McKinley ignored the exaggerated news reporting and sought a peaceful settlement.[23] Though not seeking a war, McKinley made preparations for readiness against one. He unsuccessfully sought accommodation with Spain on the issue of independence for Cuba.[24] However, after the United States Navy armored cruiser Maine mysteriously exploded and sank in Havana Harbor on February 15, 1898, political pressures pushed McKinley into a war that he had wished to avoid.[25]

As far as Spain was concerned, there was a nationalist agitation, in which the written press had a key influence, causing the Spanish government to not give in and abandon Cuba as it had abandoned Spanish Florida when faced with a troublesome colonial situation there, transferring it to the U.S. in 1821 in exchange for payment of Spanish debts.[26] If the Spanish government had transferred Cuba it would have been seen as a betrayal by a part of Spanish society and there would probably have been a new revolution.[27] So the government preferred to wage a lost war beforehand, rather than risk a revolution, opting for a "controlled demolition" to preserve the Restoration Regime.[28]

On April 20, 1898, McKinley signed a joint Congressional resolution demanding Spanish withdrawal and authorizing the President to use military force to help Cuba gain independence.[29] In response, Spain severed diplomatic relations with the United States on April 21. On the same day, the United States Navy began a blockade of Cuba.[30] Both sides declared war; neither had allies.

The 10-week war was fought in both the Caribbean and the Pacific. As United States agitators for war well knew,[31] United States naval power would prove decisive, allowing expeditionary forces to disembark in Cuba against a Spanish garrison already facing nationwide Cuban insurgent attacks and further devastated by yellow fever.[32] The invaders obtained the surrender of Santiago de Cuba and Manila despite the good performance of some Spanish infantry units, and fierce fighting for positions such as El Caney and San Juan Hill.[33] Madrid sued for peace after two Spanish squadrons were sunk in the battles of Santiago de Cuba and Manila Bay, and a third, more modern fleet was recalled home to protect the Spanish coasts.[34]

The war ended with the 1898 Treaty of Paris, negotiated on terms favorable to the United States. The treaty ceded ownership of Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippine islands from Spain to the United States and granted the United States temporary control of Cuba. The cession of the Philippines involved payment of $20 million ($650 million today) to Spain by the U.S. to cover infrastructure owned by Spain.[35]

The Spanish-American War brought an end to almost four centuries of Spanish presence in the Americas, Asia, and the Pacific. The defeat and loss of the Spanish Empire's last remnants was a profound shock to Spain's national psyche and provoked a thorough philosophical and artistic reevaluation of Spanish society known as the Generation of '98.[34] The United States meanwhile not only became a major power, but also gained several island possessions spanning the globe, which provoked rancorous debate over the wisdom of expansionism.[36]

Historical background

Spain's attitude towards its colonies

The combined problems arising from the Peninsular War (1807–1814), the loss of most of its colonies in the Americas in the early 19th-century Spanish American wars of independence, and three Carlist Wars (1832–1876) marked a low point for Spanish colonialism.[37] Liberal Spanish elites like Antonio Cánovas del Castillo and Emilio Castelar offered new interpretations of the concept of "empire" to dovetail with the emerging Spanish nationalism. Cánovas made clear in an address to the University of Madrid in 1882[38][39] his view of the Spanish nation as based on shared cultural and linguistic elements—on both sides of the Atlantic—that tied Spain's territories together.

Cánovas saw Spanish colonialism as more "benevolent" than that of other European colonial powers. The prevalent opinion in Spain before the war regarded the spreading of "civilization" and Christianity as Spain's main objective and contribution to the New World. The concept of cultural unity bestowed special significance on Cuba, which had been Spanish for almost four hundred years, and was viewed as an integral part of the Spanish nation. The focus on preserving the empire would have negative consequences for Spain's national pride in the aftermath of the Spanish–American War.[40]

American interest in the Caribbean

In 1823, the fifth American President James Monroe (1758–1831, served 1817–25) enunciated the Monroe Doctrine, which stated that the United States would not tolerate further efforts by European governments to retake or expand their colonial holdings in the Americas or to interfere with the newly independent states in the hemisphere. The U.S. would, however, respect the status of the existing European colonies. Before the American Civil War (1861–1865), Southern interests attempted to have the United States purchase Cuba and convert it into a new slave state. The pro-slavery element proposed the Ostend Manifesto of 1854. Anti-slavery forces rejected it.

After the American Civil War and Cuba's Ten Years' War, U.S. businessmen began monopolizing the devalued sugar markets in Cuba. In 1894, 90% of Cuba's total exports went to the United States, which also provided 40% of Cuba's imports.[41] Cuba's total exports to the U.S. were almost twelve times larger than the export to Spain.[42] U.S. business interests indicated that while Spain still held political authority over Cuba, it was the U.S. that held economic power over Cuba.

The U.S. became interested in a trans-isthmus canal in either Nicaragua or Panama and realized the need for naval protection. Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan was an exceptionally influential theorist; his ideas were much admired by future 26th President Theodore Roosevelt, as the U.S. rapidly built a powerful naval fleet of steel warships in the 1880s and 1890s. Roosevelt served as Assistant Secretary of the Navy in 1897–1898 and was an aggressive supporter of an American war with Spain over Cuban interests.

Meanwhile, the "Cuba Libre" movement, led by Cuban intellectual José Martí until he died in 1895, had established offices in Florida.[43] The face of the Cuban revolution in the U.S. was the "Cuban Junta", under the leadership of Tomás Estrada Palma, who in 1902 became Cuba's first president. The Junta dealt with leading newspapers and Washington officials and held fund-raising events across the U.S. It funded and smuggled weapons. It mounted an extensive propaganda campaign that generated enormous popular support in the U.S. in favor of the Cubans. Protestant churches and most Democrats were supportive, but business interests called on Washington to negotiate a settlement and avoid war.[44]

Cuba attracted enormous American attention, but almost no discussion involved the other Spanish colonies of Puerto Rico, also in the Caribbean, or of the Philippines or Guam.[45] Historians note that there was no popular demand in the United States for an overseas colonial empire.[46]

Path to war

 
World empires and colonies 1898. In yellow Spain and in light blue United States.

Cuban struggle for independence

The first serious bid for Cuban independence, the Ten Years' War, erupted in 1868 and was subdued by the authorities a decade later. Neither the fighting nor the reforms in the Pact of Zanjón (February 1878) quelled the desire of some revolutionaries for wider autonomy and, ultimately, independence. One such revolutionary, José Martí, continued to promote Cuban financial and political freedom in exile. In early 1895, after years of organizing, Martí launched a three-pronged invasion of the island.[47]

The plan called for one group from Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic led by Máximo Gómez, one group from Costa Rica led by Antonio Maceo Grajales, and another from the United States (preemptively thwarted by U.S. officials in Florida) to land in different places on the island and provoke an uprising. While their call for revolution, the grito de Baire, was successful, the result was not the grand show of force Martí had expected. With a quick victory effectively lost, the revolutionaries settled in to fight a protracted guerrilla campaign.[47]

Antonio Cánovas del Castillo, the architect of Spain's Restoration constitution and the prime minister at the time, ordered General Arsenio Martínez-Campos, a distinguished veteran of the war against the previous uprising in Cuba, to quell the revolt. Campos's reluctance to accept his new assignment and his method of containing the revolt to the province of Oriente earned him criticism in the Spanish press.[48] The mounting pressure forced Cánovas to replace General Campos with General Valeriano Weyler, a soldier who had experience in quelling rebellions in overseas provinces and the Spanish metropole. Weyler deprived the insurgency of weaponry, supplies, and assistance by ordering the residents of some Cuban districts to move to reconcentration areas near the military headquarters.[48] This strategy was effective in slowing the spread of rebellion. In the United States, this fueled the fire of anti-Spanish propaganda.[49] In a political speech President William McKinley used this to ram Spanish actions against armed rebels. He even said this "was not civilized warfare" but "extermination".[50][51]

Spanish attitude

 
A Spanish satirical drawing published in La Campana de Gràcia (1896) by Manuel Moliné criticizing U.S. behavior regarding Cuba. Upper text (in old Catalan) reads: "Uncle Sam's craving", and below: "To keep the island so it won't get lost".

Spain depended on Cuba for prestige and trade, and used it as a training ground for its army. Spanish Prime Minister Antonio Cánovas del Castillo announced that "the Spanish nation is disposed to sacrifice to the last peseta of its treasure and to the last drop of blood of the last Spaniard before consenting that anyone snatch from it even one piece of its territory".[52] He had long dominated and stabilized Spanish politics. He was assassinated in 1897 by Italian anarchist Michele Angiolillo,[53] leaving a Spanish political system that was not stable and could not risk a blow to its prestige.[54]

US response

The eruption of the Cuban revolt, Weyler's measures, and the popular fury these events whipped up proved to be a boon to the newspaper industry in New York City. Joseph Pulitzer of the New York World and William Randolph Hearst of the New York Journal recognized the potential for great headlines and stories that would sell copies. Both papers denounced Spain but had little influence outside New York. American opinion generally saw Spain as a hopelessly backward power that was unable to deal fairly with Cuba. American Catholics were divided before the war began but supported it enthusiastically once it started.[55][56]

The U.S. had important economic interests that were being harmed by the prolonged conflict and deepening uncertainty about Cuba's future. Shipping firms that had relied heavily on trade with Cuba now suffered losses as the conflict continued unresolved.[57] These firms pressed Congress and McKinley to seek an end to the revolt. Other American business concerns, specifically those who had invested in Cuban sugar, looked to the Spanish to restore order.[58] Stability, not war, was the goal of both interests. How stability would be achieved would depend largely on the ability of Spain and the U.S. to work out their issues diplomatically.

Lieutenant Commander Charles Train, in 1894, in his preparatory notes in an outlook of an armed conflict between Spain and the United States, wrote that Cuba was solely dependent on the trade activities that Spain was carrying out and that it would mean Spain would use their "entire forces" to defend it.[59]

 
An American cartoon published in Judge, February 6, 1897: Columbia (representing the American people) reaches out to the oppressed Cuba (the caption under the chained child reads "Spain's 16th Century methods") while Uncle Sam (representing the U.S. government) sits blindfolded, refusing to see the atrocities or use his guns to intervene (cartoon by Grant E. Hamilton).

While tension increased among the Cubans and Spanish Government, popular support of intervention began to spring up in the United States. Many Americans likened the Cuban revolt to the American Revolution, and they viewed the Spanish Government as a tyrannical oppressor. Historian Louis Pérez notes that "The proposition of war in behalf of Cuban independence took hold immediately and held on thereafter. Such was the sense of the public mood." Many poems and songs were written in the United States to express support of the "Cuba Libre" movement.[60] At the same time, many African Americans, facing growing racial discrimination and increasing retardation of their civil rights, wanted to take part in the war. They saw it as a way to advance the cause of equality, service to country hopefully helping to gain political and public respect amongst the wider population.[61]

President McKinley, well aware of the political complexity surrounding the conflict, wanted to end the revolt peacefully. He began to negotiate with the Spanish government, hoping that the talks would dampen yellow journalism in the United States and soften support for war with Spain. An attempt was made to negotiate a peace before McKinley took office. However, the Spanish refused to take part in the negotiations. In 1897 McKinley appointed Stewart L. Woodford as the new minister to Spain, who again offered to negotiate a peace. In October 1897, the Spanish government refused the United States' offer to negotiate between the Spanish and the Cubans, but promised the U.S. it would give the Cubans more autonomy.[62] However, with the election of a more liberal Spanish government in November, Spain began to change its policies in Cuba. First, the new Spanish government told the United States that it was willing to offer a change in the Reconcentration policies if the Cuban rebels agreed to a cessation of hostilities. This time the rebels refused the terms in hopes that continued conflict would lead to U.S. intervention and the creation of an independent Cuba.[62] The liberal Spanish government also recalled the Spanish Governor-General Valeriano Weyler from Cuba. This action alarmed many Cubans loyal to Spain.[63]

The Cubans loyal to Weyler began planning large demonstrations to take place when the next Governor General, Ramón Blanco, arrived in Cuba. U.S. consul Fitzhugh Lee learned of these plans and sent a request to the U.S. State Department to send a U.S. warship to Cuba.[63] This request led to the USS Maine being sent to Cuba. While Maine was docked in Havana harbor, a spontaneous explosion sank the ship. The sinking of Maine was blamed on the Spanish and made the possibility of a negotiated peace very slim.[64] Throughout the negotiation process, the major European powers, especially Britain, France, and Russia, generally supported the American position and urged Spain to give in.[65] Spain repeatedly promised specific reforms that would pacify Cuba but failed to deliver; American patience ran out.[66]

USS Maine dispatch to Havana and loss

 
 
Though publication of a U.S. Navy investigation report would take a month, this Washington D.C. newspaper[67] was among those asserting within one day that the explosion was not accidental.

McKinley sent USS Maine to Havana to ensure the safety of American citizens and interests, and to underscore the urgent need for reform. Naval forces were moved in position to attack simultaneously on several fronts if the war was not avoided. As Maine left Florida, a large part of the North Atlantic Squadron was moved to Key West and the Gulf of Mexico. Others were also moved just off the shore of Lisbon, and others were moved to Hong Kong too.[68]

At 9:40 P.M. on February 15, 1898, Maine sank in Havana Harbor after suffering a massive explosion. More than 3/4 of the ship's crew of 355 sailors, officers and marines died as a result of the explosion. Of the 94 survivors only 16 were uninjured.[69] In total, 260[70] servicemen were killed in the initial explosion, six more died shortly thereafter from injuries,[70] marking the greatest loss of life for the American military in a single day since the defeat at Little Bighorn twenty years prior.[71]: 244 

While McKinley urged patience and did not declare that Spain had caused the explosion, the deaths of hundreds of American[72] sailors held the public's attention. McKinley asked Congress to appropriate $50 million for defense, and Congress unanimously obliged. Most American leaders believed that the cause of the explosion was unknown. Still, public attention was now riveted on the situation and Spain could not find a diplomatic solution to avoid war. Spain appealed to the European powers, most of whom advised it to accept U.S. conditions for Cuba in order to avoid war.[73] Germany urged a united European stand against the United States but took no action.[74]

The U.S. Navy's investigation, made public on March 28, concluded that the ship's powder magazines were ignited when an external explosion was set off under the ship's hull. This report poured fuel on popular indignation in the U.S., making war virtually inevitable.[75] Spain's investigation came to the opposite conclusion: the explosion originated within the ship. Other investigations in later years came to various contradictory conclusions, but had no bearing on the coming of the war. In 1974, Admiral Hyman George Rickover had his staff look at the documents and decided there was an internal explosion.[76] A study commissioned by National Geographic magazine in 1999, using AME computer modeling, reported: "By examining the bottom plating of the ship and how it bent and folded, AME concluded that the destruction could have been caused by a mine."[76]

Declaring war

 
Illustrated map published by the Guardia Civil showing the Kingdom of Spain and its remaining colonial possessions in 1895 (Caroline and Mariana Islands, as well as Spanish Sahara, Morocco, Guinea and Guam are not included.)

After Maine was destroyed, New York City newspaper publishers Hearst and Pulitzer decided that the Spanish were to blame, and they publicized this theory as fact in their papers.[77] Even prior to the explosion, both had published sensationalistic accounts of "atrocities" committed by the Spanish in Cuba; headlines such as "Spanish Murderers" were commonplace in their newspapers. Following the explosion, this tone escalated with the headline "Remember The Maine, To Hell with Spain!", quickly appearing.[78] [79] Their press exaggerated what was happening and how the Spanish were treating the Cuban prisoners.[80] The stories were based on factual accounts, but most of the time, the articles that were published were embellished and written with incendiary language causing emotional and often heated responses among readers. A common myth falsely states that when illustrator Frederic Remington said there was no war brewing in Cuba, Hearst responded: "You furnish the pictures and I'll furnish the war."[81]

However, this new "yellow journalism" was uncommon outside New York City, and historians no longer consider it the major force shaping the national mood.[82] Public opinion nationwide did demand immediate action, overwhelming the efforts of President McKinley, Speaker of the House Thomas Brackett Reed, and the business community to find a negotiated solution. Wall Street, big business, high finance and Main Street businesses across the country were vocally opposed to war and demanded peace.[22] After years of severe depression, the economic outlook for the domestic economy was suddenly bright again in 1897. However, the uncertainties of warfare posed a serious threat to full economic recovery. "War would impede the march of prosperity and put the country back many years," warned the New Jersey Trade Review. The leading railroad magazine editorialized, "From a commercial and mercenary standpoint it seems peculiarly bitter that this war should come when the country had already suffered so much and so needed rest and peace." McKinley paid close attention to the strong antiwar consensus of the business community, and strengthened his resolve to use diplomacy and negotiation rather than brute force to end the Spanish tyranny in Cuba.[83] Historian Nick Kapur argues that McKinley's actions as he moved toward war were rooted not in various pressure groups but in his deeply held "Victorian" values, especially arbitration, pacifism, humanitarianism, and manly self-restraint.[84]

 
The American transport ship Seneca, a chartered vessel that carried troops to Puerto Rico and Cuba

A speech delivered by Republican Senator Redfield Proctor of Vermont on March 17, 1898, thoroughly analyzed the situation and greatly strengthened the pro-war cause. Proctor concluded that war was the only answer.[85] Many in the business and religious communities which had until then opposed war, switched sides, leaving McKinley and Speaker Reed almost alone in their resistance to a war.[86][87][88] On April 11, McKinley ended his resistance and asked Congress for authority to send American troops to Cuba to end the civil war there, knowing that Congress would force a war.

 
Spanish Vessels captured up to evening of May 1, 1898

On April 19, while Congress was considering joint resolutions supporting Cuban independence, Republican Senator Henry M. Teller of Colorado proposed the Teller Amendment to ensure that the U.S. would not establish permanent control over Cuba after the war. The amendment, disclaiming any intention to annex Cuba, passed the Senate 42 to 35; the House concurred the same day, 311 to 6. The amended resolution demanded Spanish withdrawal and authorized the President to use as much military force as he thought necessary to help Cuba gain independence from Spain. President McKinley signed the joint resolution on April 20, 1898, and the ultimatum was sent to Spain.[29] In response, Spain severed diplomatic relations with the United States on April 21. On the same day, the U.S. Navy began a blockade of Cuba.[30] On April 23, Spain reacted to the blockade by declaring war on the U.S.[citation needed]

 
CHAP. 189. – An Act Declaring that war exists between the United States of America and the Kingdom of Spain on April 25, 1898.

On April 25, the U.S. Congress responded in kind, declaring that a state of war between the U.S. and Spain had de facto existed since April 21, the day the blockade of Cuba had begun.[30] It was the embodiment of the naval plan created by Lieutenant Commander Charles Train four years ago, stating once the US enacted a proclamation of war against Spain, it would mobilize its N.A. (North Atlantic) squadron to form an efficient blockade in Havana, Matanzas and Sagua La Grande.[59]

The Navy was ready, but the Army was not well-prepared for the war and made radical changes in plans and quickly purchased supplies. In the spring of 1898, the strength of the U.S. Regular Army was just 24,593 soldiers. The Army wanted 50,000 new men but received over 220,000 through volunteers and the mobilization of state National Guard units,[89] even gaining nearly 100,000 men on the first night after the explosion of USS Maine.[90]

Historiography

 
The last stand of the Spanish Garrison in Cuba by Murat Halstead, 1898

The overwhelming consensus of observers in the 1890s, and historians ever since, is that an upsurge of humanitarian concern with the plight of the Cubans was the main motivating force that caused the war with Spain in 1898. McKinley put it succinctly in late 1897 that if Spain failed to resolve its crisis, the United States would see "a duty imposed by our obligations to ourselves, to civilization and humanity to intervene with force."[91] Intervention in terms of negotiating a settlement proved impossible—neither Spain nor the insurgents would agree. Louis Perez states, "Certainly the moralistic determinants of war in 1898 has been accorded preponderant explanatory weight in the historiography."[92] By the 1950s, however, American political scientists began attacking the war as a mistake based on idealism, arguing that a better policy would be realism. They discredited the idealism by suggesting the people were deliberately misled by propaganda and sensationalist yellow journalism. Political scientist Robert Osgood, writing in 1953, led the attack on the American decision process as a confused mix of "self-righteousness and genuine moral fervor," in the form of a "crusade" and a combination of "knight-errantry and national self- assertiveness."[93] Osgood argued:

A war to free Cuba from Spanish despotism, corruption, and cruelty, from the filth and disease and barbarity of General 'Butcher' Weyler's reconcentration camps, from the devastation of haciendas, the extermination of families, and the outraging of women; that would be a blow for humanity and democracy.... No one could doubt it if he believed—and skepticism was not popular—the exaggerations of the Cuban Junta's propaganda and the lurid distortions and imaginative lies pervade by the "yellow sheets" of Hearst and Pulitzer at the combined rate of 2 million [newspaper copies] a day.[94]

In his War and Empire,[31] Prof. Paul Atwood of the University of Massachusetts (Boston) writes:

The Spanish–American War was fomented on outright lies and trumped up accusations against the intended enemy. ... War fever in the general population never reached a critical temperature until the accidental sinking of the USS Maine was deliberately, and falsely, attributed to Spanish villainy. ... In a cryptic message ... Senator Lodge wrote that 'There may be an explosion any day in Cuba which would settle a great many things. We have got a battleship in the harbor of Havana, and our fleet, which overmatches anything the Spanish have, is masked at the Dry Tortugas.

