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The Cause of the War With Spain
This book
includes some historical materials that may imply negative stereotypes
reflecting the culture or language of a particular period or place. These
items are presented as part of the historical record and should not be
interpreted to mean that the WebMasters in any way endorse the stereotypes
implied . Many causes led up to the Spanish-American
war. Cuba had been in a state of turmoil for a long time,
and the continual reports of outrages on the people of the
island by Spain greatly aroused the Americans. The "ten
years war" had terminated, leaving the island much
embarrassed in its material interests, and woefully
scandalized by the methods of procedure adopted by Spain and
principally carried out by Generals Campos and Weyler, the
latter of whom was called the "butcher" on account of his
alleged cruelty in attempting to suppress the former
insurrection. There was no doubt much to complain of under
his administration, for which the General himself was not
personally responsible. He boasted that he only had three
individuals put to death, and that in each of these cases he
was highly justified by martial law.
Finally The Attention Of The United States was
forcibly attracted to Cuba by the Virginius affair, which
consisted in the wanton murder of fifty American
sailors--officers and crew of the Virginius, which was
captured by the Spanish off Santiago bay, bearing arms and
ammunition to the insurgents--Captain Fry, a West Point
graduate, in command.
Spain would, no doubt, have received a genuine American
thrashing on this occasion had she not been a republic at
that time, and President Grant and others thought it unwise
to crush out her republican principles, which then seemed
just budding into existence.
The horrors of this incident, however, were not out of the
minds of the American people when the new insurrection of
1895 broke out. At once, as if by an electric flash, the
sympathy of the American people was enlisted with the
Insurgents who were (as the Americans believed) fighting
Spain for their liberty. Public opinion was on the
Insurgents' side and against Spain from the beginning. This
feeling of sympathy for the fighting Cubans knew no North
nor South; and strange as it may seem the Southerner who
quails before the mob spirit that disfranchises, ostracises
and lynches an American Negro who seeks his liberty at home,
became a loud champion of the Insurgent cause in Cuba, which
was, in fact, the cause of Cuban Negroes and mulattoes.
 |
General
Fitzhugh Lee, of Virginia,
possibly the most noted Southerner
of the day, was sent by President
Cleveland to Havana as Consul
General, and seemed proud of the
honor of representing his government
there, judging from his reports of
the Insurgents, which were
favorable. General Lee was retained
at his post by President McKinley
until it became necessary to recall
him, thus having the high honor paid
him of not being changed by the new
McKinley administration, which
differed from him in politics; and
as evidence of General Fitzhugh
Lee's sympathy with the Cubans it
may be cited that he sent word to
the Spanish Commander (Blanco) on
leaving Havana that he would return
to the island again and when he came
he "would bring the stars and
stripes in front of him." |
Belligerent Rights To The
Insurgents Or Neutrality became the
topic of discussion during the close of
President Cleveland's administration. The
President took the ground that the
Insurgents though deserving of proper
sympathy, and such aid for humanity's sake
as could be given them, yet they had not
established on any part of the island such a
form of government as could be recognized at
Washington, and accorded belligerent rights
or rights of a nation at war with another
nation; that the laws of neutrality should
be strictly enforced, and America should
keep "hands off" and let Spain and the
Insurgents settle their own differences.
Much Money And Time was expended by the
United States government in maintaining this
neutral position. Fillibustering expeditions
were constantly being fitted up in America
with arms and ammunition for the Cuban
patriots. As a neutral power it became the
duty of the American government to suppress
fillibustering, but it was both an
unpleasant and an expensive duty, and one in
which the people had little or no sympathy.
Spain tries to Appease public
sentiment in America by recalling Marshal
Campos, who was considered unequal to the
task of defeating the Insurgents, because of
reputed inaction. The flower of the Spanish
army was poured into Cuba by the tens of
thousands--estimated, all told, at three
hundred thousand when the crisis between
America and Spain was reached.
