AMERICAN SPANISH WAR.
The Spanish-American War (1898) was a conflict between the United States
and Spain that ended Spanish colonial rule in the Americas and resulted in U.S.
acquisition of territories in the western Pacific and Latin America.
The war originated in the Cuban struggle for independence from Spain, which
began in February 1895. Spain’s brutally repressive measures to halt the
rebellion were graphically portrayed for the U.S. public by several sensational
newspapers, and American sympathy for the rebels rose. The growing popular
demand for U.S. intervention became an insistent chorus after the unexplained
sinking in Havana harbour of the battleship USS Maine (Feb. 15, 1898; see
Maine, destruction of the), which had been sent to protect U.S. citizens and
property after anti-Spanish rioting in Havana. Spain announced an armistice on
April 9 and speeded up its new program to grant Cuba limited powers of
self-government, but the U.S. Congress soon afterward issued resolutions that
declared Cuba’s right to independence, demanded the withdrawal of Spain’s armed
forces from the island, and authorized the President’s use of force to secure
that withdrawal while renouncing any U.S. design for annexing Cuba.
Spain declared war on the United States on April 24, followed by a U.S.
declaration of war on the 25th, which was made retroactive to April 21. The
ensuing war was pathetically one-sided, since Spain had readied neither its
army nor its navy for a distant war with the formidable power of the United
States. Commo. George Dewey led a U.S. naval squadron into Manila Bay in the
Philippines on May 1, 1898, and destroyed the anchored Spanish fleet in a
leisurely morning engagement that cost only seven American seamen wounded.
Manila itself was occupied by U.S. troops by August.
The elusive Spanish Caribbean fleet under Adm. Pascual Cervera was located
in Santiago harbour in Cuba by U.S. reconnaissance. An army of regular troops
and volunteers under Gen. William Shafter (and including Theodore Roosevelt and
his 1st Volunteer Cavalry, the “Rough Riders”) landed on the coast east of
Santiago and slowly advanced on the city in an effort to force Cervera’s fleet
out of the harbour. Cervera led his squadron out of Santiago on July 3 and
tried to escape westward along the coast. In the ensuing battle all of his
ships came under heavy fire from U.S. guns and were beached in a burning or
sinking condition. Santiago surrendered to Shafter on July 17, thus effectively
ending the war.
By the Treaty of Paris (signed Dec. 10, 1898), Spain renounced all claim to
Cuba, ceded Guam and Puerto Rico to the United States, and transferred
sovereignty over the Philippines to the United States for $20,000,000. The
Spanish-American War was an important turning point in the history of both
antagonists. Spain’s defeat decisively turned the nation’s attention away from
its overseas colonial adventures and inward upon its domestic needs, a process
that led to both a cultural and a literary renaissance and two decades of
much-needed economic development in Spain. The victorious United States, on the
other hand, emerged from the war a world power with far-flung overseas
possessions and a new stake in international politics that would soon lead it
to play a determining role in the affairs of Europe.
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