In his autobiography,[95] Theodore Roosevelt gave his views of the origins of the war:

Our own direct interests were great, because of the Cuban tobacco and sugar, and especially because of Cuba's relation to the projected Isthmian [Panama] Canal. But even greater were our interests from the standpoint of humanity. ... It was our duty, even more from the standpoint of National honor than from the standpoint of National interest, to stop the devastation and destruction. Because of these considerations I favored war.

Pacific theater

Philippines

 
The Pacific theatre of the Spanish–American War

In the 333 years of Spanish rule, the Philippines developed from a small overseas colony governed from the Mexico-based Viceroyalty of New Spain to a land with modern elements in the cities. The Spanish-speaking middle classes of the 19th century were mostly educated in the liberal ideas coming from Europe. Among these Ilustrados was the Filipino national hero José Rizal, who demanded larger reforms from the Spanish authorities. This movement eventually led to the Philippine Revolution against Spanish colonial rule. The revolution had been in a state of truce since the signing of the Pact of Biak-na-Bato in 1897, with revolutionary leaders having accepted exile outside of the country.

Lt. William Warren Kimball, Staff Intelligence Officer with the Naval War College[96] prepared a plan for war with Spain including the Philippines on June 1, 1896 known as "the Kimball Plan".[97]

On April 23, 1898, a document from Governor General Basilio Augustín appeared in the Manila Gazette newspaper warning of the impending war and calling for Filipinos to participate on the side of Spain.[g] Theodore Roosevelt, who was at that time Assistant Secretary of the Navy, ordered Commodore George Dewey, commanding the Asiatic Squadron of the United States Navy: "Order the squadron ...to Hong Kong. Keep full of coal. In the event of declaration of war with Spain, your duty will be to see that the Spanish squadron does not leave the Asiatic coast, and then offensive operations in Philippine Islands." Dewey's squadron departed on April 27 for the Philippines, reaching Manila Bay on the evening of April 30.[102]

 

The first battle between American and Spanish forces was at Manila Bay where, on May 1, Commodore George Dewey, commanding the U.S. Navy's Asiatic Squadron aboard USS Olympia, in a matter of hours defeated a Spanish squadron under Admiral Patricio Montojo.[h] Dewey managed this with only nine wounded.[104][105] With the German seizure of Tsingtao in 1897, Dewey's squadron had become the only naval force in the Far East without a local base of its own, and was beset with coal and ammunition problems.[106] Despite these problems, the Asiatic Squadron destroyed the Spanish fleet and captured Manila's harbor.[106]

Following Dewey's victory, Manila Bay became filled with the warships of other naval powers.[106] The German squadron of eight ships, ostensibly in Philippine waters to protect German interests, acted provocatively—cutting in front of American ships, refusing to salute the American flag (according to customs of naval courtesy), taking soundings of the harbor, and landing supplies for the besieged Spanish.[108]

With interests of their own, Germany was eager to take advantage of whatever opportunities the conflict in the islands might afford.[109] There was a fear at the time that the islands would become a German possession.[110] The Americans called Germany's bluff and threatened conflict if the aggression continued. The Germans backed down.[109][111] At the time, the Germans expected the confrontation in the Philippines to end in an American defeat, with the revolutionaries capturing Manila and leaving the Philippines ripe for German picking.[112]

 
Spanish artillery regiment during the Philippine Campaign

Commodore Dewey transported Emilio Aguinaldo, a Filipino leader who led rebellion against Spanish rule in the Philippines in 1896, from exile in Hong Kong to the Philippines to rally more Filipinos against the Spanish colonial government.[113] By June 9, Aguinaldo's forces controlled the provinces of Bulacan, Cavite, Laguna, Batangas, Bataan, Zambales, Pampanga, Pangasinan, and Mindoro, and had laid siege to Manila.[114] On June 12, Aguinaldo proclaimed the independence of the Philippines.[115][116]

 
Group of Tagalog Filipino revolutionaries during the Spanish-American War of 1898

On August 5, upon instruction from Spain, Governor-General Basilio Augustin turned over the command of the Philippines to his deputy, Fermin Jaudenes.[117] On August 13, with American commanders unaware that a peace protocol had been signed between Spain and the U.S. on the previous day in Washington D.C., American forces captured the city of Manila from the Spanish in the Battle of Manila.[i][113][119] This battle marked the end of Filipino–American collaboration, as the American action of preventing Filipino forces from entering the captured city of Manila was deeply resented by the Filipinos. This later led to the Philippine–American War,[120] which would prove to be more deadly and costly than the Spanish–American War.

 
Spanish infantry troops and officers in Manila

The U.S. had sent a force of some 11,000 ground troops to the Philippines. On August 14, 1898, Spanish Captain-General Jaudenes formally capitulated and U.S. General Merritt formally accepted the surrender and declared the establishment of a U.S. military government in occupation. The capitulation document declared, "The surrender of the Philippine Archipelago." and set forth a mechanism for its physical accomplishment.[121][122] That same day, the Schurman Commission recommended that the U.S. retain control of the Philippines, possibly granting independence in the future.[123] On December 10, 1898, the Spanish government ceded the Philippines to the United States in the Treaty of Paris. Armed conflict broke out between U.S. forces and the Filipinos when U.S. troops began to take the place of the Spanish in control of the country after the end of the war, quickly escalating into the Philippine–American War.

Guam

On June 20, 1898, the protected cruiser USS Charleston commanded by Captain Henry Glass, and three transports carrying troops to the Philippines, entered Guam's Apia Harbor. Captain Glass had opened sealed orders instructing him to proceed to Guam and capture it while enroute to the Philippines. Charleston fired a few rounds at the abandoned Fort Santa Cruz without receiving return fire. Two local officials, not knowing that war had been declared and believing the firing had been a salute, came out to Charleston to apologize for their inability to return the salute as they were out of gunpowder. Glass informed them that the U.S. and Spain were at war.[124] No Spanish warships had visited the island in a year and a half.[citation needed]

The following day, Glass sent Lieutenant William Braunersreuther to meet the Spanish Governor to arrange the surrender of the island and the Spanish garrison there. Two officers, 54 Spanish infantrymen as well as the governor-general and his staff were taken prisoner[citation needed] and transported to the Philippines as prisoners of war. No U.S. forces were left on Guam, but the only U.S. citizen on the island, Frank Portusach, told Captain Glass that he would look after things until U.S. forces returned.[124]

Caribbean theater

Cuba

 
The Spanish armored cruiser Cristóbal Colón, which was destroyed during the Battle of Santiago on July 3, 1898
 
Detail from Charge of the 24th and 25th Colored Infantry and Rescue of Rough Riders at San Juan Hill, July 2, 1898, depicting the Battle of San Juan Hill

Theodore Roosevelt advocated intervention in Cuba, both for the Cuban people and to promote the Monroe Doctrine. While Assistant Secretary of the Navy, he placed the Navy on a war-time footing and prepared Dewey's Asiatic Squadron for battle. He also worked with Leonard Wood in convincing the Army to raise an all-volunteer regiment, the 1st U.S. Volunteer Cavalry. Wood was given command of the regiment that quickly became known as the "Rough Riders".[125]

The Americans planned to destroy Spain's army forces in Cuba, capture the port city of Santiago de Cuba, and destroy the Spanish Caribbean Squadron (also known as the Flota de Ultramar). To reach Santiago they had to pass through concentrated Spanish defenses in the San Juan Hills and a small town in El Caney. The American forces were aided in Cuba by the pro-independence rebels led by General Calixto García.

Cuban sentiment

For quite some time the Cuban public believed the United States government to possibly hold the key to its independence, and even annexation was considered for a time, which historian Louis Pérez explored in his book Cuba and the United States: Ties of Singular Intimacy. The Cubans harbored a great deal of discontent towards the Spanish government, a result of years of manipulation on the part of the Spanish. The prospect of getting the United States involved in the fight was considered by many Cubans as a step in the right direction. While the Cubans were wary of the United States' intentions, the overwhelming support from the American public provided the Cubans with some peace of mind, because they believed that the United States was committed to helping them achieve their independence. However, with the imposition of the Platt Amendment of 1903 after the war, as well as economic and military manipulation on the part of the United States, Cuban sentiment towards the United States became polarized, with many Cubans disappointed with continuing American interference.[126]

Action at Cienfuegos

The first combat between American and Spanish forces in the Caribbean occurred on May 11, 1898, in the harbor near the city of Cienfuegos.[127] The city was the southern terminus for undersea communication cables that connected Cuba to Spain and other Spanish holdings in the Caribbean. American Naval officers needed to destroy these cables to cut communications into and out of Cuba, in preparation for later operations against the major city of Santiago.[128] The USS Marblehead and the USS Nashville were dispatched to cut these cables early on the morning of May 11. To cut the cables, two steam cutters, with a crew of eight sailors and six Marines each, and two sailing launches, with a crew of fourteen sailors each, maneuvered into harbor and within 200 feet from shore.[128] While the boats moved towards shore, the Marblehead and Nashville shelled Spanish trenches dug to protect the cables from sabotage attempts. They succeeded in destroying support buildings for the cables and drove the Spanish force back away from the beach. The boats' crews pulled one cable up and began trying to cut through its metal jacket while Spanish soldiers started firing from cover. Marine sharpshooters returned fire from the boats and the Marblehead and Nashville began firing shrapnel shells in an attempt to force the Spanish completely out of the area.[128] The sailors finished cutting one cable and pulled up a second one to begin severing it too. Spanish fire began to take a toll on the Marines and sailors with multiple casualties in the small boats, but the Americans were still able to cut a second wire. They began working on the final wire and succeeded in partially cutting it until the still heavy Spanish fire and mounting casualties forced the Navy officer in command, Lieutenant E. A. Anderson, to order the boats to return to the cover of the larger vessels.[128] In the almost three hours of combat, two men were killed, two mortally wounded, and four more seriously wounded and they succeeded in severing two of the three cables running out of Cienfuegos.[129] This relatively brief fight significantly disrupted communications between Cuba, Santiago, and Spain and contributed to the overall American goal of isolating Cuba from outside support. It also provided a major boost to American morale because it was the first combat American servicemen had seen close to home. For their brave actions, all the Marines and sailors in the four small boats received the Medal of Honor.[129]

Land campaign

 
Mauser Model 1893 rifle, used by the Spanish infantry and superior to American rifles; the Springfield Model 1892–99 and the Krag–Jørgensen rifle. Because of this superiority the US Army developed the M1903 Springfield.

The first American landings in Cuba occurred on June 10 with the landing of the First Marine Battalion at Fisherman's Point in Guantánamo Bay.[citation needed] This was followed on June 22 to 24, when the Fifth Army Corps under General William R. Shafter landed at Daiquirí and Siboney, east of Santiago, and established an American base of operations. A contingent of Spanish troops, having fought a skirmish with the Americans near Siboney on June 23, had retired to their lightly entrenched positions at Las Guasimas. An advance guard of U.S. forces under former Confederate General Joseph Wheeler ignored Cuban scouting parties and orders to proceed with caution. They caught up with and engaged the Spanish rearguard of about 2,000 soldiers led by General Antero Rubín[130] who effectively ambushed them, in the Battle of Las Guasimas on June 24. The battle ended indecisively in favor of Spain and the Spanish left Las Guasimas on their planned retreat to Santiago.

 
Charge of the Rough Riders

The U.S. Army employed Civil War–era skirmishers at the head of the advancing columns. Three of four of the U.S. soldiers who had volunteered to act as skirmishers walking point at the head of the American column were killed, including Hamilton Fish II (grandson of Hamilton Fish, the Secretary of State under Ulysses S. Grant), and Captain Allyn K. Capron, Jr., whom Theodore Roosevelt would describe as one of the finest natural leaders and soldiers he ever met. Only Oklahoma Territory Pawnee Indian, Tom Isbell, wounded seven times, survived.[131]


Regular Spanish troops were mostly armed with modern charger-loaded, 7mm 1893 Spanish Mauser rifles and using smokeless powder. The high-speed 7×57mm Mauser round was termed the "Spanish Hornet" by the Americans because of the supersonic crack as it passed overhead. Other irregular troops were armed with Remington Rolling Block rifles in .43 Spanish using smokeless powder and brass-jacketed bullets. U.S. regular infantry were armed with the .30–40 Krag–Jørgensen, a bolt-action rifle with a complex magazine. Both the U.S. regular cavalry and the volunteer cavalry used smokeless ammunition. In later battles, state volunteers used the .45–70 Springfield, a single-shot black powder rifle.[131]

 
Receiving the news of the surrender of Santiago

On July 1, a combined force of about 15,000 American troops in regular infantry and cavalry regiments, including all four of the army's "Colored" Buffalo Soldier regiments, and volunteer regiments, among them Roosevelt and his "Rough Riders", the 71st New York, the 2nd Massachusetts Infantry, and 1st North Carolina, and rebel Cuban forces attacked 1,270 entrenched Spaniards in dangerous Civil War-style frontal assaults at the Battle of El Caney and Battle of San Juan Hill outside of Santiago.[132] More than 200 U.S. soldiers were killed and close to 1,200 wounded in the fighting, thanks to the high rate of fire the Spanish put down range at the Americans.[133] Supporting fire by Gatling guns was critical to the success of the assault.[134][135] Cervera decided to escape Santiago two days later. First Lieutenant John J. Pershing, nicknamed "Black Jack", oversaw the 10th Cavalry Unit during the war. Pershing and his unit fought in the Battle of San Juan Hill. Pershing was cited for his gallantry during the battle.

The Spanish forces at Guantánamo were so isolated by Marines and Cuban forces that they did not know that Santiago was under siege, and their forces in the northern part of the province could not break through Cuban lines. This was not true of the Escario relief column from Manzanillo,[citation needed] which fought its way past determined Cuban resistance but arrived too late to participate in the siege.

After the battles of San Juan Hill and El Caney, the American advance halted. Spanish troops successfully defended Fort Canosa, allowing them to stabilize their line and bar the entry to Santiago. The Americans and Cubans forcibly began a bloody, strangling siege of the city.[136] During the nights, Cuban troops dug successive series of "trenches" (raised parapets), toward the Spanish positions. Once completed, these parapets were occupied by U.S. soldiers and a new set of excavations went forward. American troops, while suffering daily losses from Spanish fire, suffered far more casualties from heat exhaustion and mosquito-borne disease.[137] At the western approaches to the city, Cuban general Calixto Garcia began to encroach on the city, causing much panic and fear of reprisals among the Spanish forces.

Battle of Tayacoba

Lieutenant Carter P. Johnson of the Buffalo Soldiers' 10th Cavalry, with experience in special operations roles as head of the 10th Cavalry's attached Apache scouts in the Apache Wars, chose 50 soldiers from the regiment to lead a deployment mission with at least 375 Cuban soldiers under Cuban Brigadier General Emilio Nunez and other supplies to the mouth of the San Juan River east of Cienfuegos. On June 29, 1898, a reconnaissance team in landing boats from the transports Florida and Fanita attempted to land on the beach, but were repelled by Spanish fire. A second attempt was made on June 30, 1898, but a team of reconnaissance soldiers was trapped on the beach near the mouth of the Tallabacoa River. A team of four soldiers saved this group and were awarded Medals of Honor. The USS Peoria and the recently arrived USS Helena then shelled the beach to distract the Spanish while the Cuban deployment landed 40 miles east at Palo Alto, where they linked up with Cuban General Gomez.[138][139]

Naval operations

 
The Santiago Campaign (1898)
 
Crewmen pose under the gun turrets of Iowa in 1898.

The major port of Santiago de Cuba was the main target of naval operations during the war. The U.S. fleet attacking Santiago needed shelter from the summer hurricane season; Guantánamo Bay, with its excellent harbor, was chosen. The 1898 invasion of Guantánamo Bay happened between June 6 and 10, with the first U.S. naval attack and subsequent successful landing of U.S. Marines with naval support.[140][141]

On April 23, a council of senior admirals of the Spanish Navy had decided to order Admiral Pascual Cervera y Topete's squadron of four armored cruisers and three torpedo boat destroyers to proceed from their present location in Cape Verde (having left from Cádiz, Spain) to the West Indies.[142]

In May, the fleet of Spanish Admiral Pascual Cervera y Topete had been spotted in Santiago harbor by American forces, where they had taken shelter for protection from sea attack. A two-month stand-off between Spanish and American naval forces followed.

U.S. Assistant Naval Constructor, Lieutenant Richmond Pearson Hobson had been ordered by Rear Admiral William T. Sampson to sink the collier USS Merrimac in the harbor to bottle up the Spanish fleet. The mission was a failure, and Hobson and his crew were captured. They were exchanged on July 6, and Hobson became a national hero; he received the Medal of Honor, was advanced in grade and retired as a Naval Captain[j][143] He was elected in 1907 from Alabama to the U.S. House of Representatives. In 1934, his naval retirement rank was advanced to rear admiral.

The Battle of Santiago de Cuba on July 3, was the largest naval engagement of the Spanish–American War. When the Spanish squadron finally attempted to leave the harbor on July 3, the American forces destroyed or grounded five of the six ships. Only one Spanish vessel, the new armored cruiser Cristóbal Colón, survived, but her captain hauled down her flag and scuttled her when the Americans finally caught up with her. The 1,612 Spanish sailors who were captured and sent to Seavey's Island at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery, Maine, where they were confined at Camp Long as prisoners of war from July 11 until mid-September. The Americans treated Spain's officers, soldiers, and sailors with great respect. Ultimately, Spanish prisoners were returned to Spain with their "honors of war" on American ships. Admiral Cervera received different treatment from the sailors taken to Portsmouth. For a time, he was held at Annapolis, Maryland, where he was received with great enthusiasm by the people of that city.[144]

US withdrawal

Yellow fever had quickly spread among the American occupation force, crippling it. A group of concerned officers of the American army chose Theodore Roosevelt to draft a request to Washington that it withdraw the Army, a request that paralleled a similar one from General Shafter, who described his force as an "army of convalescents". By the time of his letter, 75% of the force in Cuba was unfit for service.[145]

On August 7, the American invasion force started to leave Cuba. The evacuation was not total. The U.S. Army kept the black Ninth U.S. Cavalry Regiment in Cuba to support the occupation. The logic was that their race and the fact that many black volunteers came from southern states would protect them from disease; this logic led to these soldiers being nicknamed "Immunes". Still, when the Ninth left, 73 of its 984 soldiers had contracted the disease.[145]

Puerto Rico

 
Spanish troops before they departed to engage the American forces at Hormigueros, Puerto Rico
 
A monument in Guánica, Puerto Rico, for the U.S. infantrymen who lost their lives in the Spanish–American War in 1898.

On May 24, 1898, in a letter to Theodore Roosevelt, Henry Cabot Lodge wrote, "Porto Rico is not forgotten and we mean to have it".[146]

In the same month, Lt. Henry H. Whitney of the United States Fourth Artillery was sent to Puerto Rico on a reconnaissance mission, sponsored by the Army's Bureau of Military Intelligence. He provided maps and information on the Spanish military forces to the U.S. government before the invasion.

The American offensive began on May 12, 1898, when a squadron of 12 U.S. ships commanded by Rear Adm. William T. Sampson of the United States Navy attacked the archipelago's capital, San Juan. Though the damage inflicted on the city was minimal, the Americans established a blockade in the city's harbor, San Juan Bay. On June 22, the cruiser Isabel II and the destroyer Terror delivered a Spanish counterattack, but were unable to break the blockade and Terror was damaged.

The land offensive began on July 25, when 1,300 infantry soldiers led by Nelson A. Miles disembarked off the coast of Guánica. The first organized armed opposition occurred in Yauco in what became known as the Battle of Yauco.[citation needed]

This encounter was followed by the Battle of Fajardo. The United States seized control of Fajardo on August 1, but were forced to withdraw on August 5 after a group of 200 Puerto Rican-Spanish soldiers led by Pedro del Pino gained control of the city, while most civilian inhabitants fled to a nearby lighthouse. The Americans encountered larger opposition during the Battle of Guayama and as they advanced towards the main island's interior. They engaged in crossfire at Guamaní River Bridge, Coamo and Silva Heights and finally at the Battle of Asomante.[147] The battles were inconclusive as the allied soldiers retreated.

A battle in San Germán concluded in a similar fashion with the Spanish retreating to Lares. On August 9, 1898, American troops that were pursuing units retreating from Coamo encountered heavy resistance in Aibonito in a mountain known as Cerro Gervasio del Asomante and retreated after six of their soldiers were injured. They returned three days later, reinforced with artillery units and attempted a surprise attack. In the subsequent crossfire, confused soldiers reported seeing Spanish reinforcements nearby and five American officers were gravely injured, which prompted a retreat order. All military actions in Puerto Rico were suspended on August 13, after U.S. President William McKinley and French Ambassador Jules Cambon, acting on behalf of the Spanish Government, signed an armistice whereby Spain relinquished its sovereignty over Puerto Rico.[147]

Cámara's squadron

 
Oil on canvas painted and signed with initials A.A. by Antonio Antón and Antonio Iboleón, around 1897. It is an ideal view of the Spanish Squadron of Instruction in 1896, before the war of 1898, since the ships represented never sailed together. On the left the Battleship Pelayo with insignia, followed by the cruisers Cristóbal Colón, Infanta María Teresa and Alfonso XIII; on the right, the cruiser Carlos V with insignia, Almirante Oquendo and Vizcaya. On the starboard side of the Pelayo sails the torpedo boat Destructor; Two Furor-class destroyer boats sail along the bows of the Carlos V. Stormy sea and partly cloudy skies.

