John J. “Black Jack” Pershing: the Man that Made the World Safe for Democracy

 

Pershing at General Headquarters in Chaumont, France, October 1918

Pershing at General Headquarters in Chaumont, France, October 1918

On April 6, 1917 the United States entered into World War One; a war that had been raging on in Europe for three years already. America sent two million men overseas under the command of Major General John J. Pershing. Even though Pershing had some battle experience that made him a qualified commander, he was not the Army’s first choice. With the sudden death of General Frederick Funston, Pershing was chosen to lead the men into war. Pershing would soon show the world he was actually the right choice due to his skills as a leader, statesman and military tactical expert.

Pershing was born on September 13, 1860 in Laclede, Missouri and experienced war at an early age. By 1861 the Civil War had consumed the United States. The town of Laclede was constantly harassed by Southern Raiders who attacked local businesses. One of these businesses was owned by Perishing’s father. On June 18, 1863 a young Pershing accompanied his father to the store that morning and at four in the afternoon they were sacked by Raiders. Perishing’s father locked the safe and grabbed young John and his shotgun as they fled the store; this was the

Young Pershing

Young Pershing

General’s first taste of war.[1] Although no one in the family was hurt, the raiders took $3,000 and the lives of several of the towns citizens before a train full of Union Soldiers came to their rescue.[2]

After working a series of jobs with varied success Pershing saw an opportunity to better himself by attending West Point. After a rough testing process Pershing was admitted in 1882. [3] It was during his time at West Point that Pershing first established himself as a leader and was made Captain of the Corps of Cadets. It was during this role that he established his policy on discipline. Pershing stated “If the men of that class have a high regard for discipline and frown upon unbecoming behavior, the other classes follow the example; if there is a laxity in the First Class, or if they are complaining or carless in dress, such faults are reflected in the classes below.” [4] In 1886 Pershing graduated West Point, although not the top of his class academically. His actions as Captain set him apart from the rest of his class and made him a rising star in the United States Army. It was due to his class standing that Pershing was given the opportunity to select his assignment. Seeking glory and adventure, the twenty-six year old Pershing chose the cavalry.

Cadet Pershing at West Point

Cadet Pershing at West Point

The next few years were a time of growth and development for Pershing. Pershing first official assignment was at Fort Bayard in New Mexico as part of a unit that was trying to fight the last of the Apache Indian Tribe in the southwest. Pershing was out on many patrols but never had an opportunity to engage any members of the tribe. Over the next few years Pershing moved from post to post and learned how to lead men in harsh conditions, mostly climate related situations than actual combat. Pershing soon grew tired of roaming the plains and decided to apply for the position of Commander of Cadets at the University of Nebraska. This was a job Pershing excelled at. In just a few years he turned a floundering program into the winners of the National Drill Competition. After his term at the University of Nebraska Pershing was assigned to the Tenth Cavalry; an African American unit of the now famous Buffalo Soldiers.

It was with the Tenth Calvary that Pershing’s life and career would make a drastic shift. Pershing took his command of the Tenth Cavalry very earnestly and during this time of racial tension Pershing found his new job challenging. He soon discovered though that if he gave his men the respect they deserved, they would perform their tasks with extreme diligence. Lieutenant Perishing led the Tenth in rounding up Cree Indians. This was not an easy task as he had to forge through the mountains and his men were fighting outs of small pox. Due to his success Pershing caught the eye of the Commander of the Army, General Nelson Miles. This is when Perishing’s military career began to take off. He was assigned to General Miles staff and from there became an assistant instructor at West Point.

During his time as an instructor at West Point Pershing drove his cadets hard. Biographer Gene Smith state in his book on Pershing that “To his charges he seemed a heartless martinet, rigid, unforgiving, always ready to pounce on the slightest departure from perfect performance, someone seeming ever ready indeed anxious to mark down demerits.” [5] As a result of his hard driving attitude and Perishing’s association with the Tenth Cavalry the cadets nicknamed him “Nigger Jack.” [6] This name would later become Black Jack in public media. His now famous moniker was at first a term of derision and disrespect.

