The United States became a key influence in the Cuban-Filipino war of 1898 in order to expand their economic sphere as an imperial power. The intervention in Cuba and the surrounding islands in this way were to protect U.S investments and businesses from foreign encroachment. Spain was that foreign presence at the time as they lingered in South America since its discovery for the past 400 years. The island of Cuba at the time was bustling with sugar production whilst the creole residence was plagued by slavery from the Spaniards.…
The United States desired to dominion all of the Americas and endeavor at all costs. Cuba being in the Americas and under Spain’s ruling, the United States would try to find little things to accuse Spain so that they believe they have the right to declare war. The United States was not justified in claiming war with Spain due to unfair and erroneous accusations.…
The situation with Spain was already tense, but I believe that the explosion of the U.S.S. Maine was the final straw that led to the invasion of Cuba in 1898. On November 27, 1897, Fitzhugh Lee forwarded an account to Washington D.C. to describe the living conditions in Cuba. Then on December 3, 1897, Lee sent a letter 3 months before the explosion, requesting war ships at Key West and Dry Tortugas. Lee also requested that a coal station would be established in Dry Tortugas. On April 11, 1898, President McKinley went before Congress to ask for a declaration of war. The reasons that President McKinley provides are issues that went on before the explosion and he also uses the explosion as a reason.…
Neutrality was no longer the case whenever William McKinley became president in 1897. One of the many causes of the spanish american war was that America agreed with the Cuban rebellion against the Spanish. The spanish were not too happy. There was also an unexplained explosion on the battleship U.S.S Maine in the havana Harbor that related to the Spanish. These two, along with many other factors, created the war. The effects of the war was the Treaty of Paris. Spain finally let go of their possession with Puerto Rico, The Philippines, Guam, and many others. The Treaty of Paris was a very important time for both…
Spanish American war By: Elijah Fitton On April 21, 1898, the United States declared war against Spain. ... The reasons for war were many, but there were two immediate ones: America's support the ongoing struggle by Cubans and Filipinos against Spanish rule, and the mysterious explosion of the battleship U.S.S. Maine in Havana Harbor. Spanish-American War definition. A war between Spain and the United States, fought in 1898.…
Despite the US’s concern in its sugar interest and its general imperialistic willingness to expand, the Spanish-American War quickly became a war based on morality. Many people saw a reflection of America’s own struggle with Britain within the Cuban willingness for freedom and saw it as a need to intervene. Spain’s blatant disregard for the Monroe Doctrine spurred a US self-entitlement to police over Southern America in case of such occurrences; this later became known as the Roosevelt…
Imagine fighting for freedom against a country that won’t listen to you and treats you with cruelty. You don’t have much military power, so this other, more powerful country helps you gain independance. However, as soon as you win, the country that helps turns around and puts you in the same situation, just with them instead of the original country. This is what it was like in the Philippines! Before the Spanish-American war, the Philippines were a territory of Spain, along with some other countries like Cuba and Puerto Rico. Spain mistreated the people of these territories. They moved them into camps, that had shelters with no roofs. If they didn’t get there in time, they were executed. The United States stepped in and went to war with Spain for the independance of these territories. When we won the war, we got control of these…
Of course, due to the escalating tensions between the Spanish government and the United States, President McKinley tried to persuade the US to go to war with Spain. For one, McKinley did this by bringing up the naval damage done to a US ship in Cuba. The text states, “... The Spanish government can not assure safety and security to a vessel of the American Navy in the harbor of Havana on a mission of peace, and rightfully there.” (Emory 88).…
He was supported by the Americans for the following reason, the Americans were shocked at the treatment of Cuban prisoners in prison camps operated by the Spanish. The United States felt that the lives of American citizens who lived in Cuba were in danger and the United States was willing to invade Cuba to protect the Americans. Some Americans felt that Cuba could be used as a military base to protect Florida. In 1898, the United States President William Mckinley sent an American warship the USS Maine to Cuba to protect American lives. However, the ship was destroyed and American sailors died on the ship. This gave the United States the opportunity to declare war on Spain. In 1898 this war was called the Spanish American War. The Spanish American War began in 1898 and involved the United States waging war against Spain. The warfare between both countries occurred in the Pacific Ocean. The United States was able to defeat the Spanish and gained the following Spanish colonies in the Pacific Ocean such as Guam and the Phillippines. The United States also gained Spanish colonies in the Caribbean example Cuba, Puerto Rico. The Phillippines, Guam, Puerto Rico became American territories but not States of the United States. The United States decided to follow the Teller Amendment as it related to Cuba. This stated that the United States would leave the government and control of Cuba to its people. However an…
Moving on, in 1898, the Spanish American War came into existence under the leadership of President William McKinley. A few years before McKinley came into office, Cuba attempted to overthrow Spanish colonial rule, and in return, the Spanish rulers started using harsh policies that included concentration camps. The rebels received financial assistance from private U.S. interests and used America as a base of operations from which to attack. McKinley originally tried to avoid an armed conflict with Spain, but the American media, lambasted McKinley as weak and ignited an intense reaction to what was taking place in Cuba. The convergence of anti-Spanish public opinion and the government's desire to protect American economic interests in Cuba prompted…
The purpose of the Spanish - American war was to grant independence of Cuba from Spain. The United States also had a lot to gain from getting involved and helping Cuban gain independence.…
The Spanish-American War was a four-month conflict between Spain and the United States, provoked by word of Spanish colonial brutality in Cuba. Although the war was largely brought about by the efforts of U.S. expansionists, many Americans supported the idea of freeing an oppressed people controlled by the Spanish. At war's end, America emerged victorious with newly acknowledged respect as a world power.…
In the Spanish-American War, the United States showed to the world that they were no longer the isolating, inward-looking nation it was for the past years, but now an important figure on the international stage. Before American involvement and the start of the war, tensions were already apparent in the Caribbean Sea, due to existing conflicts between Cuba and Spain. Years before the war would begin, there were numerous violent attempts by Cubans in the effort for independence and greater autonomy from their Spanish rulers. One was the Ten Years' War, in which a sugar planter named Carlos Manuel de Cespedes, along with thousands of Cubans, led a failed attempt for independence that lasted, wow, ten years. In response to the uprisings, the Spanish…
Francisco A. Amador-Ortiz 11/14/2014 Ms. Pass History 100 Oral Presentation Paper (Mexican American War) One of the first U.S. armed conflict that was military fought on foreign soil was The Mexican-American War sometimes known as the Invasion of Mexico that was fought from 1846-1848 (Merry, pg.176). In that two-year battle our President at the time James K. Polk who believed in the manifest destiny wanted to spread across the continent and claim new land. Unlucky for Mexico they where not prepared for such an invasion which came to many new territory’s such as California, Utah, and Nevada. Due to the beliefs of president Polk we now own what is today present southwest part of the U.S. territory along with Mexico losing almost one third of its territory.…
Jacob Mehlman 11-23-14 U.S. History The Cause of the Mexican-American War The Mexican-American war was a very controversial war in U.S. history. Many people say that the U.S. provoked Mexico by stationing troops on the Rio Grande River while the two countries were negotiating boundary issues. Others conclude that the coveted land at stake was the true cause for war.…