Shortly after the war began in April, the Spanish Navy ordered major units of its fleet to concentrate at Cádiz to form the 2nd Squadron, under the command of Rear Admiral Manuel de la Cámara y Livermoore.[citation needed] Two of Spain's most powerful warships, the battleship Pelayo and the brand-new armored cruiser Emperador Carlos V, were not available when the war began—the former undergoing reconstruction in a French shipyard and the latter not yet delivered from her builders—but both were rushed into service and assigned to Cámara's squadron.[148] The squadron was ordered to guard the Spanish coast against raids by the U.S. Navy. No such raids materialized, and while Cámara's squadron lay idle at Cádiz, U.S. Navy forces destroyed Montojo's squadron at Manila Bay on 1 May and bottled up Cervera's squadron at Santiago de Cuba on 27 May.

During May, the Spanish Ministry of Marine considered options for employing Cámara's squadron. Spanish Minister of Marine Ramón Auñón y Villalón made plans for Cámara to take a portion of his squadron across the Atlantic Ocean and bombard a city on the East Coast of the United States, preferably Charleston, South Carolina, and then head for the Caribbean to make port at San Juan, Havana, or Santiago de Cuba,[149] but in the end this idea was dropped. Meanwhile, U.S. intelligence reported rumors as early as 15 May that Spain also was considering sending Cámara's squadron to the Philippines to destroy Dewey's squadron and reinforce the Spanish forces there with fresh troops.[150] Pelayo and Emperador Carlos V each were more powerful than any of Dewey's ships, and the possibility of their arrival in the Philippines was of great concern to the United States, which hastily arranged to dispatch 10,000 additional U.S. Army troops to the Philippines and send two U.S. Navy monitors to reinforce Dewey.[150]

 
Cámara's squadron in the Suez Canal in July 1898. His flagship, the battleship Pelayo, can be seen in the foreground,. The last ship in the line is the armored cruiser Emperador Carlos V. The squadron never saw combat.

On 15 June, Cámara finally received orders to depart immediately for the Philippines. His squadron, made up of Pelayo (his flagship), Emperador Carlos V, two auxiliary cruisers, three destroyers, and four colliers, was to depart Cádiz escorting four transports. After detaching two of the transports to steam independently to the Caribbean, his squadron was to proceed to the Philippines, escorting the other two transports, which carried 4,000 Spanish Army troops to reinforce Spanish forces there. He then was to destroy Dewey's squadron.[151][149][152] Accordingly, he sortied from Cádiz on 16 June[153] and, after detaching two of the transports for their voyages to the Caribbean, passed Gibraltar on 17 June[151] and arrived at Port Said, at the northern end of the Suez Canal, on 26 June.[154] There he found that U.S. operatives had purchased all the coal available at the other end of the canal in Suez to prevent his ships from coaling with it.[155] He also received word on 29 June from the British government, which controlled Egypt at the time, that his squadron was not permitted to coal in Egyptian waters because to do so would violate Egyptian and British neutrality.[154][149]

Ordered to continue,[156] Cámara's squadron passed through the Suez Canal on 5–6 July. By that time, word had reached Spain of the annihilation of Cervera's squadron off Santiago de Cuba on 3 July, freeing up the U.S. Navy's heavy forces from the blockade there, and the United States Department of the Navy had announced that a U.S. Navy "armored squadron with cruisers" would assemble and "proceed at once to the Spanish coast."[156] Fearing for the safety of the Spanish coast, the Spanish Ministry of Marine recalled Cámara's squadron, which by then had reached the Red Sea, on 7 July 1898.[157] Cámara's squadron returned to Spain, arriving at Cartagena on 23 July. No U.S. Navy forces subsequently threatened the coast of Spain, and Cámara and Spain's two most powerful warships thus never saw combat during the war.[149]

Making peace

 
Jules Cambon, the French ambassador to the United States, signing the memorandum of ratification on behalf of Spain

With defeats in Cuba and the Philippines, and its fleets in both places destroyed, Spain sued for peace and negotiations were opened between the two parties. After the sickness and death of British consul Edward Henry Rawson-Walker, American admiral George Dewey requested the Belgian consul to Manila, Édouard André, to take Rawson-Walker's place as intermediary with the Spanish government.[158][159][160]

Hostilities were halted on August 12, 1898, with the signing in Washington of a Protocol of Peace between the United States and Spain.[161] After over two months of difficult negotiations, the formal peace treaty, the Treaty of Paris, was signed in Paris on December 10, 1898,[162] and was ratified by the United States Senate on February 6, 1899.

The United States gained Spain's colonies of the Philippines, Guam and Puerto Rico in the treaty, and Cuba became a U.S. protectorate.[162] The treaty came into force in Cuba April 11, 1899, with Cubans participating only as observers. Having been occupied since July 17, 1898, and thus under the jurisdiction of the United States Military Government (USMG), Cuba formed its own civil government and gained independence on May 20, 1902, with the announced end of USMG jurisdiction over the island. However, the U.S. imposed various restrictions on the new government, including prohibiting alliances with other countries, and reserved the right to intervene. The U.S. also established a de facto perpetual lease of Guantánamo Bay.[163][164][165]

Aftermath

The war lasted 16 weeks.[166] John Hay (the United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom), writing from London to his friend Theodore Roosevelt, declared that it had been "a splendid little war".[167][168] The press showed Northerners and Southerners, blacks and whites fighting against a common foe, helping to ease the scars left from the American Civil War.[169] Exemplary of this was the fact that four former Confederate States Army generals had served in the war, now in the U.S. Army and all of them again carrying similar ranks. These officers were Matthew Butler, Fitzhugh Lee, Thomas L. Rosser and Joseph Wheeler, though only the latter had seen action. Still, in an exciting moment during the Battle of Las Guasimas, Wheeler apparently forgot for a moment which war he was fighting, having supposedly called out "Let's go, boys! We've got the damn Yankees on the run again!"[170]

The war marked American entry into world affairs. Since then, the U.S. has had a significant hand in various conflicts around the world, and entered many treaties and agreements. The Panic of 1893 was over by this point, and the U.S. entered a long and prosperous period of economic and population growth, and technological innovation that lasted through the 1920s.[171]

The war redefined national identity, served as a solution of sorts to the social divisions plaguing the American mind, and provided a model for all future news reporting.[172]

The idea of American imperialism changed in the public's mind after the short and successful Spanish–American War. Because of the United States' powerful influence diplomatically and militarily, Cuba's status after the war relied heavily upon American actions. Two major developments emerged from the Spanish–American War: one, it firmly established the United States' vision of itself as a "defender of democracy" and as a major world power, and two, it had severe implications for Cuban–American relations in the future. As historian Louis Pérez argued in his book Cuba in the American Imagination: Metaphor and the Imperial Ethos, the Spanish–American War of 1898 "fixed permanently how Americans came to think of themselves: a righteous people given to the service of righteous purpose".[173]

Aftermath in Spain

Described as absurd and useless by much of historiography, the war against the United States was sustained by an internal logic, in the idea that it was not possible to maintain the monarchical regime if it was not from a more than predictable military defeat

— Suárez Cortina, La España Liberal, [28]

A similar point of view that is shared by Carlos Dardé:

Once the war was raised, the Spanish government believed that it had no other solution than to fight, and lose. They thought that defeat —certain— was preferable to revolution —also certain—. [...] Granting independence to Cuba, without being defeated militarily... it would have implied in Spain, more than likely, a military coup d'état with broad popular support, and the fall of the monarchy; that is, the revolution

— La Restauración, 1875-1902. Alfonso XII y la regencia de María Cristina, [27]

As the head of the Spanish delegation to the Paris peace negotiations, the liberal Eugenio Montero Ríos, said: "Everything has been lost, except the Monarchy". Or as the U.S. ambassador in Madrid said: the politicians of the dynastic parties preferred "the odds of a war, with the certainty of losing Cuba, to the dethronement of the monarchy".[174] There were Spanish officers in Cuba who expressed "the conviction that the government of Madrid had the deliberate intention that the squadron be destroyed as soon as possible, in order to quickly reach peace[175]".

Although there was nothing exceptional about the defeat in the context of the time (Fachoda incident, 1890 British Ultimatum, First Italo-Ethiopian War, Greco-Turkish War (1897), Century of humiliation, Russo-Japanese War ... among other examples) in Spain the result of the war caused a national trauma due to the affinity of peninsular Spaniards with Cuba, but only in the intellectual class (which will give rise to Regenerationism and the Generation of 98), because the majority of the population was illiterate and lived under the regime of caciquismo.

The war greatly reduced the Spanish Empire. Spain had been declining as an imperial power since the early 19th century as a result of Napoleon's invasion. Spain retained only a handful of overseas holdings: Spanish West Africa (Spanish Sahara), Spanish Guinea, Spanish Morocco and the Canary Islands. With the loss of the Philippines, Spain's remaining Pacific possessions in the Caroline Islands and Mariana Islands became untenable and were sold to Germany[176] in the German–Spanish Treaty (1899).

The Spanish soldier Julio Cervera Baviera, who served in the Puerto Rican Campaign, published a pamphlet in which he blamed the natives of that colony for its occupation by the Americans, saying, "I have never seen such a servile, ungrateful country [i.e., Puerto Rico] ... In twenty-four hours, the people of Puerto Rico went from being fervently Spanish to enthusiastically American.... They humiliated themselves, giving in to the invader as the slave bows to the powerful lord."[177] He was challenged to a duel by a group of young Puerto Ricans for writing this pamphlet.[178]

Culturally, a new wave called the Generation of '98 originated as a response to this trauma, marking a renaissance in Spanish culture. Economically, the war benefited Spain, because after the war large sums of capital held by Spaniards in Cuba and the United States were returned to the peninsula and invested in Spain. This massive flow of capital (equivalent to 25% of the gross domestic product of one year) helped to develop the large modern firms in Spain in the steel, chemical, financial, mechanical, textile, shipyard, and electrical power industries.[179] However, the political consequences were serious. The defeat in the war began the weakening of the fragile political stability that had been established earlier by the rule of Alfonso XII.

Spain would begin to rehabilitate internationally after the Algeciras Conference of 1906.[180] In 1907 it signed a kind of defensive alliance with France and the United Kingdom, known as the Pact of Cartagena in case of war against the Triple Alliance.[181] Spain improved economically because of its neutrality in the First World War.[182]

Teller and Platt Amendments

The Teller Amendment was passed in the Senate on April 19, 1898, with a vote of 42 for versus 35 against. On April 20, it was passed by the House of Representatives with a vote of 311 for versus 6 against and signed into law by President William McKinley[183] Effectively, it was a promise from the United States to the Cuban people that it was not declaring war to annex Cuba, but would help in gaining its independence from Spain. The Platt Amendment (pushed by imperialists who wanted to project U.S. power abroad, in contrast to the Teller Amendment which was pushed by anti-imperialists who called for a restraint on U.S. rule) was a move by the United States' government to shape Cuban affairs without violating the Teller Amendment.[184]

The Platt Amendment granted the United States the right to stabilize Cuba militarily as needed.[185] In addition, it permitted the United States to deploy Marines to Cuba if Cuban freedom and independence were ever threatened or jeopardized by an external or internal force.[185] Passed as a rider to an Army appropriations bill which was signed into law on March 2, it effectively prohibited Cuba from signing treaties with other nations or contracting a public debt. It also provided for a permanent American naval base in Cuba.[185] Guantánamo Bay was established after the signing of the Cuban–American Treaty of Relations in 1903. Thus, despite that Cuba technically gained its independence after the war ended, the United States government ensured that it had some form of power and control over Cuban affairs.

Aftermath in the United States

The U.S. annexed the former Spanish colonies of Puerto Rico, the Philippines and Guam.[185] The notion of the United States as an imperial power, with colonies, was hotly debated domestically with President McKinley and the Pro-Imperialists winning their way over vocal opposition led by Democrat William Jennings Bryan,[185] who had supported the war. The American public largely supported the possession of colonies, but there were many outspoken critics such as Mark Twain, who wrote The War Prayer in protest. Roosevelt returned to the United States a war hero,[185] and he was soon elected governor of New York and then became the vice president. At the age of 42, he became the youngest person to become president after the assassination of President McKinley.

The war served to further repair relations between the American North and South. The war gave both sides a common enemy for the first time since the end of the Civil War in 1865, and many friendships were formed between soldiers of northern and southern states during their tours of duty. This was an important development, since many soldiers in this war were the children of Civil War veterans on both sides.[186]

The African-American community strongly supported the rebels in Cuba, supported entry into the war, and gained prestige from their wartime performance in the Army. Spokesmen noted that 33 African-American seamen had died in the Maine explosion. The most influential Black leader, Booker T. Washington, argued that his race was ready to fight. War offered them a chance "to render service to our country that no other race can", because, unlike Whites, they were "accustomed" to the "peculiar and dangerous climate" of Cuba. One of the Black units that served in the war was the 9th Cavalry Regiment. In March 1898, Washington promised the Secretary of the Navy that war would be answered by "at least ten thousand loyal, brave, strong black men in the south who crave an opportunity to show their loyalty to our land, and would gladly take this method of showing their gratitude for the lives laid down, and the sacrifices made, that Blacks might have their freedom and rights."[187]

Veterans Associations

In 1904, the United Spanish War Veterans was created from smaller groups of the veterans of the Spanish–American War. Today, that organization is defunct, but it left an heir in the Sons of Spanish–American War Veterans, created in 1937 at the 39th National Encampment of the United Spanish War Veterans. According to data from the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, the last surviving U.S. veteran of the conflict, Nathan E. Cook, died on September 10, 1992, at age 106. (If the data is to be believed, Cook, born October 10, 1885, would have been only 12 years old when he served in the war.)

The Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States (VFW) was formed in 1914 from the merger of two veterans organizations which both arose in 1899: the American Veterans of Foreign Service and the National Society of the Army of the Philippines.[188] The former was formed for veterans of the Spanish–American War, while the latter was formed for veterans of the Philippine–American War. Both organizations were formed in response to the general neglect veterans returning from the war experienced at the hands of the government.

To pay the costs of the war, Congress passed an excise tax on long-distance phone service.[189] At the time, it affected only wealthy Americans who owned telephones. However, the Congress neglected to repeal the tax after the war ended four months later. The tax remained in place for over 100 years until, on August 1, 2006, it was announced that the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the IRS would no longer collect it.[190]

Impact on the Marine Corps

The US Marine Corps during the 18th and 19th Centuries was primarily a ship-borne force. Marines were assigned to naval vessels to protect the ship's crew during close quarters combat, man secondary batteries, and provide landing parties when the ship's captain needed them.[191] During the Mexican-American War and the Civil War, the Marine Corps participated in some amphibious landings and had limited coordination with the Army and Navy in their operations.[192] During the Spanish-American War though, the Marines conducted several successful combined operations with both the Army and the Navy. Marine forces helped in the Army-led assault on Santiago and Marines also supported the Navy's operations by securing the entrance to Guantanamo Bay so American vessels could clear the harbor of mines and use it as a refueling station without fear of Spanish harassment.[193] Doctrinally, the Army and the Navy did not agree on much of anything and Navy officers were often frustrated by the lack of Army support.[194] Having the Marine Corps alleviated some of this conflict because it gave Navy commanders a force "always under the direction of the senior naval officer" without any "conflict of authority" with the Army.[194]

The combined Marine Corps-Navy operations during the war also signaled the future relationship between the two services.[191] During the Banana Wars of the early 20th Century, the island-hopping campaigns in the Pacific during World War II, and into modern conflicts America is involved in, the Marine Corps and Navy operate as a team to secure American interests. Thanks to the new territorial acquisitions of Guam, the Philippines, Puerto Rico, and Cuba, America needed the capabilities the Marines could provide.[191] The Spanish-American War was also the first time that the Marine Corps acted as America's "force in readiness" because they were the first American force to land on Cuba. Being a "body of troops which can be quickly mobilized and sent on board transports, fully equipped for service ashore and afloat" became the Marine Corps' mission throughout the rest of the 20th Century and into the 21st Century.[194]

The Spanish-American War also served as a coming of age for several influential Marines. Lieutenants Smedley D. Butler, John A. Lejeune, and Wendell C. Neville and Captain George F. Elliott all served with distinction with the First Battalion that fought in Cuba.[127] Lieutenant Butler would go on to earn two Medals of Honor, in Veracruz and Haiti. Lieutenants Lejeune and Neville and Captain Elliott would all become Commandants of the Marine Corps, the highest rank in the service and the leader of the entire Corps.

Marines' actions during the Spanish-American War also provided significant positive press for the Corps.[191] The men of the First Battalion were welcomed as heroes when they returned to the States and many stories were published by journalists attached to the unit about their bravery during the Battle of Guantanamo. The Marine Corps began to be regarded as America's premier fighting force thanks in large part to the actions of Marines during the Spanish-American War and to the reporters who covered their exploits.[191] The success of the Marines also led to increased funding for the Corps from Congress during a time that many high-placed Navy officials were questioning the efficacy and necessity of the Marine Corps.[194] This battle for Congressional funding and support would continue until the National Security Act of 1947, but Marine actions at Guantanamo and in the Philippines provided a major boost to the Corps' status.[191]

Postwar American investment in Puerto Rico

The change in sovereignty of Puerto Rico, like the occupation of Cuba, brought about major changes in both the insular and U.S. economies. Before 1898 the sugar industry in Puerto Rico was in decline for nearly half a century.[citation needed] In the second half of the nineteenth century, technological advances increased the capital requirements to remain competitive in the sugar industry. Agriculture began to shift toward coffee production, which required less capital and land accumulation. However, these trends were reversed with U.S. hegemony. Early U.S. monetary and legal policies made it both harder for local farmers to continue operations and easier for American businesses to accumulate land.[195] This, along with the large capital reserves of American businesses, led to a resurgence in the Puerto Rican nuts and sugar industry in the form of large American owned agro-industrial complexes.

At the same time, the inclusion of Puerto Rico into the U.S. tariff system as a customs area, effectively treating Puerto Rico as a state with respect to internal or external trade, increased the codependence of the insular and mainland economies and benefitted sugar exports with tariff protection. In 1897, the United States purchased 19.6 percent of Puerto Rico's exports while supplying 18.5 percent of its imports. By 1905, these figures jumped to 84 percent and 85 percent, respectively.[196] However, coffee was not protected, as it was not a product of the mainland. At the same time, Cuba and Spain, traditionally the largest importers of Puerto Rican coffee, now subjected Puerto Rico to previously nonexistent import tariffs. These two effects led to a decline in the coffee industry. From 1897 to 1901, coffee went from 65.8 percent of exports to 19.6 percent while sugar went from 21.6 percent to 55 percent.[197] The tariff system also provided a protected market-place for Puerto Rican tobacco exports. The tobacco industry went from nearly nonexistent in Puerto Rico to a major part of the country's agricultural sector.[citation needed]

In film and television

 
USS Olympia, the only ship currently preserved from that conflict

The Spanish–American War was the first U.S. war in which the motion picture camera played a role.[198] The Library of Congress archives contain many films and film clips from the war.[199] As good footage of fighting was difficult to capture, filmed reenactments using model ships and cigar smoke were shown on vaudeville screens.[200][201]

In addition, a few feature films have been made about the war. These include:

Military decorations

 
US Army "War with Spain" campaign streamer

United States

The United States awards and decorations of the Spanish–American War were as follows:

Wartime service and honors

Postwar occupation service

 
Cross of Military Merit for Combat in Cuba

Spain

  • Army Cross of Military Merit/Cruces del Mérito Militar—Spain issued two Crosses of Military Merit including one for fighters with a red badge and a red ribbon with a white stripe, and one for non-fighters with a white badge and a white ribbon with a red stripe. An example of the Silver Cross of Military Merit with the red emblem for fighters was issued on July 18 of 1898 for good behavior on the 11th of May in defense of the fortress of El Faro and the Pueblo de Jagua on May 11 in the Battle of Cienfuegos.[202]
  • Army Operations Medal/Medalla Para Ejercito de Operaciones, Cuba[203]
  • Medal for Volunteers/Medalla Para Los Volunatrios, Cuban Campaign, 1895–1898[203]
  • Army Operations Medal for Valor, Discipline and Loyalty, Philippines, 1896–1898[203]
  • Army Medal for Volunteers/Medalla Para Los Voluntarios, Philippines, Luzon Campaign, 1896–1897[203]

Other countries

The governments of Spain and Cuba issued a wide variety of military awards to honor Spanish, Cuban, and Philippine soldiers who had served in the conflict.

See also

  Write your essay about Spanish–American War on Wikiversity

Notes

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Unrecognized by the primary belligerents.
  2. ^ a b Alternative names:
  3. ^ The US declared war on Spain on April 25, 1898, but dated the beginning of the war retroactively to April 21
  4. ^ Number is the total for all Cuban rebels active from 1895 to 1898.[7]
  5. ^ The higher naval losses may be attributed to the disastrous naval defeats inflicted on the Spanish at Manila Bay and Santiago de Cuba.[14]
  6. ^ Clodfelter describes the U.S. capturing 30,000 prisoners (plus 100 cannons, 19 machine guns, 25,114 rifles, and various other equipment) in the Oriente province and around Santiago. He also states that the 10,000-strong Puerto Rican garrison capitulated to the U.S. after only minor fighting.
  7. ^
    Text of the document which appeared in the Manila Gazette on April 23, 1898

    Further Notes:

    1. This is the English language text of the document as published by the supporting source cited, possibly as translated from the original Spanish or Tagalog. In 1898, Spanish, Tagalog, and English were official languages in the Spanish colonial Philippines.[98]
    2. In the Spanish colonial Philippiines, the term Filipino was reserved for full-blooded Spaniards born in the Philippines (insulares). Full-blooded Spaniards born in the Spanish peninsula were termed peninsulares. The Filipinos that we know today were then termed indios.[99][100]

    The text of the document as published in the cited source was as follows:

    OFFICE OF THE GOVERNMENT AND OF THE CAPTAIN-GENERAL OF THE PHILIPPINES

    Fellow Spaniards,

    Hostilities between Spain and the United States have broken out.

