shortly after nine o'clock in the evening,
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to sneak aboard the
USS Maine while it rested in Havana Harbor,
defending American interests during the Cuban insurrection.
The five men were carrying with them explosives and were believed to have
been headed toward the storage of the ship's powder charges for its
six-inch and ten-inch guns. The discovery had been nearly happenstance as
one man coughed too loudly and the crew on patrol thought to double-check.
The men were separated and questioned, and each gave wildly different
stories. Crewmen leaked the investigation, and rumors exploded into news.
Fueled by yellow journalism, the men were believed to be saboteurs from
Spain, attempting to knock America out of its defensive position with
Cuba; or, Cubans hoping to spark a war between the United States and
Spain; or, mercenaries hired by the U.S. government to blow up their own
ship and instigate a war that would bring in a wealth of captured
territory for a new empire. Some even said that they had been hired by
newspapermen Hearst or Pulitzer to precipitate a reason to sell more
papers, but these rumors did not appear in print.
The whole of America rose up in anger over the ordeal, but there was no
consensus on how to act. Some demanded war with Spain, others demanded war
with the Cuban revolutionaries that America had previously supported, and
still others demanded the Maine to leave Havana and the US wash its hands
of the whole matter. President McKinley weighed his options carefully and
finally decided to bring the diplomatic ordeal with Spain to an end as
quickly as possible. He dispatched orders to Admiral Dewey in Hong Kong to
sail toward the Philippines (also fighting for its independence) in case
anything got out of order. Congress and the President worked together to
create a reasonable ultimatum for Spain, ignoring many of Republican
Senator Redfield Proctor's demands for war. The Spanish government weighed
its options and finally decided to concede in Cuba and the Philippines.
In exchange for a massive gift of "dollar diplomacy" (to be paid back by
bonds from the new Cuban and Filipino governments), Spain would grant its
colonies their independence. America, meanwhile, would gain valuable
coaling stations and naval bases. The Pil?n-Woodward Treaty that summer
ironed out the diplomatic details, and the cries for war were silenced.
Several Americans, such as Assistant Secretary of the Navy Theodore
Roosevelt, spoke out that the nation had not acted valiantly enough, but
for the most part the populace had come to ease with international
relations. Other imperial-minded Americans called for expansion into the
Pacific rather than merely opening markets, such as conquering the
Philippines rather than holding content with bases at Manila and Luzon.
Letters from Sanford Dole the newly formed Republic of Hawaii offered the
islands to McKinely.
Hawaii would become the new battleground as many politicians and
businessmen hoped to support it as a new territory. However, the American
Anti-Imperialist League formed around such famous members as Andrew
Carnegie, Mark Twain, Samuel Gompers, and Senator George Boutwell. Their
collective clout broke up the imperialist calls prominent in the press,
and America returned to a sense of dollar diplomacy as McKinely refused
Dole's offer. Hawaii would later be returned to the Hawaiian Royal family,
and it retains close political ties to the United States to this day.
The divided Republican Party in 1900 would result in the narrow election
of President William Jennings Bryan and Vice-President Dewey, heralded as
the man who won the Philippines its independence without firing a single
shot. Dewey received a great deal of political criticism for his comment
that "Our next war will be with Germany," which was proven correct some
eighteen years later.
"Remember the Maine!" became a popular cry among Navy security as they
patrolled in the early twentieth century. A policy of stringent observance
of any possible attack became the norm, which proved effective in the
detection of the Japanese carrier fleet approaching the base at Pearl
Harbor in 1941.