1 / 24

War With Spain

War With Spain. Chapter 22, Section 3. A Hemispheric Giant. Many Latin Americans worried that the United States wanted to dominate the Western hemisphere. A conference to improve relation. Secretary of State James G. Blaine set out to improve relation with Latin America

helena
Download Presentation

War With Spain

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. War With Spain Chapter 22, Section 3

  2. A Hemispheric Giant • Many Latin Americans worried that the United States wanted to dominate the Western hemisphere

  3. A conference to improve relation • Secretary of State James G. Blaine set out to improve relation with Latin America • 1889 he invited Latin American nations to a conference in Washington to improve relations and remove trade barriers • Pan-American Union: a group created to work together to solve the problems of the hemisphere.

  4. Fears Remain • Latin American were still suspicious of the United States • They refused to open their borders to trade • Feared a flood of American imports would hurt their own industry

  5. Revolt in Cuba The Ever Faithful Isle • Cuba, unlike other Spanish colonies did not revolt against Spanish rule in the early 1800s. • 1868 a violent revolution broke out in Cuba for ten years • Some Cuban revolutionaries like Jose Marti, fled to New York where they wrote about the Cuban struggle for Independence.

  6. A new revolt • 1895 Marti returned to Cuba • Rebels launched a new fight against Spain • Rebels won control of more than half of the island

  7. A new revolt • In response Spain sent a new governor to Cuba, General ValerianoWeyler • Weyler used brutal tactics to crush the revolt • Half a million men were herded into detention camps • At least 100,000 died

  8. Americans react • Cuba lay only 90 miles from southern Florida • American trade with Cuba was worth more than $100 million a year • Many American business leaders felt US involvement might hurt their trade • Other sympathized with the Cuban’s desire for freedom and wanted the government to react

  9. War Fever • The press stirred up American feelings for Cuba • Pulitzer’s World and Hearst’s Journal competed to print grisly stories about Spanish cruelty • They both knew war with Spain would boost newspaper sales.

  10. “Blood, blood, blood!” • Pulitzer and Hearst used yellow journalism to play on the emotions of readers. • President Cleveland wanted to avoid war with Spain • When William McKinley became president in 1897 he also tried to keep the country neutral

  11. Remember the Maine! • 1898 fight broke in Havana Cuba • President McKinley set the battleship Maine to Havana to protect American citizens and property

  12. Remember the Maine! • An explosion on the Maine killed at least 260 of the 350 sailors • The real cause of the explosion has never been determined • American led by Pulitzer and Hearst clamored for war with Spain • April 22, 1898 Congress declared war with Spain

  13. The Spanish-American War • Spanish -American War • Lasted only 4 months • Battlefront stretched from the Caribbean to the Philippine islands

  14. Dewey takes the Philippines • Commodore George Dewey received secret orders from Theodore Roosevelt to prepare to attack the Philippines • American bombarded the Spanish ships in Manila harbor and destroyed the Spanish fleet • American rejoiced at the news of Dewey’s victory • Local people had been fighting for independence in the Philippines just as in Cuba. • With help from Emilio Aguinaldo and rebels Americans captured Manila

  15. Fighting in Cuba • American troops landed in Cuba • Dressed in heavy wool uniforms in the tropical heat and eating spoiled food! • Rough Riders: First volunteer Cavalry regiment; Organized by Theodore Roosevelt

  16. Battle for Santiago • Santiago was a key Cuban city • Roosevelt led the Rough Riders and joined black soldiers of the 9th and 10th regiments up San Juan Hill and Kettle • American troops took the hill

  17. Battle for Santiago • Battle of San Juan Hill did not end the war • Santiago Bay: 2 days later American destroyed the Spanish fleet • troops claimed the island of Puerto Rico • American losses : 379 killed in battle but 5,000 died of other causes like yellow fever and malaria

  18. The Fruits of Victory • 1898 in a peace treaty Spain agreed to grant Cuba its freedom • Spain also gave the US Puerto Rico and Guam • US paid $20 million for the Philippines • With the new area the dream of expansionist had come true, the United States had an empire

  19. Ruling Cuba and Puerto Rico • When the war with Spain began American had promised to leave the government and control of Cuba to its people

  20. Liberty for Cuba? • That promise was not kept • Many in Congress believed Cuba was not ready to run their own government • Business leaders opposed full independence because they wanted to protect their investments

  21. Liberty for Cuba? • The United States allowed Cuba to write their own constitution • But, forced them to sign the Platt Agreement • Limited Cuba’s right to make treaties and borrow money • Allowed the US to intervene in Cuba • Gave the US control of a naval base at Guantanamo Bay • (Cuba was NOT truly independent)

  22. Limited freedom for Puerto Rico • Foraker Act: the US set up a new government for Puerto Rico • Gave Puerto Ricans a limited say in their own affairs • 1917 Puerto Ricans were made citizens of the United States • American set up schools improved health care and built roads on the island

  23. War in the Philippines • When the US took over their land after the was Filipinos felt betrayed • Emilio Aguinaldo and others renewed their fight for independence against the Americans • Aguinaldo accused the Americans of forgetting their own beginnings • The war dragged on for years

  24. War in the Philippines • 1901 Aguinaldo was captured and the war was over • More than 4,000 American died in the Philippines • 20,000 Filipino loses and another 200,000 civilians died • 1902 US set up a government similar to the on e in the Puerto Rico • Filipinos were not made US citizens because they planned to give them independence • 1946 Filipinos were allowed to govern themselves

More Related