    The moment has come for us to show the world that we are more than courageous to triumph over those, who, feigning to be loyal friends, took advantage of our misfortunes and capitalized on our nobility by making use of the means civilized nations consider as condemnable and contemptible.

    The Americans, gratified with their social progress, have drained off our patience and have instigated the war through wicked tactics, treacherous acts, and violations of human rights and internal agreements.

    Fighting will be short and decisive. God of victories will render this victory glorious and complete as demanded by reason and justice to our cause.

    Spain, counting on the sympathies of all nations, will come out in triumph from this new test, by shattering and silencing the adventurers of those countries which, without cohesiveness and post, offer to humanity shameful traditions and the ungrateful spectacle of some embassies within which jointly dwell intrigues and defamation, cowardice and cynicism.

    A US squadron, manned by strangers, by ignorant undisciplined men, is coming into the Archipelago for the purpose of grabbing from us what we consider to be our life, honor freedom. It tries to inspire (motivate) American sailors by saying that we are weak, they are encouraged to keep on with an undertaking that can be accomplished; namely of substituting the Catholic religion with Protestantism, they consider you as a people who impedes growth; they will seize your wealth as if you do not know your rights to property; they will snatch away from you those they consider as useful to man their ships, to be exploited as workers in their fields and factories.

    Useless plans! Ridiculous boastings!

    Your indomitable courage suffices to hold off those who dare to bring it to reality. We know you will not allow them to mock the faith you are professing, their feet to step on the temple of the true God, incredulity to demolish the sacred images you honor; you will not allow the invaders to desecrate the tombs of your forefathers; to satisfy their immodest passions at the expense of your wives and daughters' honor; you will not allow them to seize all the properties you have put up through honest work in order to assure your future; you will not allow them to commit any of those crimes inspired by their wickedness and greed, because your bravery and patriotism suffice in scaring them away and knocking down the people who, calling themselves civilized and cultured, resort to the extermination of the natives of North America instead of trying to attract them to live a civilized life and of progress.

    Filipinos! Prepare yourself for the battle and united together under the glorious Spanish flag, always covered with laurels, let us fight, convinced that victory will crown our efforts and let us reply the intimations of our enemies with a decision befitting a Christian and patriot, with a cry of "Long live Spain!"

    Manila, April 23, 1898

    Your general

    BASILO AUGISTIN[101]

  8. ^ The American squadron consisted of nine ships: Olympia (flagship), Boston, Baltimore, Raleigh, Concord, Petrel, McCulloch, Zapphire, and Nashan. The Spanish squadron consisted of seven ships: Reina Cristina (flagship), Castilla, Don Juan de Austria, Don Antonio de Ulloa, Isla de Luzon, Isla de Cuba, and Marques del Duero. The Spanish ships were of inferior quality to the American ships; Castilla was unpowered and had to be towed into position by the transport ship Manila.[103]
  9. ^ Article 3 of the peace protocol provided: "The United States will occupy and hold the city, bay, and harbour of Manila, pending the conclusion of a treaty of peace which shall determine the control, disposition, and government of the Philippines."[118]
  10. ^ Hobson resigned his commission after his request to retire as a naval captain was refused, prompting Secretary of the Navy William Henry Moody to reconsider and allow him to retire.[143]

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Further reading

  • Auxier, George W. (1939). "The Propaganda Activities of the Cuban Junta in Precipitating the Spanish-American War, 1895–1898". The Hispanic American Historical Review. 19 (3): 286–305. doi:10.2307/2507259. JSTOR 2507259.
  • Auxier, George W. "The Cuban question as reflected in the editorial columns of Middle Western newspapers (1895–1898)" (PhD dissertation, Ohio State University, 1938) complete text online April 30, 2018, at the Wayback Machine
  • Barnes, Mar. The Spanish–American War and Philippine Insurrection, 1898–1902: An Annotated Bibliography (Routledge Research Guides to American Military Studies) (2010)
  • Benton, Elbert Jay. International law and diplomacy of the Spanish–American war (Johns Hopkins UP, 1908) online free
  • Berner, Brad K. The Spanish–American War: A Historical Dictionary (Scarecrow Press, 1998)
  • Berner, Brad K., ed. The Spanish–American War: A Documentary History with Commentaries (2016), 289 pp; includes primary sources
  • Bradford, James C. ed., Crucible of Empire: The Spanish–American War and Its Aftermath (1993), essays on diplomacy, naval and military operations, and historiography
  • Cirillo, Vincent J. Bullets and Bacilli: The Spanish–American War and Military Medicine (2004)
  • Corbitt, Duvon C. (1963). "Cuban Revisionist Interpretations of Cuba's Struggle for Independence". The Hispanic American Historical Review. 43 (3): 395–404. doi:10.2307/2510074. JSTOR 2510074.
  • Cosmas, Graham A. An Army for Empire: The United States Army and the Spanish–American War (1971), organizational issues
  • Crapol, Edward P. "Coming to Terms with Empire: The Historiography of Late-Nineteenth-Century American Foreign Relations," Diplomatic History 16 (Fall 1992): 573–97
  • Cull, N. J., Culbert, D., Welch, D. Propaganda and Mass Persuasion: A Historical Encyclopedia, 1500 to the Present. "Spanish–American War". (2003). 378–79
  • Daley, L. (2000), "Canosa in the Cuba of 1898", in Aguirre, B. E.; Espina, E. (eds.), Los últimos días del comienzo: Ensayos sobre la guerra, Santiago de Chile: RiL Editores, ISBN 978-9562841153
  • DeSantis, Hugh. "The Imperialist Impulse and American Innocence, 1865–1900," in Gerald K. Haines and J. Samuel Walker, eds., American Foreign Relations: A Historiographical Review (1981), pp. 65–90
  • Dirks, Tim. "War and Anti-War Films". The Greatest Films. from the original on November 7, 2005. Retrieved November 9, 2005.
  • Dobson, John M. Reticent Expansionism: The Foreign Policy of William McKinley. (1988).
  • Feuer, A. B. The Spanish–American War at Sea: Naval Action in the Atlantic (1995) online edition May 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  • Field, James A. (1978). "American Imperialism: The Worst Chapter in Almost Any Book". The American Historical Review. 83 (3): 644–68. doi:10.2307/1861842. JSTOR 1861842.
  • Flack, H.E. Spanish–American diplomatic relations preceding the war of 1898 (Johns Hopkins UP, 1906) online free
  • Foner, Philip, The Spanish–Cuban–American War and the Birth of American Imperialism, 1895–1902 (1972), A Marxist interpretation
  • Freidel, Frank. The Splendid Little War (1958), well illustrated narrative by scholar ISBN 0739423428
  • Fry, Joseph A. "From Open Door to World Systems: Economic Interpretations of Late-Nineteenth-Century American Foreign Relations," Pacific Historical Review 65 (May 1996): 277–303
  • Fry, Joseph A. "William McKinley and the Coming of the Spanish–American War: A Study of the Besmirching and Redemption of an Historical Image," Diplomatic History 3 (Winter 1979): 77–97
  • Funston, Frederick. Memoirs of Two Wars, Cuba and Philippine Experiences. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1911 online edition
  • Gould, Lewis. The Spanish–American War and President McKinley (1980) excerpt and text search October 12, 2020, at the Wayback Machine
  • Grenville, John A. S. and George Berkeley Young. Politics, Strategy, and American Diplomacy: Studies in Foreign Policy, 1873–1917 (1966) pp. 239–66 on "The breakdown of neutrality: McKinley goes to war with Spain"
  • Hamilton, Richard. President McKinley, War, and Empire (2006)
  • Hard, Curtis V. (1988). Ferrell, Robert H. (ed.). Banners in the Air: The Eighth Ohio Volunteers and the Spanish–American War. Kent State University Press. ISBN 978-0873383677. LCCN 88012033.
  • Harrington, Peter, and Frederic A. Sharf. "A Splendid Little War." The Spanish–American War, 1898. The Artists' Perspective. London: Greenhill, 1998
  • Harrington, Fred H. (1935). "The Anti-Imperialist Movement in the United States, 1898–1900". The Mississippi Valley Historical Review. 22 (2): 211–30. doi:10.2307/1898467. JSTOR 1898467.
  • Herring, George C. From Colony to Superpower: US Foreign Relations Since 1776 (2008), the latest survey
  • Hoganson, Kristin. Fighting For American Manhood: How Gender Politics Provoked the Spanish–American and Philippine–American Wars (1998)
  • Holbo, Paul S. (1967), "Presidential Leadership in Foreign Affairs: William McKinley and the Turpie-Foraker Amendment", The American Historical Review, 72 (4): 1321–35, doi:10.2307/1847795, JSTOR 1847795.
  • Kapur, Nick (2011). "William McKinley's Values and the Origins of the Spanish-American War: A Reinterpretation". Presidential Studies Quarterly. 41 (1): 18–38. doi:10.1111/j.1741-5705.2010.03829.x. JSTOR 23884754
  • Keller, Allan. The Spanish–American War: A Compact History (1969)
  • Killblane, Richard E., "Assault on San Juan Hill," Military History, June 1998, Vol. 15, Issue 2.
  • LaFeber, Walter, The New Empire: An Interpretation of American Expansion, 1865–1898 (1963)
  • Leeke, Jim. Manila and Santiago: The New Steel Navy in the Spanish–American War (2009)
  • Linderman, Gerald F. The Mirror of War: American Society and the Spanish–American War (1974), domestic aspects
  • Maass, Matthias. "When Communication Fails: Spanish–American Crisis Diplomacy 1898," Amerikastudien, 2007, Vol. 52 Issue 4, pp. 481–93
  • May, Ernest. Imperial Democracy: The Emergence of America as a Great Power (1961)
  • McCartney, Paul T. American National Identity, the War of 1898, and the Rise of American Imperialism (2006)
  • McCook, Henry Christopher (1899), The Martial Graves of Our Fallen Heroes in Santiago de Cuba, G. W. Jacobs & Co.
  • Miles, Nelson Appleton (2012). Harper's Pictorial History of the War with Spain;. HardPress. ISBN 978-1290029025. from the original on January 2, 2017. Retrieved March 27, 2016.
  • Miller, Richard H. ed., American Imperialism in 1898: The Quest for National Fulfillment (1970)
  • Millis, Walter. The Martial Spirit: A Study of Our War with Spain (1931)
  • Morgan, H. Wayne, America's Road to Empire: The War with Spain and Overseas Expansion (1965)
  • Muller y Tejeiro, Jose. Combates y Capitulacion de Santiago de Cuba. Marques, Madrid: 1898. 208 p. English translation by US Navy Dept.
  • O'Toole, G. J. A. The Spanish War: An American Epic – 1898 (1984)
  • Paterson, Thomas G. (1996). "United States Intervention in Cuba, 1898: Interpretations of the Spanish-American-Cuban-Filipino War". The History Teacher. 29 (3): 341–61. doi:10.2307/494551. JSTOR 494551.
  • Pérez, Jr. Louis A. (1989), "The Meaning of the Maine: Causation and the Historiography of the Spanish–American War", The Pacific Historical Review, 58 (3): 293–22, doi:10.2307/3640268, JSTOR 3640268.
  • Pérez Jr. Louis A. The War of 1898: The United States and Cuba in History and Historiography University of North Carolina Press, 1998
  • Smith, Ephraim K. "William McKinley's Enduring Legacy: The Historiographical Debate on the Taking of the Philippine Islands," in James C. Bradford, ed., Crucible of Empire: The Spanish–American War and Its Aftermath (1993), pp. 205–49
  • Pratt, Julius W. The Expansionists of 1898 (1936)
  • Schoonover, Thomas. Uncle Sam's War of 1898 and the Origins of Globalization. (2003)
  • Smith, Joseph. The Spanish–American War: Conflict in the Caribbean and the Pacific (1994)
  • Stewart, Richard W. "Emergence to World Power 1898–1902" Ch. 15 June 8, 2010, 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. (2004), official US Army textbook
  • Tone, John Lawrence. War and Genocide in Cuba, 1895–1898 (2006)
  • US War Dept. Military Notes on Cuba. 2 vols. Washington, DC: GPO, 1898. online edition
  • US Army Center for Military History, Adjutant General's Office Statistical Exhibit of Strength of Volunteer Forces Called into Service During the War With Spain; with Losses From All Causes. US Army Center for Military History, Washington: Government Printing Office, 1899
  • Wheeler, Joseph. The Santiago Campaign, 1898. (1898). online edition
  • Zakaria, Fareed, From Wealth to Power: The Unusual Origins of America's World Role (1998)

External links

  • The Spanish American War lesson from EDSITEment
  • Points of Confusion over the Cuba Question and Cuba Sovereignty
  • Individual state's contributions to the Spanish–American War: Georgia, ,
  • From 'Dagoes' to 'Nervy Spaniards,' American Soldiers' Views of their Opponents, 1898 by Albert Nofi
  • Excerpts from The National Museum of American history.
  • Reenactment of Spanish–American War (video) on YouTube
  • The American Peril – An Examination of the Spanish American War and the Philippine Insurrection by Dan Carlin

Media

  • William Glackens prints at the Library of Congress
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived May 1, 2010) from the state archives of Florida (archived from on 2010-05-01)
  • Pictures of the Army Nurse Corps in the war November 16, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  • Art and images from the War with Spain November 5, 2010, at the Wayback Machine at the United States Army Center of Military History
  • Spanish–American War photographic collections September 24, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, via Calisphere, California Digital Library
  • The Spanish–American War in Motion Pictures – US Library of Congress
  • Wehman Collection of Spanish–American War Photographs at the
  • Ensminger Brothers Spanish–American War Photographs[permanent dead link] at the

Reference materials

  • United States Department of State, Papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States, with the annual message of the president transmitted to Congress December 5, 1898 especially pp. 558–1085.
  • Joint Resolution Resolution of Congress April 19, 1898, point 4 is the Teller amendment
  • Operations of the U.S. Signal Corps Cutting and Diverting Undersea Telegraph Cables from Cuba
  • Library of Congress Guide to the Spanish–American War
  • Emergence to World Power, 1898–1902 August 12, 2010, at the Wayback Machine (an extract from Matloff's American Military History a publication of the United States Army Center of Military History)
  • Buffalo Soldiers at San Juan Hill August 3, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  • Impact on the Spanish Army June 12, 2010, at the Wayback Machine by Charles Hendricks
  • Black Jack in Cuba August 12, 2010, at the Wayback Machine – General John J. Pershing's service in the Spanish–American War, by Kevin Hymel
  • The World of 1898: The Spanish–American War – Library of Congress Hispanic Division
  • Centennial of the Spanish–American War 1898–1998 October 6, 2001, at the Wayback Machine by Lincoln Cushing
  • History of Negro soldiers in the Spanish–American War, and other items of interest, by Edward Augustus Johnston, published 1899, hosted by the Portal to Texas History.
  • Name Index to New York in the Spanish–American War 1898
  • 1898: El Ocaso de un Imperio Article in Spanish about naval operations during the Spanish–American War.
  • from the .
  • A finding aid listing photographs, diaries, personal papers held at the U.S. Army Heritage and Education Center, Carlisle, Pennsylvania

Newspapers

  • "Spain to Use Privateers; An Official Decree Declares that She is Determined to Reserve This Right" (Headline, The New York Times, April 24, 1898)