Weyler The
"Butcher," was put in command and
inaugurated the policy of establishing
military zones inside of the Spanish lines,
into which the unarmed farmers, merchants,
women and children were driven, penniless;
and being without any visible means of
subsistence were left to perish from hunger
and disease. (The condition of these people
greatly excited American sympathy with the
Insurgents.) General Weyler hoped thus to
weaken the Insurgents who received
considerable of supplies from this class of
the population, either by consent or force.
Weyler's policy in reference to the
reconcentrados (as these non-combatant
people were called) rather increased than
lessened the grievance as was natural to
suppose, in view of the misery and suffering
it entailed on a class of people who most of
all were not the appropriate subjects for
his persecution, and sentiment became so
strong in the United States ]against this
policy (especially in view of the fact that
General Weyler had promised to end the
"Insurrection" in three months after he took
command) that in February, 1896, the United
States Congress took up the discussion of
the matter. Several Senators and Congressmen
returned from visits to the island pending
this discussion, in which they took an
active and effective part, depicting a most
shocking and revolting situation in Cuba,
for which Spain was considered responsible;
and on April 6th following this joint
resolution was adopted by Congress:
"Be it Resolved by the Senate
and House of Representatives of the
United States of America, that in
the opinion of Congress a public war
exists between the Government of
Spain and the Government proclaimed
and for some time maintained by
force of arms by the people of Cuba;
and that the United States of
America should maintain a strict
neutrality between the contending
powers, according to each all the
rights of belligerents in the ports
and territory of the United States."
"Resolved further, that the friendly
offices of the United States should
be offered by the President to the
Spanish government
for the recognition of the
independence of Cuba." |
The Insurgents gained
by this resolution an important point. It
dignified their so-called insurrection into
an organized army, with a government at its
back which was so recognized and treated
with. They could buy and sell in American
ports.
 |
General Antonio
Maceo about
this time was doing great havoc
along the Spanish lines. He darted
from place to place, back and forth
across the supposed impassable line
of Spanish fortifications stretching
north and south across the island
some distance from Havana, and known
as the trocha. Thousands of
Spaniards fell as the result of his
daring and finesse in military
execution. His deeds became known in
America, and though a man of Negro
descent, with dark skin and crisp
hair, his fame was heralded far and
wide in the American newspapers. At
a public gathering in New York,
where his picture was exhibited, the
audience went wild with
applause--the waving of
handkerchiefs and the wild hurrahs
were long and continued. The career
of this hero was suddenly terminated
by death, due to the treachery of
his physician Zertucha, who, under
the guise of a proposed treaty of
peace, induced him to meet a company
of Spanish officers, at which
meeting, according to a pre-arranged
plot, a mob of Spanish infantry
rushed in on General Maceo and shot
him down unarmed. |
| It is
said that his friends recovered his
body and buried it in a secret place
unknown to the Spaniards, who were
anxious to obtain it for exhibition
as a trophy of war in Havana. Maceo
was equal to Toussaint L'Overture of
San Domingo. His public life was
consecrated to liberty; he knew no
vice nor mean action; he would not
permit any around him. When he
landed in Cuba from Porto Rico he
was told there were no arms. He
replied, "I will get them with my
machete," and he left five thousand
to the Cubans, conquered by his arm.
Every time the Spanish attacked him
they were beaten and left thousands
of arms and much ammunition in his
possession. He was born in Santiago
de Cuba July 14, 1848. |
The Spirit of the
Insurgents did not break with General
Maceo's death. Others rose up to fill his
place, the women even taking arms in the
defence of home and liberty. "At first no
one believed, who had not seen them, that
there were women in the Cuban army; but
there is no doubt about it. They are not all
miscalled amazons, for they are warlike
women and do not shun fighting. The
difficulty in employing them being that they
are insanely brave. When they ride into
battle they become exalted and are dangerous
creatures. Those who first joined the forces
on the field were the wives of men belonging
in the army, and their purpose was rather to
be protected than to become heroines and
avengers. It shows the state of the island,
that the women found the army the safest
place for them. With the men saved from the
plantations and the murderous bandits
infesting the roads and committing every
lamentable outrage upon the helpless, some
of the high spirited Cuban women followed
their husbands, and the example has been
followed, and some, instead of consenting to
be protected, have taken up the fashion of
fighting."--Murat Halsted.