10-cav-san-juanPershing finally got to put his leadership skills into play during combat when the Spanish American War broke out in 1898. Pershing was not enjoying his teaching role and wanted to help on the front lines. The only problem was that he was not allowed to be called into the field due to a military decree that prevented instructors at West Point from doing so. Pershing had to call in every favor he had owed to him and stated he would take any post. Due to his connections, Pershing was finally allowed to leave West Point and was reassigned to the Tenth Cavalry as their captain. Pershing and the Tenth arrived in Cuba ready to fight. Unfortunately for Pershing he did not see any action when the war began. Instead, he was being assigned to various missions, such as picking up Cuban insurgents to help the American cause. Perishing’s first taste of hostile combat came during the Battle of San Juan Hill when the poorly equipped Tenth marched through the most harsh and unforgiving terrain only to be met by the heavily armed and entrenched Spanish. Pershing called it “A veritable hail of shot and shell”. [7] The Americans were out gunned since their weapons were no match for the Spanish. The Tenth took heavy fire and casualties. At one point one of the squadrons from the Tenth got separated from the rest of the unit, so Pershing set out to find them in the midst of the fight. Pershing ran across General Joseph Wheeler just as a shell exploded between the two of them. This incident made an impression on Pershing as he then decided that a fighting general should always be at the front. [8] Another thing that made a lasting impression on Pershing was the courage of the black troops. Pershing later wrote in a memo, “We officers of the Tenth Cavalry could have taken our black heroes in our arms.”[9]

The years following the Spanish American War contained a combination of combat, office work and personal tragedy. Pershing was assigned to a series of desk jobs in Washington DC before being sent to the Philippines in 1889. While there he used military tact and diplomacy to help settle a dispute between the United States and the local tribe. Pershing was again assigned back to Washington and held a desk job for several years. In 1914, he was sent to El Paso, Texas to lead troops for a possible excursion into Mexico. Pershing decided to leave his wife and children behind; a decision he would regret the rest of his life. In 1915 the Pershing house burned down killing his wife and three daughters, the only survivor was his son.[10] This forever changed Pershing. The once vibrant and sometimes even jovial man turned into a cold and withdrawn soul saddled with grief.

On March 14, 1916 Pershing got the orders to go into Mexico for the purpose of hunting down Poncho Villa. Villa had been raiding American

Pershing and staff in Mexico, Pershing 4th from left. Pershings aide, Capt George S. Patton 5th from left.

Pershing and staff in Mexico, Pershing 4th from left. Pershings aide, Capt George S. Patton 5th from left.

towns along the Mexican border and his men were murdering American citizens and stealing their positions. The Mexican expedition proved to be a failure overall as Villa was never captured. However, for Pershing it became a great proving ground as it tested his skills of leadership over such a force and its supply lines. This expedition also proved to be America’s first use of mechanized warfare. By exhibiting this force Pershing saw its potential for future wars. It was also on this expedition that Pershing met a young and eager lieutenant named George S. Patton. Pershing saw a lot of himself in the young officer and soon took him under his wing, which would later be beneficial during World War One.

In 1917 when the United States finally felt they had no choice but to enter the war that was happing in Europe, Pershing was station at Fort Sam Houston in Texas. In the preceding years the United States was desperately trying to stay out of the war that was embroiling Europe. However, after the sinking of the RMS Lusitania as sea, which killed one hundred and twenty eight Americans,[11] and the Publication of the Zimmerman Telegram, in which Germany promised American territory to Mexico, the U.S. entered the war. Pershing was fearful he would be passed over for a command to be a part of the action. He wrote the Secretary of War, Newton Baker, saying “My life has been spent as a soldier, much of it on campaign, so that I am now fully prepared for the duties of this hour.” [12] His plea worked as Pershing was assigned to command the first division in France. However, no decision was made on who would command the entire American Expeditionary Force (AEF). This decision was up to Baker; whom had eliminated candidates due to health reasons and age. Eventually he was left with two individuals: General Leonard Wood and Pershing. Pershing was finally selected due to the fact that he had led a large force before and Wood lacked discretion when speaking in public.

