Introduction The Library of Congress's Account
On April 25, 1898 the United States declared
war on Spain
following the sinking of the Battleship Maine in Havana harbor on February 15,
1898. The war ended with the signing of the
Treaty of Paris on
December 10, 1898. As a result Spain lost its control over the remains of its
overseas empire -- Cuba, Puerto Rico, the Philippine islands, Guam, and other
islands.
Background
Beginning in 1492, Spain was the first
European nation to sail westward across the Atlantic Ocean, explore, and
colonize the Amerindian nations of the Western Hemisphere. At its greatest
extent, the empire that resulted from this exploration extended from Virginia on
the eastern coast of the United States south to Tierra del Fuego at the tip of
South America excluding Brazil and westward to California and Alaska. Across the
Pacific, it included the Philippines and other island groups. By 1825 much of
this empire had fallen into other hands and in that year, Spain acknowledged the
independence of its possessions in the present-day United States (then under
Mexican control) and south to the tip of South America. The only remnants that
remained in the empire in the Western Hemisphere were Cuba and Puerto Rico and
across the Pacific in Philippine Islands, and the Carolina, Marshall, and
Mariana Islands (including Guam) in Micronesia.
Cuba
Following the liberation from Spain of
mainland Latin America, Cuba was the first to initiate its own struggle for
independence. During the years from 1868-1878, Cubans personified by guerrilla
fighters known as
mambises fought for autonomy from Spain. That war concluded with a treaty
that was never enforced. In the 1890's Cubans began to agitate once again for
their freedom from Spain. The moral leader of this struggle was
José Martí, known
as "El Apóstol," who established the Cuban Revolutionary Party on January 5,
1892 in the United States. Following the grito de Baire, the call to
arms on February 24, 1895, Martí returned to Cuba and participated in the first
weeks of armed struggle when he was killed on May 19, 1895.
The Philippines
The Philippines too was beginning to grow
restive with Spanish rule.
José Rizal, a
member of a wealthy mestizo family, resented that his upper mobility was limited
by Spanish insistence on promoting only "pure-blooded" Spaniards. He began his
political career at the University of Madrid in 1882 where he became the leader
of Filipino students there. For the next ten years he traveled in Europe and
wrote several novels considered seditious by Filipino and Church authorities. He
returned to Manila in 1892 and founded the Liga Filipina, a political group
dedicated to peaceful change. He was rapidly exiled to Mindanao. During his
absence, Andrés
Bonifacio founded
Katipunan,
dedicated to the violent overthrow of Spanish rule. On August 26, 1896, after
learning that the Katipunan had been betrayed, Bonifacio issued the
Grito de
Balintawak, a call for Filipinos to revolt. Bonifacio was succeeded as head
of the Philippine revolution by
Emilio Aguinaldo y
Famy, who had his predecessor arrested and executed on May 10, 1897.
Aguinaldo negotiated a deal with the Spaniards who exiled him to Hong Kong with
400,000 pesos that he subsequently used to buy weapons to resume the fight.
Puerto Rico
During the 1880s and 1890s, Puerto Ricans
developed many different political parties, some of which sought independence
for island while others, headquartered like their Cuban counterparts in New
York, preferred to ally with the United States. Spain proclaimed the autonomy of
Puerto Rico on November 25, 1897, although the news did not reach the island
until January 1898 and a new government established on February 12, 1898.
United States
U.S. interest in purchasing Cuba had begun
long before 1898. Following the Ten Years War, American sugar interests bought
up large tracts of land in Cuba. Alterations in the U.S. sugar tariff favoring
home-grown beet sugar helped foment the rekindling of revolutionary fervor in
1895. By that time the U.S. had more than $50 million invested in Cuba and
annual trade, mostly in sugar, was worth twice that much. Fervor for war had
been growing in the United States, despite President
Grover Cleveland's
proclamation of neutrality on June 12, 1895. But sentiment to enter the conflict
grew in the United States when
General Valeriano
Weyler began implementing a policy of
Reconcentration that moved the population into central locations guarded by
Spanish troops and placed the entire country under martial law in February 1896.