spanish, american, april, august, 1898, period, armed, conflict, between, spain, united, states, hostilities, began, aftermath, internal, explosion, maine, havana, harbor, cuba, leading, united, states, intervention, cuban, independence, united, states, emergi. The Spanish American War b April 21 August 13 1898 was a period of armed conflict between Spain and the United States Hostilities began in the aftermath of the internal explosion of USS Maine in Havana Harbor in Cuba leading to United States intervention in the Cuban War of Independence The war led to the United States emerging predominant in the Caribbean region 16 and resulted in U S acquisition of Spain s Pacific possessions It led to United States involvement in the Philippine Revolution and later to the Philippine American War Spanish American War b Part of the Philippine Revolution the decolonization of the Americas and the Cuban War of Independence clockwise from top left Signal Corps extending telegraph lines USS Iowa at the Victory Fleet Review in August 1898 in New York Harbor Filipino soldiers wearing Spanish pith helmets outside Manila The Spanish signing the Treaty of Paris Roosevelt and his Rough Riders at San Juan Hill Replacing of the Spanish flag at Fort San Antonio Abad Fort Malate DateApril 21 c August 13 1898 3 months 3 weeks and 2 days LocationCuba and Puerto Rico Caribbean Sea Philippines and Guam Asia Pacific ResultAmerican victory Treaty of Paris of 1898 Founding of the First Philippine Republic and beginning of the Philippine American War Spain sells to Germany the last colonies in the Pacific in 1899 End of the Spanish Empire in America and Asia TerritorialchangesSpain relinquishes sovereignty over Cuba cedes Puerto Rico Guam and the Philippine Islands to the United States 20 million paid to Spain by the United States for infrastructure owned by Spain BelligerentsUnited StatesCuban Revolutionaries a Filipino Revolutionaries a Spain Cuba Philippines Puerto RicoCommanders and leadersWilliam McKinley Russell A Alger John Davis Long Nelson Miles Theodore Roosevelt William Shafter Fitzhugh Lee George Dewey William Sampson Wesley Merritt Joseph Wheeler Charles SigsbeeMaximo Gomez Calixto Garcia Demetrio Duany Emilio Aguinaldo Apolinario Mabini Baldomero Aguinaldo Antonio LunaMaria Christina Praxedes Mateo Sagasta Patricio Montojo Pascual Cervera Arsenio Linares Manuel Camara Manuel Macias Ramon Blanco Antero Rubin Arsenio Campos Valeriano Weyler Jose Velazquez Basilio Augustin Fermin Jaudenes Diego RiosStrengthTotal 300 000 5 72 339 6 failed verification 53 000 d 40 000 8 Total 339 783 9 288 452 Caribbean 278 447 in Cuba 10 005 in Puerto Rico 51 331 Philippines Casualties and lossesAmerican 369 soldiers killed 10 10 sailors killed 10 6 marines killed 10 1 662 wounded 11 11 prisoners 12 2 061 dead from disease 10 11 1 cargo ship sunk 13 1 cruiser damaged 10 1 battleship damagedSpanish 200 soldiers killed 14 500 600 sailors killed 14 e 700 800 wounded 14 40 000 prisoners 10 f 15 000 dead from disease 15 6 small ships sunk 10 11 cruisers sunk 10 2 destroyers sunk 10 The 19th century represented a clear decline for the Spanish Empire while the United States went from becoming a newly founded country to being a medium regional power In the Spanish case the descent which already came from previous centuries accelerated first with the Napoleonic invasion which in turn would cause the independence of a large part of the American colonies 17 and later political instability pronouncements revolutions civil wars bled the country socially and economically The U S on the other hand expanded economically throughout that century by purchasing territories such as Louisiana and Alaska militarily by actions such as the Mexican American War and by receiving large numbers of immigrants That process was interrupted only for a few years by the American Civil War and Reconstruction era 18 The main issue was Cuban independence Revolts had been occurring for some years in Cuba against Spanish colonial rule The United States backed these revolts upon entering the Spanish American War There had been war scares before as in the Virginius Affair in 1873 But in the late 1890s American public opinion swayed in support of the rebellion because of reports of concentration camps set up to control the populace 19 20 Yellow journalism exaggerated the atrocities to further increase public fervor and to sell more newspapers and magazines 21 The business community had just recovered from a deep depression and feared that a war would reverse the gains Accordingly most business interests lobbied vigorously against going to war 22 President William McKinley ignored the exaggerated news reporting and sought a peaceful settlement 23 Though not seeking a war McKinley made preparations for readiness against one He unsuccessfully sought accommodation with Spain on the issue of independence for Cuba 24 However after the United States Navy armored cruiser Maine mysteriously exploded and sank in Havana Harbor on February 15 1898 political pressures pushed McKinley into a war that he had wished to avoid 25 As far as Spain was concerned there was a nationalist agitation in which the written press had a key influence causing the Spanish government to not give in and abandon Cuba as it had abandoned Spanish Florida when faced with a troublesome colonial situation there transferring it to the U S in 1821 in exchange for payment of Spanish debts 26 If the Spanish government had transferred Cuba it would have been seen as a betrayal by a part of Spanish society and there would probably have been a new revolution 27 So the government preferred to wage a lost war beforehand rather than risk a revolution opting for a controlled demolition to preserve the Restoration Regime 28 On April 20 1898 McKinley signed a joint Congressional resolution demanding Spanish withdrawal and authorizing the President to use military force to help Cuba gain independence 29 In response Spain severed diplomatic relations with the United States on April 21 On the same day the United States Navy began a blockade of Cuba 30 Both sides declared war neither had allies The 10 week war was fought in both the Caribbean and the Pacific As United States agitators for war well knew 31 United States naval power would prove decisive allowing expeditionary forces to disembark in Cuba against a Spanish garrison already facing nationwide Cuban insurgent attacks and further devastated by yellow fever 32 The invaders obtained the surrender of Santiago de Cuba and Manila despite the good performance of some Spanish infantry units and fierce fighting for positions such as El Caney and San Juan Hill 33 Madrid sued for peace after two Spanish squadrons were sunk in the battles of Santiago de Cuba and Manila Bay and a third more modern fleet was recalled home to protect the Spanish coasts 34 The war ended with the 1898 Treaty of Paris negotiated on terms favorable to the United States The treaty ceded ownership of Puerto Rico Guam and the Philippine islands from Spain to the United States and granted the United States temporary control of Cuba The cession of the Philippines involved payment of 20 million 650 million today to Spain by the U S to cover infrastructure owned by Spain 35 The Spanish American War brought an end to almost four centuries of Spanish presence in the Americas Asia and the Pacific The defeat and loss of the Spanish Empire s last remnants was a profound shock to Spain s national psyche and provoked a thorough philosophical and artistic reevaluation of Spanish society known as the Generation of 98 34 The United States meanwhile not only became a major power but also gained several island possessions spanning the globe which provoked rancorous debate over the wisdom of expansionism 36 Contents 1 Historical background 1 1 Spain s attitude towards its colonies 1 2 American interest in the Caribbean 2 Path to war 2 1 Cuban struggle for independence 2 2 Spanish attitude 2 3 US response 2 4 USS Maine dispatch to Havana and loss 2 5 Declaring war 2 6 Historiography 3 Pacific theater 3 1 Philippines 3 2 Guam 4 Caribbean theater 4 1 Cuba 4 1 1 Cuban sentiment 4 1 2 Land campaign 4 1 3 Battle of Tayacoba 4 1 4 Naval operations 4 1 5 US withdrawal 4 2 Puerto Rico 5 Camara s squadron 6 Making peace 7 Aftermath 7 1 Aftermath in Spain 7 2 Teller and Platt Amendments 7 3 Aftermath in the United States 7 3 1 Veterans Associations 7 3 2 Impact on the Marine Corps 7 4 Postwar American investment in Puerto Rico 8 In film and television 9 Military decorations 9 1 United States 9 1 1 Wartime service and honors 9 1 2 Postwar occupation service 9 2 Spain 9 3 Other countries 10 See also 11 Notes 11 1 Footnotes 11 2 Source citations 12 General references 13 Further reading 14 External links 14 1 Media 14 2 Reference materials 14 3 NewspapersHistorical background EditSpain s attitude towards its colonies Edit The combined problems arising from the Peninsular War 1807 1814 the loss of most of its colonies in the Americas in the early 19th century Spanish American wars of independence and three Carlist Wars 1832 1876 marked a low point for Spanish colonialism 37 Liberal Spanish elites like Antonio Canovas del Castillo and Emilio Castelar offered new interpretations of the concept of empire to dovetail with the emerging Spanish nationalism Canovas made clear in an address to the University of Madrid in 1882 38 39 his view of the Spanish nation as based on shared cultural and linguistic elements on both sides of the Atlantic that tied Spain s territories together Canovas saw Spanish colonialism as more benevolent than that of other European colonial powers The prevalent opinion in Spain before the war regarded the spreading of civilization and Christianity as Spain s main objective and contribution to the New World The concept of cultural unity bestowed special significance on Cuba which had been Spanish for almost four hundred years and was viewed as an integral part of the Spanish nation The focus on preserving the empire would have negative consequences for Spain s national pride in the aftermath of the Spanish American War 40 American interest in the Caribbean Edit In 1823 the fifth American President James Monroe 1758 1831 served 1817 25 enunciated the Monroe Doctrine which stated that the United States would not tolerate further efforts by European governments to retake or expand their colonial holdings in the Americas or to interfere with the newly independent states in the hemisphere The U S would however respect the status of the existing European colonies Before the American Civil War 1861 1865 Southern interests attempted to have the United States purchase Cuba and convert it into a new slave state The pro slavery element proposed the Ostend Manifesto of 1854 Anti slavery forces rejected it After the American Civil War and Cuba s Ten Years War U S businessmen began monopolizing the devalued sugar markets in Cuba In 1894 90 of Cuba s total exports went to the United States which also provided 40 of Cuba s imports 41 Cuba s total exports to the U S were almost twelve times larger than the export to Spain 42 U S business interests indicated that while Spain still held political authority over Cuba it was the U S that held economic power over Cuba The U S became interested in a trans isthmus canal in either Nicaragua or Panama and realized the need for naval protection Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan was an exceptionally influential theorist his ideas were much admired by future 26th President Theodore Roosevelt as the U S rapidly built a powerful naval fleet of steel warships in the 1880s and 1890s Roosevelt served as Assistant Secretary of the Navy in 1897 1898 and was an aggressive supporter of an American war with Spain over Cuban interests Meanwhile the Cuba Libre movement led by Cuban intellectual Jose Marti until he died in 1895 had established offices in Florida 43 The face of the Cuban revolution in the U S was the Cuban Junta under the leadership of Tomas Estrada Palma who in 1902 became Cuba s first president The Junta dealt with leading newspapers and Washington officials and held fund raising events across the U S It funded and smuggled weapons It mounted an extensive propaganda campaign that generated enormous popular support in the U S in favor of the Cubans Protestant churches and most Democrats were supportive but business interests called on Washington to negotiate a settlement and avoid war 44 Cuba attracted enormous American attention but almost no discussion involved the other Spanish colonies of Puerto Rico also in the Caribbean or of the Philippines or Guam 45 Historians note that there was no popular demand in the United States for an overseas colonial empire 46 Path to war Edit World empires and colonies 1898 In yellow Spain and in light blue United States Cuban struggle for independence Edit Main article Cuban War of Independence The first serious bid for Cuban independence the Ten Years War erupted in 1868 and was subdued by the authorities a decade later Neither the fighting nor the reforms in the Pact of Zanjon February 1878 quelled the desire of some revolutionaries for wider autonomy and ultimately independence One such revolutionary Jose Marti continued to promote Cuban financial and political freedom in exile In early 1895 after years of organizing Marti launched a three pronged invasion of the island 47 The plan called for one group from Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic led by Maximo Gomez one group from Costa Rica led by Antonio Maceo Grajales and another from the United States preemptively thwarted by U S officials in Florida to land in different places on the island and provoke an uprising While their call for revolution the grito de Baire was successful the result was not the grand show of force Marti had expected With a quick victory effectively lost the revolutionaries settled in to fight a protracted guerrilla campaign 47 Antonio Canovas del Castillo the architect of Spain s Restoration constitution and the prime minister at the time ordered General Arsenio Martinez Campos a distinguished veteran of the war against the previous uprising in Cuba to quell the revolt Campos s reluctance to accept his new assignment and his method of containing the revolt to the province of Oriente earned him criticism in the Spanish press 48 The mounting pressure forced Canovas to replace General Campos with General Valeriano Weyler a soldier who had experience in quelling rebellions in overseas provinces and the Spanish metropole Weyler deprived the insurgency of weaponry supplies and assistance by ordering the residents of some Cuban districts to move to reconcentration areas near the military headquarters 48 This strategy was effective in slowing the spread of rebellion In the United States this fueled the fire of anti Spanish propaganda 49 In a political speech President William McKinley used this to ram Spanish actions against armed rebels He even said this was not civilized warfare but extermination 50 51 Spanish attitude Edit A Spanish satirical drawing published in La Campana de Gracia 1896 by Manuel Moline criticizing U S behavior regarding Cuba Upper text in old Catalan reads Uncle Sam s craving and below To keep the island so it won t get lost Spain depended on Cuba for prestige and trade and used it as a training ground for its army Spanish Prime Minister Antonio Canovas del Castillo announced that the Spanish nation is disposed to sacrifice to the last peseta of its treasure and to the last drop of blood of the last Spaniard before consenting that anyone snatch from it even one piece of its territory 52 He had long dominated and stabilized Spanish politics He was assassinated in 1897 by Italian anarchist Michele Angiolillo 53 leaving a Spanish political system that was not stable and could not risk a blow to its prestige 54 US response Edit Further information Presidency of William McKinley The eruption of the Cuban revolt Weyler s measures and the popular fury these events whipped up proved to be a boon to the newspaper industry in New York City Joseph Pulitzer of the New York World and William Randolph Hearst of the New York Journal recognized the potential for great headlines and stories that would sell copies Both papers denounced Spain but had little influence outside New York American opinion generally saw Spain as a hopelessly backward power that was unable to deal fairly with Cuba American Catholics were divided before the war began but supported it enthusiastically once it started 55 56 The U S had important economic interests that were being harmed by the prolonged conflict and deepening uncertainty about Cuba s future Shipping firms that had relied heavily on trade with Cuba now suffered losses as the conflict continued unresolved 57 These firms pressed Congress and McKinley to seek an end to the revolt Other American business concerns specifically those who had invested in Cuban sugar looked to the Spanish to restore order 58 Stability not war was the goal of both interests How stability would be achieved would depend largely on the ability of Spain and the U S to work out their issues diplomatically Lieutenant Commander Charles Train in 1894 in his preparatory notes in an outlook of an armed conflict between Spain and the United States wrote that Cuba was solely dependent on the trade activities that Spain was carrying out and that it would mean Spain would use their entire forces to defend it 59 An American cartoon published in Judge February 6 1897 Columbia representing the American people reaches out to the oppressed Cuba the caption under the chained child reads Spain s 16th Century methods while Uncle Sam representing the U S government sits blindfolded refusing to see the atrocities or use his guns to intervene cartoon by Grant E Hamilton While tension increased among the Cubans and Spanish Government popular support of intervention began to spring up in the United States Many Americans likened the Cuban revolt to the American Revolution and they viewed the Spanish Government as a tyrannical oppressor Historian Louis Perez notes that The proposition of war in behalf of Cuban independence took hold immediately and held on thereafter Such was the sense of the public mood Many poems and songs were written in the United States to express support of the Cuba Libre movement 60 At the same time many African Americans facing growing racial discrimination and increasing retardation of their civil rights wanted to take part in the war They saw it as a way to advance the cause of equality service to country hopefully helping to gain political and public respect amongst the wider population 61 President McKinley well aware of the political complexity surrounding the conflict wanted to end the revolt peacefully He began to negotiate with the Spanish government hoping that the talks would dampen yellow journalism in the United States and soften support for war with Spain An attempt was made to negotiate a peace before McKinley took office However the Spanish refused to take part in the negotiations In 1897 McKinley appointed Stewart L Woodford as the new minister to Spain who again offered to negotiate a peace In October 1897 the Spanish government refused the United States offer to negotiate between the Spanish and the Cubans but promised the U S it would give the Cubans more autonomy 62 However with the election of a more liberal Spanish government in November Spain began to change its policies in Cuba First the new Spanish government told the United States that it was willing to offer a change in the Reconcentration policies if the Cuban rebels agreed to a cessation of hostilities This time the rebels refused the terms in hopes that continued conflict would lead to U S intervention and the creation of an independent Cuba 62 The liberal Spanish government also recalled the Spanish Governor General Valeriano Weyler from Cuba This action alarmed many Cubans loyal to Spain 63 The Cubans loyal to Weyler began planning large demonstrations to take place when the next Governor General Ramon Blanco arrived in Cuba U S consul Fitzhugh Lee learned of these plans and sent a request to the U S State Department to send a U S warship to Cuba 63 This request led to the USS Maine being sent to Cuba While Maine was docked in Havana harbor a spontaneous explosion sank the ship The sinking of Maine was blamed on the Spanish and made the possibility of a negotiated peace very slim 64 Throughout the negotiation process the major European powers especially Britain France and Russia generally supported the American position and urged Spain to give in 65 Spain repeatedly promised specific reforms that would pacify Cuba but failed to deliver American patience ran out 66 USS Maine dispatch to Havana and loss Edit Main article USS Maine 1889 The sunken USS Maine in Havana harbor Though publication of a U S Navy investigation report would take a month this Washington D C newspaper 67 was among those asserting within one day that the explosion was not accidental McKinley sent USS Maine to Havana to ensure the safety of American citizens and interests and to underscore the urgent need for reform Naval forces were moved in position to attack simultaneously on several fronts if the war was not avoided As Maine left Florida a large part of the North Atlantic Squadron was moved to Key West and the Gulf of Mexico Others were also moved just off the shore of Lisbon and others were moved to Hong Kong too 68 At 9 40 P M on February 15 1898 Maine sank in Havana Harbor after suffering a massive explosion More than 3 4 of the ship s crew of 355 sailors officers and marines died as a result of the explosion Of the 94 survivors only 16 were uninjured 69 In total 260 70 servicemen were killed in the initial explosion six more died shortly thereafter from injuries 70 marking the greatest loss of life for the American military in a single day since the defeat at Little Bighorn twenty years prior 71 244 While McKinley urged patience and did not declare that Spain had caused the explosion the deaths of hundreds of American 72 sailors held the public s attention McKinley asked Congress to appropriate 50 million for defense and Congress unanimously obliged Most American leaders believed that the cause of the explosion was unknown Still public attention was now riveted on the situation and Spain could not find a diplomatic solution to avoid war Spain appealed to the European powers most of whom advised it to accept U S conditions for Cuba in order to avoid war 73 Germany urged a united European stand against the United States but took no action 74 The U S Navy s investigation made public on March 28 concluded that the ship s powder magazines were ignited when an external explosion was set off under the ship s hull This report poured fuel on popular indignation in the U S making war virtually inevitable 75 Spain s investigation came to the opposite conclusion the explosion originated within the ship Other investigations in later years came to various contradictory conclusions but had no bearing on the coming of the war In 1974 Admiral Hyman George Rickover had his staff look at the documents and decided there was an internal explosion 76 A study commissioned by National Geographic magazine in 1999 using AME computer modeling reported By examining the bottom plating of the ship and how it bent and folded AME concluded that the destruction could have been caused by a mine 76 Declaring war Edit Main article Propaganda of the Spanish American War Illustrated map published by the Guardia Civil showing the Kingdom of Spain and its remaining colonial possessions in 1895 Caroline and Mariana Islands as well as Spanish Sahara Morocco Guinea and Guam are not included After Maine was destroyed New York City newspaper publishers Hearst and Pulitzer decided that the Spanish were to blame and they publicized this theory as fact in their papers 77 Even prior to the explosion both had published sensationalistic accounts of atrocities committed by the Spanish in Cuba headlines such as Spanish Murderers were commonplace in their newspapers Following the explosion this tone escalated with the headline Remember The Maine To Hell with Spain quickly appearing 78 79 Their press exaggerated what was happening and how the Spanish were treating the Cuban prisoners 80 The stories were based on factual accounts but most of the time the articles that were published were embellished and written with incendiary language causing emotional and often heated responses among readers A common myth falsely states that when illustrator Frederic Remington said there was no war brewing in Cuba Hearst responded You furnish the pictures and I ll furnish the war 81 However this new yellow journalism was uncommon outside New York City and historians no longer consider it the major force shaping the national mood 82 Public opinion nationwide did demand immediate action overwhelming the efforts of President McKinley Speaker of the House Thomas Brackett Reed and the business community to find a negotiated solution Wall Street big business high finance and Main Street businesses across the country were vocally opposed to war and demanded peace 22 After years of severe depression the economic outlook for the domestic economy was suddenly bright again in 1897 However the uncertainties of warfare posed a serious threat to full economic recovery War would impede the march of prosperity and put the country back many years warned the New Jersey Trade Review The leading railroad magazine editorialized From a commercial and mercenary standpoint it seems peculiarly bitter that this war should come when the country had already suffered so much and so needed rest and peace McKinley paid close attention to the strong antiwar consensus of the business community and strengthened his resolve to use diplomacy and negotiation rather than brute force to end the Spanish tyranny in Cuba 83 Historian Nick Kapur argues that McKinley s actions as he moved toward war were rooted not in various pressure groups but in his deeply held Victorian values especially arbitration pacifism humanitarianism and manly self restraint 84 The American transport ship Seneca a chartered vessel that carried troops to Puerto Rico and Cuba A speech delivered by Republican Senator Redfield Proctor of Vermont on March 17 1898 thoroughly analyzed the situation and greatly strengthened the pro war cause Proctor concluded that war was the only answer 85 Many in the business and religious communities which had until then opposed war switched sides leaving McKinley and Speaker Reed almost alone in their resistance to a war 86 87 88 On April 11 McKinley ended his resistance and asked Congress for authority to send American troops to Cuba to end the civil war there knowing that Congress would force a war Spanish Vessels captured up to evening of May 1 1898 On April 19 while Congress was considering joint resolutions supporting Cuban independence Republican Senator Henry M Teller of Colorado proposed the Teller Amendment to ensure that the U S would not establish permanent control over Cuba after the war The amendment disclaiming any intention to annex Cuba passed the Senate 42 to 35 the House concurred the same day 311 to 6 The amended resolution demanded Spanish withdrawal and authorized the President to use