Major General Pershing now had the overwhelming task of putting together an army that was in shambles. Due to years of isolationism the United States Army was nothing but a paper tiger, full of outdated weapons and only a handful of soldiers. After Pershing selected his staff he set off to Europe with the AEF. They had only 550 guns, which was enough ammunition to last through a nine hour firefight, and 55 airplanes, most of which were outdated.[13] During the trip over to Europe Pershing had a staff meeting in which it was decided that 1,000,000 American soldiers were needed to win the war.[14] Pershing arrived in Great Britain to much fan fair and was the highlighted guest at many parties and political gatherings. However, this was not Perishing’s idea of war. He knew that there was work to be done and resented the public spectacle.

During the next few months Pershing was overworked and kept long hours trying to get his men ready for combat. Fourteen thousand young men mustered in front of Pershing on the June 26, 1917 the first of the American forces arrived. The General was unimpressed as he found them to be undisciplined and unkempt. Pershing was also disappointed in the commanders of the First Division, so in order to better fit his ideals he made some changes in the command structure. By October 1917 Perishing felt they were ready to be rotated into the fight.[15] Unfortunately, the Germans learned of the green American troops being transferred and launched an attack first. Although this attack was large in scale and a defeat for the Allies, the American casualties were light with only three Americans killed. When Pershing heard the news he openly wept. [16]

General Pershing In France Leading the American Expeditionary Force (AEF)

General Pershing In France Leading the American Expeditionary Force (AEF)

As the American entered the war it was a devastating time for the Allies. The Allies were losing men by the thousands and America had not yet raised the number of troops to be effective. During their early months of involvement, Pershing only had 175,000 men in Europe, mostly in non-combat related jobs.[17] With the losses suffered by the other Allied forces, France and Britain called for the amalgamation of all forces and to use the American forces as replacements in other units. Pershing was dead set against this idea because he felt it would demoralize the American troops. He also felt distrust for the foreign commanders and feeling did not want American blood spilled because of their incompetence. By the end of 1917 Pershing was still working on the logistics of gathering his force and was playing politics with the French, British and the United States War Department. The American forces still had not seen much action on the front.

It took till the summer of 1918 before Pershing felt comfortable enough with his numbers to issue an order creating the American First Army. This army was then sent into the fray at St. Mihiel, France and prepared for battle. At this time French Marshal Ferdinand Foch made one more push for the amalgamation of French and American forces. Perishing angrily replied, “Here on the very day that you turn over a sector the American army and almost on the eve of an offensive you ask me to reduce my operation so you can take away several of my divisions and assigning them to the French… This virtually destroys the American army that we have been trying for so long.” [18] Foch left the office angered and the issue was dropped for the last time.

During the fall of 1918 the United States army finally entered into the action. Their first major combat action was when they went into the battle

American charge against the St.-Mihiel salient (one doughboy has just taken a hit from German fire)

American charge against the St.-Mihiel salient
(one doughboy has just taken a hit from German fire)

of St. Mihiel. The American forces started off with an artillery barrage and then set forth with a push that went further than their objectives expected them too. The American force took 16,000 prisoners and 450 enemy guns.[19] This was the first major victory for the AEF. This success allowed Pershing to authorize what would be known as the Meuse-Argonne Offensive. Pershing wrote, “Our dogged offensive was wearing down the enemy, who continued desperately to throw his best troops against us, thus weakening his line in front of ours Allies and making their advance less difficult,” when discussing this American success.[20] This push eventually resulted in the depletion of German forces and by the 8th of November Pershing received word that the hostilities would be ending soon. Finally on the 11th of November, 1918 the war ended with the signing of the Treaty of Versailles. This Allied victory was set in motion due to the AEF and Perishing’s leadership.