Jose Maceo, brother of Antonio, was
also a troublesome character to the
Spaniards, who were constantly being set
upon by him and his men.
Weyler's Policy and the Brave Struggle
of the people both appealed very strongly
for American sympathy with the Insurgent
cause. The American people were indignant at
Weyler and were inspired by the conduct of
the Insurgents. Public sentiment grew
stronger with every fresh report of an
Insurgent victory, or a Weyler persecution.
 |
Miss
Evangelina Cosio
Y Cisnero's Rescue helped to
arouse sentiment. This young and
beautiful girl of aristocratic Cuban
parentage alleged that a Spanish
officer had, on the occasion of a
raid made on her home, in which her
father was captured and imprisoned
as a Cuban sympathizer, proposed her
release on certain illicit
conditions, and on her refusal she
was incarcerated with her aged
father in the renowned but filthy
and dreaded Morro Castle at Havana. |
Appeal after appeal
by large numbers of the most prominent women
in America was made to General Weyler, and
even to the Queen Regent of Spain, for her
release, but without avail, when finally the
news was flashed to America that she had
escaped. This proved to be true--her release
being effected by Carl Decker, a reporter on
the New York Journal--a most daring fete.
Miss Cisneros was brought to America and
became the greatest sensation of the day.
Her beauty, her affection for her aged
father, her innocence, and the thrilling
events of her rescue, made her the public
idol, and gave Cuba libre a new impetus in
American sympathy. Spain
and Havana felt the touch of these ever
spreading waves of public sentiment, and
began to resent them. At Havana public
demonstrations were made against America.
The life of Consul General Lee was
threatened. The Spanish Minister at
Washington, Seņor de Lome, was exposed for
having written to a friend a most insulting
letter, describing President McKinley as a
low politician and a weakling. For this he
was recalled by Spain at the request of the
American government.
Protection to American citizens and property
in Havana became necessary, and accordingly
the Battleship Maine was sent there
for this purpose, the United States
government disclaiming any other motives
save those of protection to Americans and
their interests. The Maine was, to all
outward appearances, friendly received by
the Spaniards at Havana by the usual salutes
and courtesies of the navy, and was anchored
at a point in the bay near a certain buoy
designated by the Spanish Commander. This
was on January 25, 1898, and on February
15th this noble vessel was blown to pieces,
and 266 of its crew perished--two colored
men being in the number. This event added
fuel to the already burning fire of American
feeling against Spain. Public sentiment
urged an immediate declaration of war.
President McKinley counseled moderation.
Captain Siggsbee, who survived the wreck of
the Maine, published an open address in
which he advised that adverse criticism be
delayed until an official investigation
could be made of the affair.
The official investigation was had by a
Court of Inquiry, composed of Captain W.T.
Sampson of the Iowa, Captain F.C. Chadwick
of the New York, Lieutenant-Commander W.P.
Potter of the New York, and
Lieutenant-Commander Adolph Marix of the
Vermont, appointed by the President. Divers
were employed; many witnesses were examined,
and the court, by a unanimous decision,
rendered March 21, 1898, after a four weeks
session, reported as follows: "That the loss
of the Maine was not in any respect due to
the fault or negligence on the part of any
of the officers or members of her crew; that
the ship was destroyed by the explosion of a
submarine mine which caused the partial
explosion of two or more of her forward
magazines; and that no evidence has been
obtainable fixing the responsibility for the
destruction of the Maine upon any person or
persons."