as much military force as he thought necessary to help Cuba gain independence from Spain President McKinley signed the joint resolution on April 20 1898 and the ultimatum was sent to Spain 29 In response Spain severed diplomatic relations with the United States on April 21 On the same day the U S Navy began a blockade of Cuba 30 On April 23 Spain reacted to the blockade by declaring war on the U S citation needed CHAP 189 An Act Declaring that war exists between the United States of America and the Kingdom of Spain on April 25 1898 On April 25 the U S Congress responded in kind declaring that a state of war between the U S and Spain had de facto existed since April 21 the day the blockade of Cuba had begun 30 It was the embodiment of the naval plan created by Lieutenant Commander Charles Train four years ago stating once the US enacted a proclamation of war against Spain it would mobilize its N A North Atlantic squadron to form an efficient blockade in Havana Matanzas and Sagua La Grande 59 The Navy was ready but the Army was not well prepared for the war and made radical changes in plans and quickly purchased supplies In the spring of 1898 the strength of the U S Regular Army was just 24 593 soldiers The Army wanted 50 000 new men but received over 220 000 through volunteers and the mobilization of state National Guard units 89 even gaining nearly 100 000 men on the first night after the explosion of USS Maine 90 Historiography Edit The last stand of the Spanish Garrison in Cuba by Murat Halstead 1898 The overwhelming consensus of observers in the 1890s and historians ever since is that an upsurge of humanitarian concern with the plight of the Cubans was the main motivating force that caused the war with Spain in 1898 McKinley put it succinctly in late 1897 that if Spain failed to resolve its crisis the United States would see a duty imposed by our obligations to ourselves to civilization and humanity to intervene with force 91 Intervention in terms of negotiating a settlement proved impossible neither Spain nor the insurgents would agree Louis Perez states Certainly the moralistic determinants of war in 1898 has been accorded preponderant explanatory weight in the historiography 92 By the 1950s however American political scientists began attacking the war as a mistake based on idealism arguing that a better policy would be realism They discredited the idealism by suggesting the people were deliberately misled by propaganda and sensationalist yellow journalism Political scientist Robert Osgood writing in 1953 led the attack on the American decision process as a confused mix of self righteousness and genuine moral fervor in the form of a crusade and a combination of knight errantry and national self assertiveness 93 Osgood argued A war to free Cuba from Spanish despotism corruption and cruelty from the filth and disease and barbarity of General Butcher Weyler s reconcentration camps from the devastation of haciendas the extermination of families and the outraging of women that would be a blow for humanity and democracy No one could doubt it if he believed and skepticism was not popular the exaggerations of the Cuban Junta s propaganda and the lurid distortions and imaginative lies pervade by the yellow sheets of Hearst and Pulitzer at the combined rate of 2 million newspaper copies a day 94 In his War and Empire 31 Prof Paul Atwood of the University of Massachusetts Boston writes The Spanish American War was fomented on outright lies and trumped up accusations against the intended enemy War fever in the general population never reached a critical temperature until the accidental sinking of the USS Maine was deliberately and falsely attributed to Spanish villainy In a cryptic message Senator Lodge wrote that There may be an explosion any day in Cuba which would settle a great many things We have got a battleship in the harbor of Havana and our fleet which overmatches anything the Spanish have is masked at the Dry Tortugas In his autobiography 95 Theodore Roosevelt gave his views of the origins of the war Our own direct interests were great because of the Cuban tobacco and sugar and especially because of Cuba s relation to the projected Isthmian Panama Canal But even greater were our interests from the standpoint of humanity It was our duty even more from the standpoint of National honor than from the standpoint of National interest to stop the devastation and destruction Because of these considerations I favored war Pacific theater EditPhilippines Edit See also Philippine Revolution The Pacific theatre of the Spanish American War In the 333 years of Spanish rule the Philippines developed from a small overseas colony governed from the Mexico based Viceroyalty of New Spain to a land with modern elements in the cities The Spanish speaking middle classes of the 19th century were mostly educated in the liberal ideas coming from Europe Among these Ilustrados was the Filipino national hero Jose Rizal who demanded larger reforms from the Spanish authorities This movement eventually led to the Philippine Revolution against Spanish colonial rule The revolution had been in a state of truce since the signing of the Pact of Biak na Bato in 1897 with revolutionary leaders having accepted exile outside of the country Lt William Warren Kimball Staff Intelligence Officer with the Naval War College 96 prepared a plan for war with Spain including the Philippines on June 1 1896 known as the Kimball Plan 97 On April 23 1898 a document from Governor General Basilio Augustin appeared in the Manila Gazette newspaper warning of the impending war and calling for Filipinos to participate on the side of Spain g Theodore Roosevelt who was at that time Assistant Secretary of the Navy ordered Commodore George Dewey commanding the Asiatic Squadron of the United States Navy Order the squadron to Hong Kong Keep full of coal In the event of declaration of war with Spain your duty will be to see that the Spanish squadron does not leave the Asiatic coast and then offensive operations in Philippine Islands Dewey s squadron departed on April 27 for the Philippines reaching Manila Bay on the evening of April 30 102 Spanish Marines trenched during the Battle of Manila Bay The first battle between American and Spanish forces was at Manila Bay where on May 1 Commodore George Dewey commanding the U S Navy s Asiatic Squadron aboard USS Olympia in a matter of hours defeated a Spanish squadron under Admiral Patricio Montojo h Dewey managed this with only nine wounded 104 105 With the German seizure of Tsingtao in 1897 Dewey s squadron had become the only naval force in the Far East without a local base of its own and was beset with coal and ammunition problems 106 Despite these problems the Asiatic Squadron destroyed the Spanish fleet and captured Manila s harbor 106 The Battle of Manila Bay Following Dewey s victory Manila Bay became filled with the warships of other naval powers 106 The German squadron of eight ships ostensibly in Philippine waters to protect German interests acted provocatively cutting in front of American ships refusing to salute the American flag according to customs of naval courtesy taking soundings of the harbor and landing supplies for the besieged Spanish 108 With interests of their own Germany was eager to take advantage of whatever opportunities the conflict in the islands might afford 109 There was a fear at the time that the islands would become a German possession 110 The Americans called Germany s bluff and threatened conflict if the aggression continued The Germans backed down 109 111 At the time the Germans expected the confrontation in the Philippines to end in an American defeat with the revolutionaries capturing Manila and leaving the Philippines ripe for German picking 112 Spanish artillery regiment during the Philippine Campaign Commodore Dewey transported Emilio Aguinaldo a Filipino leader who led rebellion against Spanish rule in the Philippines in 1896 from exile in Hong Kong to the Philippines to rally more Filipinos against the Spanish colonial government 113 By June 9 Aguinaldo s forces controlled the provinces of Bulacan Cavite Laguna Batangas Bataan Zambales Pampanga Pangasinan and Mindoro and had laid siege to Manila 114 On June 12 Aguinaldo proclaimed the independence of the Philippines 115 116 Group of Tagalog Filipino revolutionaries during the Spanish American War of 1898 On August 5 upon instruction from Spain Governor General Basilio Augustin turned over the command of the Philippines to his deputy Fermin Jaudenes 117 On August 13 with American commanders unaware that a peace protocol had been signed between Spain and the U S on the previous day in Washington D C American forces captured the city of Manila from the Spanish in the Battle of Manila i 113 119 This battle marked the end of Filipino American collaboration as the American action of preventing Filipino forces from entering the captured city of Manila was deeply resented by the Filipinos This later led to the Philippine American War 120 which would prove to be more deadly and costly than the Spanish American War Spanish infantry troops and officers in Manila The U S had sent a force of some 11 000 ground troops to the Philippines On August 14 1898 Spanish Captain General Jaudenes formally capitulated and U S General Merritt formally accepted the surrender and declared the establishment of a U S military government in occupation The capitulation document declared The surrender of the Philippine Archipelago and set forth a mechanism for its physical accomplishment 121 122 That same day the Schurman Commission recommended that the U S retain control of the Philippines possibly granting independence in the future 123 On December 10 1898 the Spanish government ceded the Philippines to the United States in the Treaty of Paris Armed conflict broke out between U S forces and the Filipinos when U S troops began to take the place of the Spanish in control of the country after the end of the war quickly escalating into the Philippine American War Guam Edit Main article Capture of Guam On June 20 1898 the protected cruiser USS Charleston commanded by Captain Henry Glass and three transports carrying troops to the Philippines entered Guam s Apia Harbor Captain Glass had opened sealed orders instructing him to proceed to Guam and capture it while enroute to the Philippines Charleston fired a few rounds at the abandoned Fort Santa Cruz without receiving return fire Two local officials not knowing that war had been declared and believing the firing had been a salute came out to Charleston to apologize for their inability to return the salute as they were out of gunpowder Glass informed them that the U S and Spain were at war 124 No Spanish warships had visited the island in a year and a half citation needed The following day Glass sent Lieutenant William Braunersreuther to meet the Spanish Governor to arrange the surrender of the island and the Spanish garrison there Two officers 54 Spanish infantrymen as well as the governor general and his staff were taken prisoner citation needed and transported to the Philippines as prisoners of war No U S forces were left on Guam but the only U S citizen on the island Frank Portusach told Captain Glass that he would look after things until U S forces returned 124 Caribbean theater EditCuba Edit See also San Juan Hill order of battle and El Caney order of battle The Spanish armored cruiser Cristobal Colon which was destroyed during the Battle of Santiago on July 3 1898 Detail from Charge of the 24th and 25th Colored Infantry and Rescue of Rough Riders at San Juan Hill July 2 1898 depicting the Battle of San Juan Hill Theodore Roosevelt advocated intervention in Cuba both for the Cuban people and to promote the Monroe Doctrine While Assistant Secretary of the Navy he placed the Navy on a war time footing and prepared Dewey s Asiatic Squadron for battle He also worked with Leonard Wood in convincing the Army to raise an all volunteer regiment the 1st U S Volunteer Cavalry Wood was given command of the regiment that quickly became known as the Rough Riders 125 The Americans planned to destroy Spain s army forces in Cuba capture the port city of Santiago de Cuba and destroy the Spanish Caribbean Squadron also known as the Flota de Ultramar To reach Santiago they had to pass through concentrated Spanish defenses in the San Juan Hills and a small town in El Caney The American forces were aided in Cuba by the pro independence rebels led by General Calixto Garcia Cuban sentiment Edit For quite some time the Cuban public believed the United States government to possibly hold the key to its independence and even annexation was considered for a time which historian Louis Perez explored in his book Cuba and the United States Ties of Singular Intimacy The Cubans harbored a great deal of discontent towards the Spanish government a result of years of manipulation on the part of the Spanish The prospect of getting the United States involved in the fight was considered by many Cubans as a step in the right direction While the Cubans were wary of the United States intentions the overwhelming support from the American public provided the Cubans with some peace of mind because they believed that the United States was committed to helping them achieve their independence However with the imposition of the Platt Amendment of 1903 after the war as well as economic and military manipulation on the part of the United States Cuban sentiment towards the United States became polarized with many Cubans disappointed with continuing American interference 126 Action at CienfuegosThe first combat between American and Spanish forces in the Caribbean occurred on May 11 1898 in the harbor near the city of Cienfuegos 127 The city was the southern terminus for undersea communication cables that connected Cuba to Spain and other Spanish holdings in the Caribbean American Naval officers needed to destroy these cables to cut communications into and out of Cuba in preparation for later operations against the major city of Santiago 128 The USS Marblehead and the USS Nashville were dispatched to cut these cables early on the morning of May 11 To cut the cables two steam cutters with a crew of eight sailors and six Marines each and two sailing launches with a crew of fourteen sailors each maneuvered into harbor and within 200 feet from shore 128 While the boats moved towards shore the Marblehead and Nashville shelled Spanish trenches dug to protect the cables from sabotage attempts They succeeded in destroying support buildings for the cables and drove the Spanish force back away from the beach The boats crews pulled one cable up and began trying to cut through its metal jacket while Spanish soldiers started firing from cover Marine sharpshooters returned fire from the boats and the Marblehead and Nashville began firing shrapnel shells in an attempt to force the Spanish completely out of the area 128 The sailors finished cutting one cable and pulled up a second one to begin severing it too Spanish fire began to take a toll on the Marines and sailors with multiple casualties in the small boats but the Americans were still able to cut a second wire They began working on the final wire and succeeded in partially cutting it until the still heavy Spanish fire and mounting casualties forced the Navy officer in command Lieutenant E A Anderson to order the boats to return to the cover of the larger vessels 128 In the almost three hours of combat two men were killed two mortally wounded and four more seriously wounded and they succeeded in severing two of the three cables running out of Cienfuegos 129 This relatively brief fight significantly disrupted communications between Cuba Santiago and Spain and contributed to the overall American goal of isolating Cuba from outside support It also provided a major boost to American morale because it was the first combat American servicemen had seen close to home For their brave actions all the Marines and sailors in the four small boats received the Medal of Honor 129 Land campaign Edit Mauser Model 1893 rifle used by the Spanish infantry and superior to American rifles the Springfield Model 1892 99 and the Krag Jorgensen rifle Because of this superiority the US Army developed the M1903 Springfield The first American landings in Cuba occurred on June 10 with the landing of the First Marine Battalion at Fisherman s Point in Guantanamo Bay citation needed This was followed on June 22 to 24 when the Fifth Army Corps under General William R Shafter landed at Daiquiri and Siboney east of Santiago and established an American base of operations A contingent of Spanish troops having fought a skirmish with the Americans near Siboney on June 23 had retired to their lightly entrenched positions at Las Guasimas An advance guard of U S forces under former Confederate General Joseph Wheeler ignored Cuban scouting parties and orders to proceed with caution They caught up with and engaged the Spanish rearguard of about 2 000 soldiers led by General Antero Rubin 130 who effectively ambushed them in the Battle of Las Guasimas on June 24 The battle ended indecisively in favor of Spain and the Spanish left Las Guasimas on their planned retreat to Santiago Charge of the Rough Riders The U S Army employed Civil War era skirmishers at the head of the advancing columns Three of four of the U S soldiers who had volunteered to act as skirmishers walking point at the head of the American column were killed including Hamilton Fish II grandson of Hamilton Fish the Secretary of State under Ulysses S Grant and Captain Allyn K Capron Jr whom Theodore Roosevelt would describe as one of the finest natural leaders and soldiers he ever met Only Oklahoma Territory Pawnee Indian Tom Isbell wounded seven times survived 131 Regular Spanish troops were mostly armed with modern charger loaded 7mm 1893 Spanish Mauser rifles and using smokeless powder The high speed 7 57mm Mauser round was termed the Spanish Hornet by the Americans because of the supersonic crack as it passed overhead Other irregular troops were armed with Remington Rolling Block rifles in 43 Spanish using smokeless powder and brass jacketed bullets U S regular infantry were armed with the 30 40 Krag Jorgensen a bolt action rifle with a complex magazine Both the U S regular cavalry and the volunteer cavalry used smokeless ammunition In later battles state volunteers used the 45 70 Springfield a single shot black powder rifle 131 Receiving the news of the surrender of Santiago On July 1 a combined force of about 15 000 American troops in regular infantry and cavalry regiments including all four of the army s Colored Buffalo Soldier regiments and volunteer regiments among them Roosevelt and his Rough Riders the 71st New York the 2nd Massachusetts Infantry and 1st North Carolina and rebel Cuban forces attacked 1 270 entrenched Spaniards in dangerous Civil War style frontal assaults at the Battle of El Caney and Battle of San Juan Hill outside of Santiago 132 More than 200 U S soldiers were killed and close to 1 200 wounded in the fighting thanks to the high rate of fire the Spanish put down range at the Americans 133 Supporting fire by Gatling guns was critical to the success of the assault 134 135 Cervera decided to escape Santiago two days later First Lieutenant John J Pershing nicknamed Black Jack oversaw the 10th Cavalry Unit during the war Pershing and his unit fought in the Battle of San Juan Hill Pershing was cited for his gallantry during the battle The Spanish forces at Guantanamo were so isolated by Marines and Cuban forces that they did not know that Santiago was under siege and their forces in the northern part of the province could not break through Cuban lines This was not true of the Escario relief column from Manzanillo citation needed which fought its way past determined Cuban resistance but arrived too late to participate in the siege After the battles of San Juan Hill and El Caney the American advance halted Spanish troops successfully defended Fort Canosa allowing them to stabilize their line and bar the entry to Santiago The Americans and Cubans forcibly began a bloody strangling siege of the city 136 During the nights Cuban troops dug successive series of trenches raised parapets toward the Spanish positions Once completed these parapets were occupied by U S soldiers and a new set of excavations went forward American troops while suffering daily losses from Spanish fire suffered far more casualties from heat exhaustion and mosquito borne disease 137 At the western approaches to the city Cuban general Calixto Garcia began to encroach on the city causing much panic and fear of reprisals among the Spanish forces Battle of Tayacoba Edit Main article Battle of Tayacoba Lieutenant Carter P Johnson of the Buffalo Soldiers 10th Cavalry with experience in special operations roles as head of the 10th Cavalry s attached Apache scouts in the Apache Wars chose 50 soldiers from the regiment to lead a deployment mission with at least 375 Cuban soldiers under Cuban Brigadier General Emilio Nunez and other supplies to the mouth of the San Juan River east of Cienfuegos On June 29 1898 a reconnaissance team in landing boats from the transports Florida and Fanita attempted to land on the beach but were repelled by Spanish fire A second attempt was made on June 30 1898 but a team of reconnaissance soldiers was trapped on the beach near the mouth of the Tallabacoa River A team of four soldiers saved this group and were awarded Medals of Honor The USS Peoria and the recently arrived USS Helena then shelled the beach to distract the Spanish while the Cuban deployment landed 40 miles east at Palo Alto where they linked up with Cuban General Gomez 138 139 Naval operations Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Santiago Campaign 1898 Crewmen pose under the gun turrets of Iowa in 1898 The major port of Santiago de Cuba was the main target of naval operations during the war The U S fleet attacking Santiago needed shelter from the summer hurricane season Guantanamo Bay with its excellent harbor was chosen The 1898 invasion of Guantanamo Bay happened between June 6 and 10 with the first U S naval attack and subsequent successful landing of U S Marines with naval support 140 141 On April 23 a council of senior admirals of the Spanish Navy had decided to order Admiral Pascual Cervera y Topete s squadron of four armored cruisers and three torpedo boat destroyers to proceed from their present location in Cape Verde having left from Cadiz Spain to the West Indies 142 In May the fleet of Spanish Admiral Pascual Cervera y Topete had been spotted in Santiago harbor by American forces where they had taken shelter for protection from sea attack A two month stand off between Spanish and American naval forces followed U S Assistant Naval Constructor Lieutenant Richmond Pearson Hobson had been ordered by Rear Admiral William T Sampson to sink the collier USS Merrimac in the harbor to bottle up the Spanish fleet The mission was a failure and Hobson and his crew were captured They were exchanged on July 6 and Hobson became a national hero he received the Medal of Honor was advanced in grade and retired as a Naval Captain j 143 He was elected in 1907 from Alabama to the U S House of Representatives In 1934 his naval retirement rank was advanced to rear admiral The Battle of Santiago de Cuba on July 3 was the largest naval engagement of the Spanish American War When the Spanish squadron finally attempted to leave the harbor on July 3 the American forces destroyed or grounded five of the six ships Only one Spanish vessel the new armored cruiser Cristobal Colon survived but her captain hauled down her flag and scuttled her when the Americans finally caught up with her The 1 612 Spanish sailors who were captured and sent to Seavey s Island at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in Kittery Maine where they were confined at Camp Long as prisoners of war from July 11 until mid September The Americans treated Spain s officers soldiers and sailors with great respect Ultimately Spanish prisoners were returned to Spain with their honors of war on American ships Admiral Cervera received different treatment from the sailors taken to Portsmouth For a time he was held at Annapolis Maryland where he was received with great enthusiasm by the people of that city 144 US withdrawal Edit Yellow fever had quickly spread among the American occupation force crippling it A group of concerned officers of the American army chose Theodore Roosevelt to draft a request to Washington that it withdraw the Army a request that paralleled a similar one from General Shafter who described his force as an army of convalescents By the time of his letter 75 of the force in Cuba was unfit for service 145 On August 7 the American invasion force started to leave Cuba The evacuation was not total The U S Army kept the black Ninth U S Cavalry Regiment in Cuba to support the occupation The logic was that their race and the fact that many black volunteers came from southern states would protect them from disease this logic led to these soldiers being nicknamed Immunes Still when the Ninth left 73 of its 984 soldiers had contracted the disease 145 Puerto Rico Edit Main article Puerto Rico Campaign Spanish troops before they departed to engage the American forces at Hormigueros Puerto Rico A monument in Guanica Puerto Rico for the U S infantrymen who lost their lives in the Spanish American War in 1898 On May 24 1898 in a letter to Theodore Roosevelt Henry Cabot Lodge wrote Porto Rico is not forgotten and we mean to have it 146 In the same month Lt Henry H Whitney of the United States Fourth Artillery was sent to Puerto Rico on a reconnaissance mission sponsored by the Army s Bureau of Military Intelligence He provided maps and information on the Spanish military forces to the U S government before the invasion The American offensive began on May 12 1898 when a squadron of 12 U S ships commanded by Rear Adm William T Sampson of the United States Navy attacked the archipelago s capital San Juan Though the damage inflicted on the city was minimal the Americans established a blockade in the city s harbor San Juan Bay On June 22 the cruiser Isabel II and the destroyer Terror delivered a Spanish counterattack but were unable to break the blockade and Terror was damaged The land offensive began on July 25 when 1 300 infantry soldiers led by Nelson A Miles disembarked off the coast of Guanica The first organized armed opposition occurred in Yauco in what became known as the Battle of Yauco citation needed This encounter was followed by the Battle of Fajardo The United States seized control of Fajardo on August 1 but were forced to withdraw on August 5 after a group of 200 Puerto Rican Spanish soldiers led by Pedro del Pino gained control of the city while most civilian inhabitants fled to a nearby lighthouse The Americans encountered larger opposition during the Battle of Guayama and as they advanced towards the main island s interior They engaged in crossfire at Guamani River Bridge Coamo and Silva Heights and finally at the Battle of Asomante 147 The battles were inconclusive as the allied soldiers retreated A battle in San German concluded in a similar fashion with the Spanish retreating to Lares On August 9 1898 American troops that were pursuing units retreating from