eterans of World War I parade down 5th Avenue in New York City on Sept. 10, 1919. The parade was held to honor General John J. Pershing and an estimated 25,000 soldiers from the American Expeditionary Force, almost one year after the official end to the war.

eterans of World War I parade down 5th Avenue in New York City on Sept. 10, 1919. The parade was held to honor General John J. Pershing and an estimated 25,000 soldiers from the American Expeditionary Force, almost one year after the official end to the war.

Pershing returned home to a hero’s welcome. Parades were held in Philadelphia and New York in which Pershing faced cheering crowds and adoring children. At one point a little girl handed him some flowers and Pershing broke down; one would only assume it was due to the loss of his own daughters. After that all visits with children had to be screened. Pershing was elevated to Army Chief of Staff before retiring in 1924 because of his age. The Cleveland Plain Dealer wrote about the loss of Pershing to the Army and said “His retirement is a loss to the country; and there is no doubt that when the public becomes acquainted with the circumstances of his retirement, especially the sharp reduction in his pay, it will demand tardy justice for him. Pershing has never stooped to the more obvious devices to obtain popularity; and this fact has strengthened his hold on the country.” [21] After retiring, Pershing gave speeches from time to time; but mostly kept to himself and what was left of his family. Over the years his appearances grew less and less as the General got weaker and finally passed quietly in his sleep in 1948. General Pershing

Carrying the casket of General John J. Pershing to the gravesite at Arlington National Cemetery

Carrying the casket of General John J. Pershing to the gravesite at Arlington National Cemetery

made a lasting impact on those he commanded and befriended over the years. Nothing compared though to the impact the death of his wife and children left on Pershing. Their deaths turned Perishing into the cold, calculated leader that crafted an army and won the First World War

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bibliography

Delgado, James P. Silent Killers: Submarines and Underwater Warfare. Osprey Publishing, 2011.

Lacey, Jim. Pershing. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008.

Palmer, Frederick. John J. Pershing General of th Armies. Harrisburg: The Military Service Publishing Company, 1948.

Perry, John. Pershing Commander of The Great War. Nashville: Thomas Nelson , 2011.

Pershing, John J. My Experienced in the First World War. New York: Da Capo Press, 1931.

Smith, Gene. Until The Last Trumpet Sounds The Life of General of The Armies John J. Pershing. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1998.

Times, The Army. The Yanks Are Coming. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1960.

Vandiver, Frank E. Black Jack The Life and Times of John J. Pershing. College Station : Texas A&M University Press, 1977.

Weir, William. The Encyclopeda of African American Military History. Prometheus Books: Amherst, 2004.


[1] Lacey, Pg. 7

[2] Lacey, Pg. 8

[3] Lacey, Pg. 10

[4] Vandiver, Pg. 41

[5] Smith, Pg. 48

[6] Smith, Pg. 49

[7] Perry, Pg. 41

[8] Perry, Pg. 42

[9] Weir, Pg. 231

[10] Palmer, Pg. 67

[11] Delgado, Pg. 150

[12] Lacey, Pg. 88

[13] Times, Pg. 59

[14] Vandiver, Pg., 700

[15] Lacey, Pg. 127

[16] Lacey, Pg. 128

[17] Lacey, Pg. 130

[18] Lacey, Pg. 152

[19] Pershing, Pg. 270

[20] Times, Pg. 118

[21] Times, Pg.159

San Juan Hill the Battle That Made America a World Power

The Spanish American War was fought in 1898 between Spain, and The United States, it took place in both the Caribbean as well as the Pacific. The United States was forced to get involved in Cuba’s War for Independence following the mysterious explosion and sinking of the USS Maine in Havana harbor Cuba, on February 15, 1898. The war only lasted a few months, yet the United States lost 2,456 lives. Most of which were from disease; however 385 men were lost in battle. Perhaps, the most famous battle of the Spanish American War was the Battle of San Juan Hill on July 1 in Cuba. (1)