By December 7, President Cleveland reversed himself declaring that the United
States might intervene should Spain fail to end the crisis in Cuba.
President William
McKinley, inaugurated on March 4, 1897, was even more anxious to become
involved, particularly after the New York Journal published a copy of a letter
from Spanish Foreign Minister
Enrique Dupuy de Lôme
criticizing the American President on February 9, 1898. Events moved swiftly
after the explosion aboard the
U.S.S. Maine on
February 15. On March 9, Congress passed a law allocating fifty million dollars
to build up military strength. On March 28, the U.S. Naval Court of Inquiry
finds that a mine blew up the Maine. On April 21 President McKinley orders a
blockade of Cuba and four days later the U.S. declares war.
The War
Following its declaration of war against Spain
issued on April 25, 1898, the United States added the
Teller Amendment
asserting that it would not attempt to exercise hegemony over Cuba. Two days
later Commodore George
Dewey sailed from Hong Kong with Emilio Aguinaldo on board. Fighting began
in the Phillipine islands at the Battle of Manila Bay on May 1 where Commodore
George Dewey reportedly exclaimed, "You may fire when ready, Gridley," destroyed
the Spanish fleet under Rear Admiral Patricio Montojo. However, he did not have
enough manpower to capture Manila and so Aguinaldo's guerrillas maintained their
operations until 15,000 U.S. troops arrived at the end of July. On the way, the
cruiser Charleston stopped at Guam and accepted its surrender from its
Spanish governor who was unaware his nation was at war. Although a peace
protocol was signed by the two belligerants on August 12, Commodore Dewey and
Maj. Gen. Wesley Merritt, leader of the army troops, assaulted Manila the very
next day, unaware that peace had broken out.
In late April, Andrew Summers Rowan made
contact with Cuban General Calixto García who supplied him with maps,
intelligence, and a core of rebel officers to coordinate U.S. efforts on the
island. The U.S. North Atlantic Squadron left Key West for Cuba on April 22
following the frightening news that the Spanish home fleet commanded by
Admiral Pascual
Cervera had left Cadiz and entered Santiago, having slipped by U.S. ships
commanded by William
T. Sampson and Winfield Scott Schley. They arrived in Cuba in late May.
War actually began for the U.S. in Cuba in
June when the Marines captured Guantánamo Bay and 17,000 troops landed at
Siboney and Daiquirí,
east of Santiago de Cuba, the second largest city on the island. At that time
Spanish troops stationed on the island included 150,000 regulars and 40,000
irregulars and volunteers while rebels inside Cuba numbered as many as 50,000.
Total U.S. army strength at the time totalled 26,000, requiring the passage of
the Mobilization Act of April 22 that allowed for an army of at first 125,000
volunteers (later increased to 200,000) and a regular army of 65,000. On June
22, U.S. troops landed at Daiquiri where they were joined by Calixto García and
about 5,000 revolutionaries.
U.S.
troops attacked the San Juan heights on July 1, 1898. Dismounted troopers,
including the African-American Ninth and Tenth cavalries and the
Rough Riders
commanded by Lt.
Col. Theodore Roosevelt went up against Kettle Hill while the forces led by
Brigadier General Jacob Kent charged up San Juan Hill and pushed Spanish troops
further inland while inflicting 1,700 casualties. While U.S. commanders were
deciding on a further course of action, Admiral Cervera left port only to be
defeated by Schley. On July 16, the Spaniards agreed to the unconditional
surrendar of the 23,500 troops around the city. A few days later, Major General
Nelson Miles sailed
from Guantánamo to Puerto Rico. His forces landed near
Ponce and marched
to San Juan with
virtually no opposition.
Representatives of Spain and the United States
signed a peace treaty in Paris on December 10, 1898 established the independence
of Cuba, ceded Puerto Rico and Guam to the United States, and allowed the
victorious power to purchase the Philippines Islands from Spain for $20 million.
The war had cost the United States $250 million and 3,000 lives, of whom 90% had
perished from infectious diseases.