Responsibility in this report is not fixed
on any "person or persons." It reads
something like the usual verdict of a
coroner's jury after investigating the death
of some colored man who has been
lynched,--"he came to his death by the hands
of parties unknown." This report on the
Maine's destruction, unlike the usual
coroner's jury verdict, however, in one
respect, was not accepted by the people who
claimed that Spain was responsible, either
directly or indirectly, for the explosion,
and the public still clamored for war to
avenge the outrage.
Congress also Catches
the war fever and appropriated $50,000,000
"for the national defence" by a unanimous
vote of both houses. The war and navy
departments became very active; agents were
sent abroad to buy war ships, but the
President still hesitated to state his
position until he had succeeded in getting
the American Consuls out of Cuba who were in
danger from the Spaniards there. Consul
Hyatt embarked from Santiago April 3, and
Consul General Lee, who was delayed in
getting off American refugees, left on April
10, and on that day the President sent
his message to Congress. He pictured the
deplorable condition of the people of Cuba,
due to General Weyler's policy; he
recommended that the Insurgent government be
not recognized, as such recognition might
involve this government in "embarrassing
international complications," but referred
the whole subject to Congress for action.
Congress declares war
on April 13 by a joint resolution of the
Foreign Affairs Committee of both houses,
which was adopted, after a conference of the
two committees, April 18, in the following
form:
Whereas, the abhorrent
conditions which have existed for
more than three years in the island
of Cuba, so near our own borders,
have shocked the moral sense of the
people of the United States, have
been a disgrace to Christian
civilization, culminating as they
have in the destruction of a United
States battle ship, with 266 of its
officers and crew, while on a
friendly visit in the harbor of
Havana, and cannot longer be
endured, as has been set forth by
the President of the United States
in his message to Congress of April
11, 1898, upon which the action of
Congress was invited: therefore,
Resolved, by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress
assembled:
First, that the people of the island
of Cuba are, and of right ought to
be, free and independent.
Second, that it is the duty of the
United States to demand, and the
government of the United States does
hereby demand, that the government
of Spain at once relinquish its
authority and government in the
island of Cuba, and withdraw its
land and naval forces from Cuba and
Cuban waters.
Third, that the President of the
United States be, and he hereby is,
directed and empowered to use the
entire land and naval forces of the
United States, and to call into the
actual service of the United States
the militia of the several states to
such extent as may be necessary to
carry these resolutions into effect.
Fourth, that the United States
hereby disclaims any disposition or
intention to exercise sovereignty,
jurisdiction or control over said
island, except for the pacification
thereof, and asserts its
determination when that is completed
to leave the government and control
of the island to its people. |
The President signed this
resolution at 11:24 A.M. on the 20th of
April, 1898. The Spanish Minister, Seņor
Luis Polo y Bernarbe, was served with a
copy, upon which he asked for his passports,
and "immediately left Washington."
 |
"This is a picture
of Edward Savoy,
who accomplished one of the most
signal diplomatic triumphs in
connection with recent relations
with Spain. It was he who outwitted
the whole Spanish Legation and
delivered the ultimatum to Minister
Polo."
"Edward Savoy has been a messenger
in the Department of State for
nearly thirty years. He was
appointed by Hamilton Fish in 1869,
and held in high esteem by James G.
Blaine."
"He was a short, squat, colored man,
with a highly intelligent face, hair
slightly tinged with gray and an air
of |
alertness which makes him stand out
in sharp contrast with the other
messengers whom one meets in the
halls of the big building."
"Of all the men under whom 'Eddie,'
as he is universally called, has
served he has become most attached
to Judge Day, whom he says is the
finest man he ever saw." |
"Minister Polo was
determined not to receive the ultimatum. He
was confident he would receive a private tip
from the White House, which would enable him
to demand his passports before the ultimatum
was served upon him. Then he could refuse to
receive it, saying that he was no longer
Minister. It will be remembered that Spain
handed Minister Woodford his passports
before the American representative could
present the ultimatum to the Spanish
Government."