The Battle of San Juan Hill was fought between Americans and Cuban Gorillas. The Americans were led by Major General William R. Shafter and Major General Joseph Wheeler, also known as “Fighting Joe.” The Spanish forces were led by General Arsenio Linares.
The United States V Corps, consisting of 17,000 men, was under the command of Major General Shafter. (2) Shafter was born in 1835 in Michigan. Prior to the American Civil War he had no prior military experience and in fact was a school teacher when the war broke out. Shafter served with merit in the Union army and earned the Medal of Honor for heroism during the Battle of Fair Oaks. After the Civil War Shafter stayed in the army and eventually gained the rank of Brigadier General and by the time of the Spanish American War he was appointed Major General.

Left Gen. Wheeler, Middle Major Gen. Shafter Right Gen. Arsenio Linares

Left Gen. Wheeler, Middle Major Gen. Shafter Right Gen. Arsenio Linares

 During the Spanish American War, Major General Shafter and his men faced a few obstacles. At the time of the war, Shafter was an obese man who suffered from gout. His lack of mobility made him very unfit to command an army. Also, his men lacked discipline. These two factors would hurt him in the war. (3) Major General Shafter was given his command due to politics, ironically because many felt he  was not political. This shows that merit and fitness for command did not play into his appointment. Unfortunately, this cost many a young man his life during the Battle of San Juan Hill. Another problem facing  Shafter was the fact that most of his men came from ill trained volunteer regiments. One of these units was the now famous “Rough Riders.” Their commanding officer was a well-seasoned military man, Colonel Leonard Wood. However the second in command was Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, a man with no military experience but high political ambitions seeking the glory of combat.

Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, and the "Rough Riders"

Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, and the “Rough Riders”

The most qualified men of Shafter’s V Corps were the African American men of the Twenty-forth and Twenty-fifth Infantry as well as the Ninth and Tenth Cavalry Regiments. (4) Conversely the African American soldiers may have had issues with one of their commanders, Major General Joseph Wheeler, since he commanded a brigade of Confederate soldiers during the Civil War.
Major General Wheeler graduated West Point in the class of 1859 and was appointed as a Lieutenant in the Dragoons, a Calvary unit of the United States Army. In 1861 Wheeler resigned from the army and joined the Confederate forces. In 1862, he commanded an infantry regiment at Shiloh and through the operations around Corinth, Mississippi. Then during the summer of 1862 he was assigned to be in charge of the Cavalry for General Braxton Bragg’s Army of the Mississippi. He directed a mounted brigade at Perryville and a division at Murfreesboro while fighting in Tennessee. Then Wheeler was put in command of a corps of mounted troopers which he led in the Tullahoma Campaign in 1863. Then at Chickamauga he was in charge of one of the two cavalry corps. Wheeler was later put in charge of all the mounted troops with the Army of Tennessee. Then in 1864, he fought at Chattanooga and led his men in the Atlanta Campaign. During these last two operations he was famous for his raids on the Union supply lines. After the Civil War Major General Wheeler became a businessman and a member of congress. When the Spanish American War came about he offered his generalship and was appointed by President William McKinley. (5)
The Americans faced a formidable opponent in the Spanish. They were led by General Arsenio Linares. He was a professional Spanish Army officer with a large amount of military understanding and battle experience. General Linares was made a Lieutenant in charge of artillery. Later he moved to the infantry where he clashed with rebels in Cuba during the Carlist Wars in Spain, as well as in the Philippians. (6) By 1897 Linares was chosen to be the commanding officer of the Spanish defense force at Santiago, Cuba in preparations for the the coming war. In May of 1898 he was appointed Lieutenant General and was in charge of 35,000 men. Instead of garrisoning them all in Santiago he spread them out all over Cuba to protect against insurgent attacks leaving only about 10,000 in Santiago. This would affect the Spanish forces greatly during the Battle of San Juan Hill. (7)
On June 22, 1898 the American assault force started coming ashore at Daiquiri and Siboney in Cuba. They began to head towards the city of Santiago where General Linares had deployed his Spanish troops along the peaks of San Juan and Kettle Hills, external to the city. The craggy topography and heavy vegetation combined with the lack of roads made anything other than a frontal attack impossible for the Americas. Furthermore outmoded rifles that used black powder exposed shooters positions and slowed their progress. In contrast the Spanish army had bolt action rifles that used new smokeless powder and a few German made machine-guns, but lacked the motivation to defend a Spanish colony as opposed to their homeland. (8) The American assault started early in the morning of July 1 as an attack on the city of El Caney. Major General Shafter grossly under estimated the Spanish and thought this battle would be a quick engagement, but the Spanish army was heavily entrenched and fought with ferocity hurting American progress. (9)