Coamo encountered heavy resistance in Aibonito in a mountain known as Cerro Gervasio del Asomante and retreated after six of their soldiers were injured They returned three days later reinforced with artillery units and attempted a surprise attack In the subsequent crossfire confused soldiers reported seeing Spanish reinforcements nearby and five American officers were gravely injured which prompted a retreat order All military actions in Puerto Rico were suspended on August 13 after U S President William McKinley and French Ambassador Jules Cambon acting on behalf of the Spanish Government signed an armistice whereby Spain relinquished its sovereignty over Puerto Rico 147 Camara s squadron Edit Oil on canvas painted and signed with initials A A by Antonio Anton and Antonio Iboleon around 1897 It is an ideal view of the Spanish Squadron of Instruction in 1896 before the war of 1898 since the ships represented never sailed together On the left the Battleship Pelayo with insignia followed by the cruisers Cristobal Colon Infanta Maria Teresa and Alfonso XIII on the right the cruiser Carlos V with insignia Almirante Oquendo and Vizcaya On the starboard side of the Pelayo sails the torpedo boat Destructor Two Furor class destroyer boats sail along the bows of the Carlos V Stormy sea and partly cloudy skies Shortly after the war began in April the Spanish Navy ordered major units of its fleet to concentrate at Cadiz to form the 2nd Squadron under the command of Rear Admiral Manuel de la Camara y Livermoore citation needed Two of Spain s most powerful warships the battleship Pelayo and the brand new armored cruiser Emperador Carlos V were not available when the war began the former undergoing reconstruction in a French shipyard and the latter not yet delivered from her builders but both were rushed into service and assigned to Camara s squadron 148 The squadron was ordered to guard the Spanish coast against raids by the U S Navy No such raids materialized and while Camara s squadron lay idle at Cadiz U S Navy forces destroyed Montojo s squadron at Manila Bay on 1 May and bottled up Cervera s squadron at Santiago de Cuba on 27 May During May the Spanish Ministry of Marine considered options for employing Camara s squadron Spanish Minister of Marine Ramon Aunon y Villalon made plans for Camara to take a portion of his squadron across the Atlantic Ocean and bombard a city on the East Coast of the United States preferably Charleston South Carolina and then head for the Caribbean to make port at San Juan Havana or Santiago de Cuba 149 but in the end this idea was dropped Meanwhile U S intelligence reported rumors as early as 15 May that Spain also was considering sending Camara s squadron to the Philippines to destroy Dewey s squadron and reinforce the Spanish forces there with fresh troops 150 Pelayo and Emperador Carlos V each were more powerful than any of Dewey s ships and the possibility of their arrival in the Philippines was of great concern to the United States which hastily arranged to dispatch 10 000 additional U S Army troops to the Philippines and send two U S Navy monitors to reinforce Dewey 150 Camara s squadron in the Suez Canal in July 1898 His flagship the battleship Pelayo can be seen in the foreground The last ship in the line is the armored cruiser Emperador Carlos V The squadron never saw combat On 15 June Camara finally received orders to depart immediately for the Philippines His squadron made up of Pelayo his flagship Emperador Carlos V two auxiliary cruisers three destroyers and four colliers was to depart Cadiz escorting four transports After detaching two of the transports to steam independently to the Caribbean his squadron was to proceed to the Philippines escorting the other two transports which carried 4 000 Spanish Army troops to reinforce Spanish forces there He then was to destroy Dewey s squadron 151 149 152 Accordingly he sortied from Cadiz on 16 June 153 and after detaching two of the transports for their voyages to the Caribbean passed Gibraltar on 17 June 151 and arrived at Port Said at the northern end of the Suez Canal on 26 June 154 There he found that U S operatives had purchased all the coal available at the other end of the canal in Suez to prevent his ships from coaling with it 155 He also received word on 29 June from the British government which controlled Egypt at the time that his squadron was not permitted to coal in Egyptian waters because to do so would violate Egyptian and British neutrality 154 149 Ordered to continue 156 Camara s squadron passed through the Suez Canal on 5 6 July By that time word had reached Spain of the annihilation of Cervera s squadron off Santiago de Cuba on 3 July freeing up the U S Navy s heavy forces from the blockade there and the United States Department of the Navy had announced that a U S Navy armored squadron with cruisers would assemble and proceed at once to the Spanish coast 156 Fearing for the safety of the Spanish coast the Spanish Ministry of Marine recalled Camara s squadron which by then had reached the Red Sea on 7 July 1898 157 Camara s squadron returned to Spain arriving at Cartagena on 23 July No U S Navy forces subsequently threatened the coast of Spain and Camara and Spain s two most powerful warships thus never saw combat during the war 149 Making peace Edit Jules Cambon the French ambassador to the United States signing the memorandum of ratification on behalf of Spain With defeats in Cuba and the Philippines and its fleets in both places destroyed Spain sued for peace and negotiations were opened between the two parties After the sickness and death of British consul Edward Henry Rawson Walker American admiral George Dewey requested the Belgian consul to Manila Edouard Andre to take Rawson Walker s place as intermediary with the Spanish government 158 159 160 Hostilities were halted on August 12 1898 with the signing in Washington of a Protocol of Peace between the United States and Spain 161 After over two months of difficult negotiations the formal peace treaty the Treaty of Paris was signed in Paris on December 10 1898 162 and was ratified by the United States Senate on February 6 1899 The United States gained Spain s colonies of the Philippines Guam and Puerto Rico in the treaty and Cuba became a U S protectorate 162 The treaty came into force in Cuba April 11 1899 with Cubans participating only as observers Having been occupied since July 17 1898 and thus under the jurisdiction of the United States Military Government USMG Cuba formed its own civil government and gained independence on May 20 1902 with the announced end of USMG jurisdiction over the island However the U S imposed various restrictions on the new government including prohibiting alliances with other countries and reserved the right to intervene The U S also established a de facto perpetual lease of Guantanamo Bay 163 164 165 Aftermath EditThe war lasted 16 weeks 166 John Hay the United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom writing from London to his friend Theodore Roosevelt declared that it had been a splendid little war 167 168 The press showed Northerners and Southerners blacks and whites fighting against a common foe helping to ease the scars left from the American Civil War 169 Exemplary of this was the fact that four former Confederate States Army generals had served in the war now in the U S Army and all of them again carrying similar ranks These officers were Matthew Butler Fitzhugh Lee Thomas L Rosser and Joseph Wheeler though only the latter had seen action Still in an exciting moment during the Battle of Las Guasimas Wheeler apparently forgot for a moment which war he was fighting having supposedly called out Let s go boys We ve got the damn Yankees on the run again 170 The war marked American entry into world affairs Since then the U S has had a significant hand in various conflicts around the world and entered many treaties and agreements The Panic of 1893 was over by this point and the U S entered a long and prosperous period of economic and population growth and technological innovation that lasted through the 1920s 171 The war redefined national identity served as a solution of sorts to the social divisions plaguing the American mind and provided a model for all future news reporting 172 The idea of American imperialism changed in the public s mind after the short and successful Spanish American War Because of the United States powerful influence diplomatically and militarily Cuba s status after the war relied heavily upon American actions Two major developments emerged from the Spanish American War one it firmly established the United States vision of itself as a defender of democracy and as a major world power and two it had severe implications for Cuban American relations in the future As historian Louis Perez argued in his book Cuba in the American Imagination Metaphor and the Imperial Ethos the Spanish American War of 1898 fixed permanently how Americans came to think of themselves a righteous people given to the service of righteous purpose 173 Aftermath in Spain Edit Described as absurd and useless by much of historiography the war against the United States was sustained by an internal logic in the idea that it was not possible to maintain the monarchical regime if it was not from a more than predictable military defeat Suarez Cortina La Espana Liberal 28 A similar point of view that is shared by Carlos Darde Once the war was raised the Spanish government believed that it had no other solution than to fight and lose They thought that defeat certain was preferable to revolution also certain Granting independence to Cuba without being defeated militarily it would have implied in Spain more than likely a military coup d etat with broad popular support and the fall of the monarchy that is the revolution La Restauracion 1875 1902 Alfonso XII y la regencia de Maria Cristina 27 As the head of the Spanish delegation to the Paris peace negotiations the liberal Eugenio Montero Rios said Everything has been lost except the Monarchy Or as the U S ambassador in Madrid said the politicians of the dynastic parties preferred the odds of a war with the certainty of losing Cuba to the dethronement of the monarchy 174 There were Spanish officers in Cuba who expressed the conviction that the government of Madrid had the deliberate intention that the squadron be destroyed as soon as possible in order to quickly reach peace 175 Although there was nothing exceptional about the defeat in the context of the time Fachoda incident 1890 British Ultimatum First Italo Ethiopian War Greco Turkish War 1897 Century of humiliation Russo Japanese War among other examples in Spain the result of the war caused a national trauma due to the affinity of peninsular Spaniards with Cuba but only in the intellectual class which will give rise to Regenerationism and the Generation of 98 because the majority of the population was illiterate and lived under the regime of caciquismo The war greatly reduced the Spanish Empire Spain had been declining as an imperial power since the early 19th century as a result of Napoleon s invasion Spain retained only a handful of overseas holdings Spanish West Africa Spanish Sahara Spanish Guinea Spanish Morocco and the Canary Islands With the loss of the Philippines Spain s remaining Pacific possessions in the Caroline Islands and Mariana Islands became untenable and were sold to Germany 176 in the German Spanish Treaty 1899 The Spanish soldier Julio Cervera Baviera who served in the Puerto Rican Campaign published a pamphlet in which he blamed the natives of that colony for its occupation by the Americans saying I have never seen such a servile ungrateful country i e Puerto Rico In twenty four hours the people of Puerto Rico went from being fervently Spanish to enthusiastically American They humiliated themselves giving in to the invader as the slave bows to the powerful lord 177 He was challenged to a duel by a group of young Puerto Ricans for writing this pamphlet 178 Culturally a new wave called the Generation of 98 originated as a response to this trauma marking a renaissance in Spanish culture Economically the war benefited Spain because after the war large sums of capital held by Spaniards in Cuba and the United States were returned to the peninsula and invested in Spain This massive flow of capital equivalent to 25 of the gross domestic product of one year helped to develop the large modern firms in Spain in the steel chemical financial mechanical textile shipyard and electrical power industries 179 However the political consequences were serious The defeat in the war began the weakening of the fragile political stability that had been established earlier by the rule of Alfonso XII Spain would begin to rehabilitate internationally after the Algeciras Conference of 1906 180 In 1907 it signed a kind of defensive alliance with France and the United Kingdom known as the Pact of Cartagena in case of war against the Triple Alliance 181 Spain improved economically because of its neutrality in the First World War 182 Teller and Platt Amendments Edit The Teller Amendment was passed in the Senate on April 19 1898 with a vote of 42 for versus 35 against On April 20 it was passed by the House of Representatives with a vote of 311 for versus 6 against and signed into law by President William McKinley 183 Effectively it was a promise from the United States to the Cuban people that it was not declaring war to annex Cuba but would help in gaining its independence from Spain The Platt Amendment pushed by imperialists who wanted to project U S power abroad in contrast to the Teller Amendment which was pushed by anti imperialists who called for a restraint on U S rule was a move by the United States government to shape Cuban affairs without violating the Teller Amendment 184 The Platt Amendment granted the United States the right to stabilize Cuba militarily as needed 185 In addition it permitted the United States to deploy Marines to Cuba if Cuban freedom and independence were ever threatened or jeopardized by an external or internal force 185 Passed as a rider to an Army appropriations bill which was signed into law on March 2 it effectively prohibited Cuba from signing treaties with other nations or contracting a public debt It also provided for a permanent American naval base in Cuba 185 Guantanamo Bay was established after the signing of the Cuban American Treaty of Relations in 1903 Thus despite that Cuba technically gained its independence after the war ended the United States government ensured that it had some form of power and control over Cuban affairs Aftermath in the United States Edit The U S annexed the former Spanish colonies of Puerto Rico the Philippines and Guam 185 The notion of the United States as an imperial power with colonies was hotly debated domestically with President McKinley and the Pro Imperialists winning their way over vocal opposition led by Democrat William Jennings Bryan 185 who had supported the war The American public largely supported the possession of colonies but there were many outspoken critics such as Mark Twain who wrote The War Prayer in protest Roosevelt returned to the United States a war hero 185 and he was soon elected governor of New York and then became the vice president At the age of 42 he became the youngest person to become president after the assassination of President McKinley The war served to further repair relations between the American North and South The war gave both sides a common enemy for the first time since the end of the Civil War in 1865 and many friendships were formed between soldiers of northern and southern states during their tours of duty This was an important development since many soldiers in this war were the children of Civil War veterans on both sides 186 The African American community strongly supported the rebels in Cuba supported entry into the war and gained prestige from their wartime performance in the Army Spokesmen noted that 33 African American seamen had died in the Maine explosion The most influential Black leader Booker T Washington argued that his race was ready to fight War offered them a chance to render service to our country that no other race can because unlike Whites they were accustomed to the peculiar and dangerous climate of Cuba One of the Black units that served in the war was the 9th Cavalry Regiment In March 1898 Washington promised the Secretary of the Navy that war would be answered by at least ten thousand loyal brave strong black men in the south who crave an opportunity to show their loyalty to our land and would gladly take this method of showing their gratitude for the lives laid down and the sacrifices made that Blacks might have their freedom and rights 187 Veterans Associations Edit In 1904 the United Spanish War Veterans was created from smaller groups of the veterans of the Spanish American War Today that organization is defunct but it left an heir in the Sons of Spanish American War Veterans created in 1937 at the 39th National Encampment of the United Spanish War Veterans According to data from the United States Department of Veterans Affairs the last surviving U S veteran of the conflict Nathan E Cook died on September 10 1992 at age 106 If the data is to be believed Cook born October 10 1885 would have been only 12 years old when he served in the war The Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States VFW was formed in 1914 from the merger of two veterans organizations which both arose in 1899 the American Veterans of Foreign Service and the National Society of the Army of the Philippines 188 The former was formed for veterans of the Spanish American War while the latter was formed for veterans of the Philippine American War Both organizations were formed in response to the general neglect veterans returning from the war experienced at the hands of the government To pay the costs of the war Congress passed an excise tax on long distance phone service 189 At the time it affected only wealthy Americans who owned telephones However the Congress neglected to repeal the tax after the war ended four months later The tax remained in place for over 100 years until on August 1 2006 it was announced that the U S Department of the Treasury and the IRS would no longer collect it 190 Impact on the Marine Corps Edit The US Marine Corps during the 18th and 19th Centuries was primarily a ship borne force Marines were assigned to naval vessels to protect the ship s crew during close quarters combat man secondary batteries and provide landing parties when the ship s captain needed them 191 During the Mexican American War and the Civil War the Marine Corps participated in some amphibious landings and had limited coordination with the Army and Navy in their operations 192 During the Spanish American War though the Marines conducted several successful combined operations with both the Army and the Navy Marine forces helped in the Army led assault on Santiago and Marines also supported the Navy s operations by securing the entrance to Guantanamo Bay so American vessels could clear the harbor of mines and use it as a refueling station without fear of Spanish harassment 193 Doctrinally the Army and the Navy did not agree on much of anything and Navy officers were often frustrated by the lack of Army support 194 Having the Marine Corps alleviated some of this conflict because it gave Navy commanders a force always under the direction of the senior naval officer without any conflict of authority with the Army 194 The combined Marine Corps Navy operations during the war also signaled the future relationship between the two services 191 During the Banana Wars of the early 20th Century the island hopping campaigns in the Pacific during World War II and into modern conflicts America is involved in the Marine Corps and Navy operate as a team to secure American interests Thanks to the new territorial acquisitions of Guam the Philippines Puerto Rico and Cuba America needed the capabilities the Marines could provide 191 The Spanish American War was also the first time that the Marine Corps acted as America s force in readiness because they were the first American force to land on Cuba Being a body of troops which can be quickly mobilized and sent on board transports fully equipped for service ashore and afloat became the Marine Corps mission throughout the rest of the 20th Century and into the 21st Century 194 The Spanish American War also served as a coming of age for several influential Marines Lieutenants Smedley D Butler John A Lejeune and Wendell C Neville and Captain George F Elliott all served with distinction with the First Battalion that fought in Cuba 127 Lieutenant Butler would go on to earn two Medals of Honor in Veracruz and Haiti Lieutenants Lejeune and Neville and Captain Elliott would all become Commandants of the Marine Corps the highest rank in the service and the leader of the entire Corps Marines actions during the Spanish American War also provided significant positive press for the Corps 191 The men of the First Battalion were welcomed as heroes when they returned to the States and many stories were published by journalists attached to the unit about their bravery during the Battle of Guantanamo The Marine Corps began to be regarded as America s premier fighting force thanks in large part to the actions of Marines during the Spanish American War and to the reporters who covered their exploits 191 The success of the Marines also led to increased funding for the Corps from Congress during a time that many high placed Navy officials were questioning the efficacy and necessity of the Marine Corps 194 This battle for Congressional funding and support would continue until the National Security Act of 1947 but Marine actions at Guantanamo and in the Philippines provided a major boost to the Corps status 191 Postwar American investment in Puerto Rico Edit The change in sovereignty of Puerto Rico like the occupation of Cuba brought about major changes in both the insular and U S economies Before 1898 the sugar industry in Puerto Rico was in decline for nearly half a century citation needed In the second half of the nineteenth century technological advances increased the capital requirements to remain competitive in the sugar industry Agriculture began to shift toward coffee production which required less capital and land accumulation However these trends were reversed with U S hegemony Early U S monetary and legal policies made it both harder for local farmers to continue operations and easier for American businesses to accumulate land 195 This along with the large capital reserves of American businesses led to a resurgence in the Puerto Rican nuts and sugar industry in the form of large American owned agro industrial complexes At the same time the inclusion of Puerto Rico into the U S tariff system as a customs area effectively treating Puerto Rico as a state with respect to internal or external trade increased the codependence of the insular and mainland economies and benefitted sugar exports with tariff protection In 1897 the United States purchased 19 6 percent of Puerto Rico s exports while supplying 18 5 percent of its imports By 1905 these figures jumped to 84 percent and 85 percent respectively 196 However coffee was not protected as it was not a product of the mainland At the same time Cuba and Spain traditionally the largest importers of Puerto Rican coffee now subjected Puerto Rico to previously nonexistent import tariffs These two effects led to a decline in the coffee industry From 1897 to 1901 coffee went from 65 8 percent of exports to 19 6 percent while sugar went from 21 6 percent to 55 percent 197 The tariff system also provided a protected market place for Puerto Rican tobacco exports The tobacco industry went from nearly nonexistent in Puerto Rico to a major part of the country s agricultural sector citation needed In film and television Edit USS Olympia the only ship currently preserved from that conflict The Spanish American War was the first U S war in which the motion picture camera played a role 198 The Library of Congress archives contain many films and film clips from the war 199 As good footage of fighting was difficult to capture filmed reenactments using model ships and cigar smoke were shown on vaudeville screens 200 201 In addition a few feature films have been made about the war These include The Rough Riders a 1927 silent film A Message to Garcia 1936 Pursued a 1947 Western film Its main character Jeb Rand Robert Mitchum is wounded in the war and receives the Medal of Honor Rough Riders a 1997 television miniseries directed by John Milius and featuring Tom Berenger Theodore Roosevelt Gary Busey Joseph Wheeler Sam Elliott Buckey O Neill Dale Dye Leonard Wood Brian Keith William McKinley George Hamilton William Randolph Hearst and R Lee Ermey John Hay Crucible of Empire The Spanish American War a 1999 television documentary from PBS The Spanish American War First Intervention a 2007 docudrama from The History Channel Baler a 2008 film about the Siege of Baler Los ultimos de Filipinas The Last Ones of the Philippines a 1945 Spanish biographical film directed by Antonio Roman Amigo 2010 1898 Our Last Men in the Philippines a well acclaimed 2016 film about the Siege of BalerMilitary decorations Edit US Army War with Spain campaign streamer United States Edit The United States awards and decorations of the Spanish American War were as follows Wartime service and honors Edit Medal of Honor Specially Meritorious Service Medal Spanish Campaign Medal upgradeable to include the Silver Citation Star to recognize those U S Army members who had performed individual acts of heroism West Indies Campaign Medal Sampson Medal West Indies service under Admiral William T Sampson Dewey Medal service during the Battle of Manila Bay under Admiral George Dewey Spanish War Service Medal U S Army homeland servicePostwar occupation service Edit Army of Puerto Rican Occupation Medal Army of Cuban Occupation Medal Cross of Military Merit for Combat in Cuba Spain Edit Army Cross of Military Merit Cruces del Merito Militar Spain issued two Crosses of Military Merit including one for fighters with a red badge and a red ribbon with a white stripe and one for non fighters with a white badge and a white ribbon with a red stripe An example of the Silver Cross of Military Merit with the red emblem for fighters was issued on July 18 of 1898 for good behavior on the 11th of May in defense of the fortress of El Faro and the Pueblo de Jagua on May 11 in the Battle of Cienfuegos 202 Army Operations Medal Medalla Para Ejercito de Operaciones Cuba 203 Medal for Volunteers Medalla Para Los Volunatrios Cuban Campaign 1895 1898 203 Army Operations Medal for Valor Discipline and Loyalty Philippines 1896 1898 203 Army Medal for Volunteers Medalla Para Los Voluntarios Philippines Luzon Campaign 1896 1897 203 Other countries Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2017 The governments of Spain and Cuba issued a wide variety of military awards to honor Spanish Cuban and Philippine soldiers who had served in the conflict See also EditBattles of the Spanish American War Bolton Hall activist opposed the war Commonwealth of the Philippines 1st Separate Brigade Philippine Expedition List of weapons of the Spanish American War Spain United