"Judge Day's training as a country lawyer
stood him in good stead. He had learned the
value of being the first to get in an
attachment."
"The ultimatum was placed in a large, square
envelope, that might have contained an
invitation to dinner. It was natural that it
should be given to 'Eddie' Savoy. He had
gained the sobriquet of the nation's
'bouncer,' from the fact that he had handed
Lord Sackville-West and Minister De Lome
their passports."
"It was 11:30 o'clock on Wednesday morning
when 'Eddie' Savoy pushed the electric
button at the front door of the Spanish
Legation, in Massachusetts avenue. The old
Spanish soldier who acted as doorkeeper
responded."
"'Have something here for the Minister,'
said Eddie."
"The porter looked at him suspiciously, but
he permitted the messenger to pass into the
vestibule, which is perhaps six feet square.
Beyond the vestibule is a passage that leads
to the large central hall. The Minister
stood in the hall. In one hand he held an
envelope. It was addressed to the Secretary
of State. It contained a request for the
passports of the Minister and his suite.
Seņor Polo had personally brought the
document from the chancellory above."
"When the porter presented the letter just
brought by the Department of State's
messenger, Seņor Polo grasped it in his
quick, nervous way. He opened the envelope
and realized instantly that he had been
outwitted. A cynical smile passed over the
Minister's face as he handed his request for
passports to 'Eddie,' who bowed and smiled
on the Minister."
"Seņor Polo stepped back into the hall and
started to read the ultimatum carefully. But
he stopped and turned his head toward the
door."
"'This is indeed Jeffersonian simplicity,'
he said."
"'Eddie' Savoy felt very badly over the
incident, because he had learned to like
Minister Polo personally."
"'He was so pleasant that I felt like asking
him to stay a little longer,' said 'Eddie,'
'but I didn't, for that wouldn't have been
diplomatic. When you have been in this
department twenty-five or thirty years you
learn never to say what you want to say and
never to speak unless you think twice.'"
"Wherefore it will be seen that 'Eddie'
Savoy has mastered the first principles of
diplomacy."--N.Y. World. A
copy of the resolution by Congress was also
cabled to Minister Woodford, at Madrid, to
be officially transmitted to the Spanish
Government, fixing the 23d as the limit for
its reply, but the Spanish Minister of
Foreign Affairs had already learned of the
action of Congress, and did not permit
Minister Woodford to ask for his passports,
but sent them to him on the evening of the
21st, and this was the formal beginning of
the war.
A fatal step was this for Spain, who
evidently, as her newspapers declared, did
not think the "American pigs" would fight.
She was unaware of the temper of the people,
who seemed to those who knew the facts,
actually thirsting for Spanish blood--a
feeling due more or less to thirty years of
peace, in which the nation had become
restless, and to the fact also that America
had some new boats, fine specimens of
workmanship, which had been at target
practice for a long time and now yearned for
the reality, like the boy who has a gun and
wants to try it on the real game. The proof
of the superiority of American gunnery was
demonstrated in every naval battle. The
accurate aim of Dewey's gunners at Manilla,
and Sampson and Schley's at Santiago, was
nothing less than wonderful. No less
wonderful, however, was the accuracy of the
Americans than the inaccuracy of the
Spaniards, who seemed almost unable to hit
anything.
While accrediting the American Navy with its
full share of praise for its wonderful
accomplishments, let us remember that there
is scarcely a boat in the navy flying the
American flag but what has a number of
Colored Sailors on it, who, along with
others, help to make up its greatness and
superiority. History of
Negro Soldiers in the Spanish-American War,
and other items of Interest, 1899
History of the Negro Soldier in the Spanish
American War Genealogy | African
American Genealogy
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History of the Negro Soldier in the Spanish
American War
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