Battle of San Juan Hill Topographic Map

Battle of San Juan Hill Topographic Map

By eleven in the morning many of the American troops had reached the San Juan River, including the “Rough Riders.” They were ordered to the right of the line, so Roosevelt led his men in that direction. He recalled, “The fight was now on in good earnest and the Spaniards on the hills were engaged in heavy volley firing. The Mauser bullets drove through the trees and the tall jungle grass, making a peculiar whirring or rustling sound.” The Rough Riders stayed in a secure position and waited for orders. (10)
By one in the afternoon the American advance was all but halted by the Spanish resistance. A United States Captain at one point crawled into a ditch for cover and discovered over a hundred men lying there. He asked “Are those reserves?” and the reply he received was grave, “No sir by God They are casualties.” All of the men in that trench were dead. The situation was desperate; only a bold move could turn the tide in the Americans favor. (11) The American war correspondent Richard Harding Davis wrote of just how calamitous a predicament the United States Army was in, “Our troops could not retreat, as the trail for two miles behind them was wedged with men. They could not remain where they were for they were being shot to pieces. There was only one thing to do go forward and take San Juan Hills by force.” (12)
Colonel Roosevelt had the same thought and was about to move up Kettle Hill without orders when he was commanded to do so. Roosevelt first looked to the rear, the position he was supposed to be in as the commanding officer. Despite this, he decided that he could command better from the front. From this position Colonel Roosevelt rode between his men shouting orders and encouragement. The “Rough Riders” advanced so far and so fast that they reached the lines of the American infantry troops. Roosevelt later recalled this, “By the time I reached the lines of the regulars of the first brigade I had come to the conclusion that it would be silly to stay in the Valley firing at the hills, because that was really where we were

Teddy Roosevelt and his "Rough Riders" Charge Kettle Hill

Teddy Roosevelt and his “Rough Riders” Charge Kettle Hill

most exposed, and the only thing to do was to try to rush the entrenchments….I waved my hat and we went up the hill in a rush.” Thus began the now famous charge up Kettle Hill, not San Juan Hill as many think. (13) Another misconception about the charge was that it was swift and had a large number of men in fact the opposite was true. War correspondent Davis wrote, “They had no glittering bayonets; they were not massed in a regular array. There were a few men in advance bunched together, and creeping up a steep, sunny hill the tops of which roared and flashed with flame.” (14)