States relations Timeline of the Spanish American War Write your essay about Spanish American War on WikiversityNotes EditFootnotes Edit a b Unrecognized by the primary belligerents a b Alternative names Spanish Guerra hispano estadounidense or Guerra hispano americana Filipino Digmaang Espanyol Amerikano American English The War of 1898 1 2 3 Uncle Sam s War of 1898 4 The US declared war on Spain on April 25 1898 but dated the beginning of the war retroactively to April 21 Number is the total for all Cuban rebels active from 1895 to 1898 7 The higher naval losses may be attributed to the disastrous naval defeats inflicted on the Spanish at Manila Bay and Santiago de Cuba 14 Clodfelter describes the U S capturing 30 000 prisoners plus 100 cannons 19 machine guns 25 114 rifles and various other equipment in the Oriente province and around Santiago He also states that the 10 000 strong Puerto Rican garrison capitulated to the U S after only minor fighting Text of the document which appeared in the Manila Gazette on April 23 1898Further Notes 1 This is the English language text of the document as published by the supporting source cited possibly as translated from the original Spanish or Tagalog In 1898 Spanish Tagalog and English were official languages in the Spanish colonial Philippines 98 2 In the Spanish colonial Philippiines the term Filipino was reserved for full blooded Spaniards born in the Philippines insulares Full blooded Spaniards born in the Spanish peninsula were termed peninsulares The Filipinos that we know today were then termed indios 99 100 The text of the document as published in the cited source was as follows OFFICE OF THE GOVERNMENT AND OF THE CAPTAIN GENERAL OF THE PHILIPPINESFellow Spaniards Hostilities between Spain and the United States have broken out The moment has come for us to show the world that we are more than courageous to triumph over those who feigning to be loyal friends took advantage of our misfortunes and capitalized on our nobility by making use of the means civilized nations consider as condemnable and contemptible The Americans gratified with their social progress have drained off our patience and have instigated the war through wicked tactics treacherous acts and violations of human rights and internal agreements Fighting will be short and decisive God of victories will render this victory glorious and complete as demanded by reason and justice to our cause Spain counting on the sympathies of all nations will come out in triumph from this new test by shattering and silencing the adventurers of those countries which without cohesiveness and post offer to humanity shameful traditions and the ungrateful spectacle of some embassies within which jointly dwell intrigues and defamation cowardice and cynicism A US squadron manned by strangers by ignorant undisciplined men is coming into the Archipelago for the purpose of grabbing from us what we consider to be our life honor freedom It tries to inspire motivate American sailors by saying that we are weak they are encouraged to keep on with an undertaking that can be accomplished namely of substituting the Catholic religion with Protestantism they consider you as a people who impedes growth they will seize your wealth as if you do not know your rights to property they will snatch away from you those they consider as useful to man their ships to be exploited as workers in their fields and factories Useless plans Ridiculous boastings Your indomitable courage suffices to hold off those who dare to bring it to reality We know you will not allow them to mock the faith you are professing their feet to step on the temple of the true God incredulity to demolish the sacred images you honor you will not allow the invaders to desecrate the tombs of your forefathers to satisfy their immodest passions at the expense of your wives and daughters honor you will not allow them to seize all the properties you have put up through honest work in order to assure your future you will not allow them to commit any of those crimes inspired by their wickedness and greed because your bravery and patriotism suffice in scaring them away and knocking down the people who calling themselves civilized and cultured resort to the extermination of the natives of North America instead of trying to attract them to live a civilized life and of progress Filipinos Prepare yourself for the battle and united together under the glorious Spanish flag always covered with laurels let us fight convinced that victory will crown our efforts and let us reply the intimations of our enemies with a decision befitting a Christian and patriot with a cry of Long live Spain Manila April 23 1898Your generalBASILO AUGISTIN 101 The American squadron consisted of nine ships Olympia flagship Boston Baltimore Raleigh Concord Petrel McCulloch Zapphire and Nashan The Spanish squadron consisted of seven ships Reina Cristina flagship Castilla Don Juan de Austria Don Antonio de Ulloa Isla de Luzon Isla de Cuba and Marques del Duero The Spanish ships were of inferior quality to the American ships Castilla was unpowered and had to be towed into position by the transport ship Manila 103 Article 3 of the peace protocol provided The United States will occupy and hold the city bay and harbour of Manila pending the conclusion of a treaty of peace which shall determine the control disposition and government of the Philippines 118 Hobson resigned his commission after his request to retire as a naval captain was refused prompting Secretary of the Navy William Henry Moody to reconsider and allow him to retire 143 Source citations Edit Louis A Perez 1998 The war of 1898 the United States and Cuba in history and historiography UNC Press Books ISBN 978 0807847428 archived from the original on April 24 2016 retrieved October 31 2015 Benjamin R Beede 1994 The War of 1898 and US interventions 1898 1934 an encyclopedia Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0824056247 archived from the original on May 27 2016 retrieved October 31 2015 Virginia Marie Bouvier 2001 Whose America the war of 1898 and the battles to define the nation Praeger ISBN 978 0275967949 archived from the original on May 14 2016 retrieved October 31 2015 Thomas David Schoonover Walter LaFeber 2005 Uncle Sam s War of 1898 and the Origins of Globalization University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0813191225 archived from the original on May 7 2016 retrieved October 31 2015 Dyal Carpenter amp Thomas 1996 p 21 22 Clodfelter 2017 p 256 Clodfelter 2017 p 308 Karnow 1990 p 115 Dyal Carpenter amp Thomas 1996 p 20 a b c d e f g h i Clodfelter 2017 p 255 a b America s Wars Factsheet Archived July 20 2017 at the Wayback Machine US Department of Veteran Affairs Office of Public Affairs Washington DC Published April 2017 Marsh Alan POWs in American History A Synoposis Archived August 6 2017 at the Wayback Machine National Park Service 1998 See USS Merrimac 1894 a b c d Keenan 2001 p 70 Tucker 2009 p 105 Milestones 1866 1898 Office of the Historian history state gov Archived from the original on June 19 2019 Retrieved April 4 2019 Lynch John Spanish American Independence in The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Latin America and the Caribbean 2nd edition New York Cambridge University Press 1992 p 218 Thomas B Alexander Persistent Whiggery in the Confederate South 1860 1877 Journal of Southern History 1961 27 3 pp 305 329 JSTOR 2205211 Concentration camps existed long before Auschwitz Archived from the original on September 17 2020 February 1896 Reconcentration Policy PBS Archived from the original on October 3 2020 W Joseph Campbell Yellow journalism Puncturing the myths defining the legacies 2001 a b Pratt Julius W May 1934 American Business and the Spanish American War The Hispanic American Historical Review 14 2 163 201 doi 10 1215 00182168 14 2 163 JSTOR 2506353 David Nasaw 2013 The Chief The Life of William Randolph Hearst p 171 ISBN 978 0547524726 Archived from the original on March 9 2019 Retrieved February 18 2019 Quince C 2017 5 Sliding Towards War Resistance to the Spanish American and Philippine Wars Anti Imperialism and the Role of the Press 1895 1902 McFarland Incorporated Publishers ISBN 978 1 4766 6974 8 Quince 2017 pp 136 140harvnb error no target CITEREFQuince 2017 help Chapter 11 A Shift in Public Opinion The Spanish Colonization of Florida website historymiami org Retrieved December 27 2022 a b Darde Carlos 1996 p 116 La Restauracion 1875 1902 Alfonso XII y la regencia de Maria Cristina Madrid Historia 16 Temas de Hoy ISBN 84 7679 317 0 a b Suarez Cortina Manuel 2006 The survival of the monarchical regime it led liberals and conservatives to opt for defeat as a guarantee that it was thus possible to safeguard the Crown The logic of war was thus subject to a basic task to preserve the integrity of the inherited patrimony and to safeguard the throne of the child king La Espana Liberal 1868 1917 Politica y sociedad Madrid Sintesis ISBN 84 9756 415 4 a b Resolution 24 33 Stat 738 a b c Trask 1996 p 57 a b Atwood Paul 2010 War and Empire New York Pluto Press pp 98 102 ISBN 978 0745327648 Perez 1998 p 89 states In the larger view the Cuban insurrection had already brought the Spanish army to the brink of defeat During three years of relentless war the Cubans had destroyed railroad lines bridges and roads and paralyzed telegraph communications making it all but impossible for the Spanish army to move across the island and between provinces The Cubans had moreover inflicted countless thousands of casualties on Spanish soldiers and effectively driven Spanish units into beleaguered defensive concentrations in the cities there to suffer the further debilitating effects of illness and hunger Military Book Reviews StrategyPage com Archived from the original on May 1 2011 Retrieved March 22 2014 a b Dyal Carpenter amp Thomas 1996 pp 108 09 Benjamin R Beede 2013 The War of 1898 and US Interventions 1898T1934 An Encyclopedia Taylor amp Francis p 289 ISBN 978 1136746901 Archived from the original on May 15 2016 Retrieved October 31 2015 Herring George C October 28 2008 The War of 1898 the New Empire and the Dawn of the American Century 1893 1901 From Colony to Superpower US Foreign Relations Since 1776 Oxford 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Between Reform and Revolution Oxford Oxford University Press 1995 p 138 Gary R Mormino Cuba Libre Florida and the Spanish American War Theodore Roosevelt Association Journal 2010 Vol 31 Issue 1 2 pp 43 54 Auxier George W 1939 The Propaganda Activities of the Cuban Junta in Precipitating the Spanish American War 1895 1898 The Hispanic American Historical Review 19 3 286 305 doi 10 2307 2507259 JSTOR 2507259 Herring George C October 28 2008 The War of 1898 the New Empire and the Dawn of the American Century 1893 1901 From Colony to Superpower US Foreign Relations Since 1776 Oxford University Press pp 318 319 ISBN 9780199743773 Retrieved May 18 2021 via Google Books Field James A 1978 American Imperialism The Worst Chapter in Almost Any Book The American Historical Review 83 3 644 68 doi 10 2307 1861842 JSTOR 1861842 a b Trask 1996 pp 2 3 a b Jonathan Krohn Review of Tone John Lawrence War and Genocide in Cuba 1895 1898 H War H Net Reviews May 2008 online Archived January 20 2013 at the Wayback Machine Trask 1996 pp 8 10 Carr 1982 pp 379 88 William McKinley First Annual Message www presidency ucsb edu December 6 1897 Archived from the original on April 30 2013 Retrieved February 26 2013 James Ford Rhodes 2007 The McKinley and Roosevelt Administrations 1897 1909 Read Books p 44 ISBN 978 1406734645 citing an annual message delivered December 6 1897 from French Ensor Chadwick 1968 The relations of the United States and Spain diplomacy Russell amp Russell ISBN 9780846212300 Quoted in Trask 1996 p 6 Angiolillo Died Bravely Archived October 12 2020 at the Wayback Machine August 22 1897 The New York Times Octavio Ruiz Spain on the Threshold of a New Century Society and Politics before and after the Disaster of 1898 Mediterranean Historical Review June 1998 Vol 13 Issue 1 2 pp 7 27 Scott Wright The Northwestern Chronicle and the Spanish American War American Catholic Attitudes Regarding the Splendid Little War American Catholic Studies 116 4 2005 55 68 However three Catholic newspapers were critical of the war after it began Benjamin Wetzel A Church Divided Roman Catholicism Americanization and the Spanish American War Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 14 3 2015 348 66 Trade with Cuba had dropped by more than two thirds from a high of US 100 million Offner 2004 p 51 David M Pletcher The Diplomacy of Trade and Investment American Economic Expansion in the Hemisphere 1865 1900 Columbia University of Missouri Press 1998 a b Plan Of Operations Against Spain Prepared By Lieutenant Commander Charles J Train 1894 Naval History and Heritage Command Retrieved November 7 2021 Louis A Perez Jr 2000 The War of 1898 The United States and Cuba in History and Historiography p 24 ISBN 978 0807866979 Archived from the original on January 2 2017 Retrieved February 13 2016 Russell Timothy Dale 2013 African Americans and the Spanish American War and Philippine Insurrection Military Participation Recognition and Memory 1898 1904 First Published dissertation ed 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Where total U S casualties were 268 dead 55 severely wounded six of whom died shortley thereafter from their wounds Scott Douglas D Fox Richard A Connor Melissa A Harmon Dick 2013 1989 Archaeological Perspectives on the Battle of the Little Bighorn Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 3292 1 Thomas Evan 2010 The War Lovers Roosevelt Lodge Hearst and the Rush to Empire 1898 Little Brown and Co p 48 Keenan 2001 p 372 Tucker 2009 p 614 Offner 2004 p 57 For a minority view that downplays the role of public opinion and asserts that McKinley feared the Cubans would win their insurgency before the U S could intervene see Louis A Perez The Meaning of the Maine Causation and the Historiography of the Spanish American War The Pacific Historical Review Vol 58 No 3 August 1989 pp 293 322 a b Fisher Louis August 4 2009 Destruction of the Maine 1898 PDF The Law Library of Congress p 5 Archived from the original PDF on November 4 2009 source includes a summary of other studies Evan 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October 31 2015 Rogers Robert F 1995 Destiny s Landfall A History of Guam illustrated ed University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0824816780 archived from the original on July 2 2016 retrieved October 31 2015 Roosevelt Theodore 1899 I Raising The Regiment The Rough Riders New York Charles Scribner s Sons archived from the original on February 6 2009 retrieved January 14 2009 Smithsonian Institution 2005 The Price of Freedom Americans at War Spanish American War National Museum of American History US ISBN 978 0974420233 Santamarina Juan C The Cuba Company and the Expansion of American Business in Cuba 1898 1915 The Business History Review 74 01 Spring 2000 41 83 Print Saravia Jose Roca de Togores y Garcia Remigio 2003 Blockade and Siege of Manila in 1898 National Historical Institute ISBN 978 9715381673 archived from the original on January 4 2016 retrieved December 30 2017 Smith Mark The Political Economy of Sugar Production and the Environment of Eastern Cuba 1898 1923 Environmental 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United States Purchased and Pacified the Philippine Islands at the Century s Turn Wolff Productions ISBN 978 1582882093 archived from the original on May 5 2016 retrieved October 31 2015Further reading EditAuxier George W 1939 The Propaganda Activities of the Cuban Junta in Precipitating the Spanish American War 1895 1898 The Hispanic American Historical Review 19 3 286 305 doi 10 2307 2507259 JSTOR 2507259 Auxier George W The Cuban question as reflected in the editorial columns of Middle Western newspapers 1895 1898 PhD dissertation Ohio State University 1938 complete text online Archived April 30 2018 at the Wayback Machine Barnes Mar The Spanish American War and Philippine Insurrection 1898 1902 An Annotated Bibliography Routledge Research Guides to American Military Studies 2010 Benton Elbert Jay International law and diplomacy of the Spanish American war Johns Hopkins UP 1908 online free Berner Brad K The Spanish American War A Historical Dictionary Scarecrow Press 1998 Berner Brad K ed The Spanish American War A Documentary History with Commentaries 2016 289 pp includes primary sources Bradford James C ed Crucible of Empire The Spanish American War and Its Aftermath 1993 essays on diplomacy naval and military operations and historiography Cirillo Vincent J Bullets and Bacilli The Spanish American War and Military Medicine 2004 Corbitt Duvon C 1963 Cuban Revisionist Interpretations of Cuba s Struggle for Independence The Hispanic American Historical Review 43 3 395 404 doi 10 2307 2510074 JSTOR 2510074 Cosmas Graham A An Army for Empire The United States Army and the Spanish American War 1971 organizational issues Crapol Edward P Coming to Terms with Empire The Historiography of Late Nineteenth Century American Foreign Relations Diplomatic History 16 Fall 1992 573 97 Cull N J Culbert D Welch D Propaganda and Mass Persuasion A Historical Encyclopedia 1500 to the Present Spanish American War 2003 378 79 Daley L 2000 Canosa in the Cuba of 1898 in Aguirre B E Espina E eds Los ultimos dias del comienzo Ensayos sobre la guerra Santiago de Chile RiL Editores ISBN 978 9562841153 DeSantis Hugh The Imperialist Impulse and American Innocence 1865 1900 in Gerald K Haines and J Samuel Walker eds American Foreign Relations A Historiographical Review 1981 pp 65 90 Dirks Tim War and Anti War Films The Greatest Films Archived from the original on November 7 2005 Retrieved November 9 2005 Dobson John M Reticent Expansionism The Foreign Policy of William McKinley 1988 Feuer A B The Spanish American War at Sea Naval Action in the Atlantic 1995 online edition Archived May 25 2012 at the Wayback Machine Field James A 1978 American Imperialism The Worst Chapter in Almost Any Book The American Historical Review 83 3 644 68 doi 10 2307 1861842 JSTOR 1861842 Flack H E Spanish American diplomatic relations preceding the war of 1898 Johns Hopkins UP 1906 online free Foner Philip The Spanish Cuban American War and the Birth of American Imperialism 1895 1902 1972 A Marxist interpretation Freidel Frank The Splendid Little War 1958 well illustrated narrative by scholar ISBN 0739423428 Fry Joseph A From Open Door to World Systems Economic Interpretations of Late Nineteenth Century American Foreign Relations Pacific Historical Review 65 May 1996 277 303 Fry Joseph A William McKinley and the Coming of the Spanish American War A Study of the Besmirching and Redemption of an Historical Image Diplomatic History 3 Winter 1979 77 97 Funston Frederick Memoirs of Two Wars Cuba and Philippine Experiences New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1911 online edition Gould Lewis The Spanish American War and President McKinley 1980 excerpt and text search Archived October 12 2020 at the Wayback Machine Grenville John A S and George Berkeley Young Politics Strategy and American Diplomacy Studies in Foreign Policy 1873 1917 1966 pp 239 66 on The breakdown of neutrality McKinley goes to war with Spain Hamilton Richard President McKinley War and Empire 2006 Hard Curtis V 1988 Ferrell Robert H ed Banners in the Air The Eighth Ohio Volunteers and the Spanish American War Kent State University Press ISBN 978 0873383677 LCCN 88012033 Harrington Peter and Frederic A Sharf A Splendid Little War The Spanish American War 1898 The Artists Perspective London Greenhill 1998 Harrington Fred H 1935 The Anti Imperialist Movement in the United States 1898 1900 The Mississippi Valley Historical Review 22 2 211 30 doi 10 2307 1898467 JSTOR 1898467 Herring George C From Colony to Superpower US Foreign Relations Since 1776 2008 the latest survey Hoganson Kristin Fighting For American Manhood How Gender Politics Provoked the Spanish American and Philippine American Wars 1998 Holbo Paul S 1967 Presidential Leadership in Foreign Affairs William McKinley and the Turpie Foraker Amendment The American Historical Review 72 4 1321 35 doi 10 2307 1847795 JSTOR 1847795 Kapur Nick 2011 William McKinley s Values and the Origins of the Spanish American War A Reinterpretation Presidential Studies Quarterly 41 1 18 38 doi 10 1111 j 1741 5705 2010 03829 x JSTOR 23884754 Keller Allan The Spanish American War A Compact History 1969 Killblane Richard E Assault on San Juan Hill Military History June 1998 Vol 15 Issue 2 LaFeber Walter The New Empire An Interpretation of American Expansion 1865 1898 1963 Leeke Jim Manila and Santiago The New Steel Navy in the Spanish American War 2009 Linderman Gerald F The Mirror of War American Society and the Spanish American War 1974 domestic aspects Maass Matthias When Communication Fails Spanish American Crisis Diplomacy 1898 Amerikastudien 2007 Vol 52 Issue 4 pp 481 93 May Ernest Imperial Democracy The Emergence of America as a Great Power 1961 McCartney Paul T American National Identity the War of 1898 and the Rise of American Imperialism 2006 McCook Henry Christopher 1899 The Martial Graves of Our Fallen Heroes in Santiago de Cuba G W Jacobs amp Co Miles Nelson Appleton 2012 Harper s Pictorial History of the War with Spain HardPress ISBN 978 1290029025 Archived from the original on January 2 2017 Retrieved March 27 2016 Miller Richard H ed American Imperialism in 1898 The Quest for National Fulfillment 1970 Millis Walter The Martial Spirit A Study of Our War with Spain 1931 Morgan H Wayne America s Road to Empire The War with Spain and Overseas Expansion 1965 Muller y Tejeiro Jose Combates y Capitulacion de Santiago de Cuba Marques Madrid 1898 208 p English translation by US Navy Dept O Toole G J A The Spanish War An American Epic 1898 1984 Paterson Thomas G 1996 United States Intervention in Cuba 1898 Interpretations of the Spanish American Cuban Filipino War The History Teacher 29 3 341 61 doi 10 2307 494551 JSTOR 494551 Perez Jr Louis A 1989 The Meaning of the Maine Causation and the Historiography of the Spanish American War The Pacific Historical Review 58 3 293 22 doi 10 2307 3640268 JSTOR 3640268 Perez Jr Louis A The War of 1898 The United States and Cuba in History and Historiography University of North Carolina Press 1998 Smith Ephraim K William McKinley s Enduring Legacy The Historiographical Debate on the Taking of the Philippine Islands in James C Bradford ed Crucible of Empire The Spanish American War and Its Aftermath 1993 pp 205 49 Pratt Julius W The Expansionists of 1898 1936 Schoonover Thomas Uncle Sam s War of 1898 and the Origins of Globalization 2003 Smith Joseph The Spanish American War Conflict in the Caribbean and the Pacific 1994 Stewart Richard W Emergence to World Power 1898 1902 Ch 15 Archived June 8 2010 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 2004 official US Army textbook Tone John Lawrence War and Genocide in Cuba 1895 1898 2006 US War Dept Military Notes on Cuba 2 vols Washington DC GPO 1898 online edition US Army Center for Military History Adjutant General s Office Statistical Exhibit of Strength of Volunteer Forces Called into Service During the War With Spain with Losses From All Causes US Army Center for Military History Washington Government Printing Office 1899 Wheeler Joseph The Santiago Campaign 1898 1898 online edition Zakaria Fareed From Wealth to Power The Unusual Origins of America s World Role 1998 External links EditThis section s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Spanish American War at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Texts from Wikisource Resources from Wikiversity Data from Wikidata The Spanish American War lesson from EDSITEment America s Black Patriots Spanish American War Points of Confusion over the Cuba Question and Cuba Sovereignty Individual state s contributions to the Spanish American War Georgia Illinois Pennsylvania Sons of Spanish American War Veterans From Dagoes to Nervy Spaniards American Soldiers Views of their Opponents 1898 by Albert Nofi Excerpts from The National Museum of American history Reenactment of Spanish American War video on YouTube The American Peril An Examination of the Spanish American War and the Philippine Insurrection by Dan CarlinMedia Edit William Glackens prints at the Library of Congress Images of Florida and the War for Cuban Independence 1898 at the Wayback Machine archived May 1 2010 from the state archives of Florida archived from the original on 2010 05 01 Pictures of the Army Nurse Corps in the war Archived November 16 2010 at the Wayback Machine Art and images from the War with Spain Archived November 5 2010 at the Wayback Machine at the United States Army Center of Military History Spanish American War photographic collections Archived September 24 2010 at the Wayback Machine via Calisphere California Digital Library The Spanish American War in Motion Pictures US Library of Congress Wehman Collection of Spanish American War Photographs at the University of South Florida Ensminger Brothers Spanish American War Photographs permanent dead link at the University of South FloridaReference materials Edit United States Department of State Papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States with the annual message of the president transmitted to Congress December 5 1898 especially pp 558 1085 Joint Resolution Resolution of Congress April 19 1898 point 4 is the Teller amendment Operations of the U S Signal Corps Cutting and Diverting Undersea Telegraph Cables from Cuba Library of Congress Guide to the Spanish American War Emergence to World Power 1898 1902 Archived August 12 2010 at the Wayback Machine an extract from Matloff s American Military History a publication of the United States Army Center of Military History Buffalo Soldiers at San Juan Hill Archived August 3 2010 at the Wayback Machine Impact on the Spanish Army Archived June 12 2010 at the Wayback Machine by Charles Hendricks Black Jack in Cuba Archived August 12 2010 at the Wayback Machine General John J Pershing s service in the Spanish American War by Kevin Hymel The World of 1898 The Spanish American War Library of Congress Hispanic Division Centennial of the Spanish American War 1898 1998 Archived October 6 2001 at the Wayback Machine by Lincoln Cushing History of Negro soldiers in the Spanish American War and other items of interest by Edward Augustus Johnston published 1899 hosted by the Portal to Texas History Name Index to New York in the Spanish American War 1898 1898 El Ocaso de un Imperio Article in Spanish about naval operations during the Spanish American War Spanish American War Service Summary Cards from the Georgia Archives Spanish American War Veterans Surveys A finding aid listing photographs diaries personal papers held at the U S Army Heritage and Education Center Carlisle PennsylvaniaNewspapers Edit Spain to Use Privateers An Official Decree Declares that She is Determined to Reserve This Right Headline The New York Times April 24 1898 Portals Cuba Spain United States War Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spanish American War amp oldid 1142015417, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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