The slow pace of the charge broke when the African American Troopers of the Ninth and Tenth Calvary broke free. This bolstered the spirit of the charge and the American forces rushed up the hill. When Colonel Roosevelt reached the top he came across a barbed wire fence and dismounted his horse; his uniform and elbow pierced by shot. The Spanish seeing the rush of men poured heavy fire onto the American troops, which took shelter in time to witness the American infantry trying charge up San Juan Hill. Colonel Roosevelt ordered his men to give fire support to those advancing men. Then out of nowhere the sound of heavy fire erupted. At first the men under Roosevelt’s command thought it to be the Spanish machine guns, but Roosevelt could discern the sound was coming from the American lines and promptly informed his men “It’s the Gatling’s, men our Gatling’s.” (15)
Using the cover fire from the dismounted cavalry and the Gatling guns Lieutenant Jules Garesche Ord ordered his men of the United States Sixth Infantry forward up San Juan Hill to take the Spanish blockhouse. This charge was a fierce and quick, unlike the one up Kettle Hill. The men of the Sixth gave a cheer as they went up the hill. When they got to the highest point, the Spanish fled in a hurry. Unfortunately, Lieutenant Ord, the first man a top San Juan, was slain.
Despite the tide of battle being turned in the American favorer the battle was not over yet. By two in the afternoon the Americans were spread thin atop the hills as the Spanish made an organized retreat. Furthermore, the battle at El Caney was still raging on and an American officer speaking about the situation in El Caney recalled, “Our situation was extremely serious; we were holding our own and no more, and were losing far more heavily than the enemy.” (16) After appraising the situation in El Caney, Major General Shafter realized he had made a mistake by sending his forces there. This mistake may have been caused by the fact that due to his health and weight. Major General Shafter could not survey the ground in person or lead in the field, so the men in El Caney had to fight it out against a tenacious Spanish army. During this fight the Spanish General Linares took personal command of his soldiers and was wounded. He was carried off the field and replaced.
After almost ten hours of fighting, at four fifteen in the afternoon El Caney was seized by the American forces. A British military observer describes the carnage after the siege, “The trench around the fort was a gruesome sight, floored with dead Spaniards in horribly contorted attitudes and with sightless staring eyes. Others were littered about the slope, and these were mostly terribly mutilated by shell fire. Those killed in the trenches were all shot through the forehead, and their brains oozed out like white paint from a colored tube.” (17) The battle was over with the American narrowly gaining a victory. In the end this action would total 420 lives, 205 Americans and 215 Spaniards. The Americans dug in waiting to make another advance in the upcoming days, but that was not essential due to the American naval victory at Santiago harbor that destroyed the Spanish fleets Caribbean Squadron. By July 17 the residual Spanish forces surrendered.
This battle was significant due to the fact that it bolstered American pride and nationalism as well as making the United States a power on the world stage due to the fact that this victory lead to the US obtaining the territories of Cuba, Puerto Rico and the Philippines. This triumph also gave the American military the experience it needed and exposed issues with the armed forces that needed improvement. For example, the fact that many men died of tropical diseases led to research in yellow fever that all but eradicated the disease, thus making the building of the Panama canal a possibility. Furthermore, many of the men who fought in Cuba would later use that experience to lead men in World War One.

Notes.

1) Lee, R. “The History Guy: Casualties From America’s Wars” retrieved from, http://www.historyguy.com/american_war_casualties.html (8-15-2012)
2) Lt. Col Lanning Michael, The Battle 100: The Stories Behind History’s Most Influential Battles Sourcebooks (April 1, 2005) 109
3) Maj. Gen. William Shafter (1835 – 1906) By Patrick McSherry; retrieved from http://www.spanamwar.com/shafter.htm (8-15-2012)
4) Lanning, 109
5) Joseph Wheeler, Retrieved from http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/jwheeler.htm (8-15-12)
6) Tucker, Spencer, The Encyclopedia of the Spanish-American and Philippine-American Wars: A Political, Social, and Military History ABC-CLIO (January 2009) 338
7) Ibid
8) Lt. Col Lanning Michael, The Battle 100: The Stories Behind History’s Most Influential Battles Sourcebooks (April 1, 2005) 110
9) Ibid
10) O’Toole, G. J. A. The Spanish War: An American Epic 1898, W. W. Norton & Company (August 17, 1986) 310
11) Ibid 314
12) Ibid 315
13) Ibid 316
14) Ibid
15) Ibid 318
16) Ibid 320
17) Ibid