Title: Sea Power and Maritime Affairs
1Sea Power and Maritime Affairs
- Lesson 8 The U.S. Navy and American Imperialism,
1898-1914
2Learning Objectives
- Know the influence of the mass media in U.S.
relations with Spain and the effect of the
destruction of the U.S.S. Maine on public
opinion. - Comprehend the impact of Mahanian doctrine on the
naval strategy and thinking in preparation for
and conduct of the war. - Comprehend the reasons for the acceleration of
U.S. Navy expansion following the war with Spain.
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3Learning Objectives
- Know the effect of the Progressive Era in
domestic politics on the Navy. - Comprehend the threats and resultant actions
taken by the U.S. concerning activities in the
Pacific and Caribbean during the period 1900-1914.
4The Spanish-American War
5Causes
- Decreased isolationism in U.S. public and
Congress - Cuban Revolution (1895-1898)
- U.S. investments threatened
- Spanish authorities commit atrocities against
Cuban civilians - Sympathetic to Cubans
6The Fuze
- USS Maine Explosion - February 1898
- Havana, Cuba.
- Mission protect U.S. citizens and property.
- U.S. public angered - blame placed on Spain.
- Free Cuba!
- Remember the Maine!
- President William McKinley
- Congress declares war on Spain -- April 1898.
7USS MaineHavana, Cuba February 1898
8(No Transcript)
9Fighting the War
- Geography
- Spanish Empire- Cuba, Puerto Rico, Philippines,
Guam - U.S. strategic interests
- Panama Canal, Hawaii
- U.S forces
- Atlantic Sampson/Schley
- Asiatic Dewey (China/Japan)
10President William McKinley
11Naval Orders of Battle
- United States
- North Atlantic Squadron
- Sampson based in Key West.
- Schleys Flying Squadron in Norfolk.
- USS Oregon sent from Pacific to Atlantic.
- Asiatic Squadron
- Commanded by Commodore George Dewey at Hong Kong.
- Sent by Assistant Secretary of the Navy Theodore
Roosevelt. - Spain
- Inferior naval forces.
- Montojo - Manila Bay
- Cervera - Cape Verde Islands
12Fighting the War
- Cuba
- Blockade of Santiago harbor (1 May)
- Amphibious landing at Daiquiri (June 20)
- Destruction of Ceveras Fleet (July 3)
- Sampson/Schley command controversy
- Naval Results
13(No Transcript)
14Rear AdmiralWilliam T.SampsonCommanderNorth
Atlantic Squadron
15Rear AdmiralWinfield ScottSchleyCommanderNor
th AtlanticFlying SquadronSpanish-AmericanWar
16AdmiralPascual Cervera
- Commander
- Spanish Fleet
- Battle of Santiago de Cuba
17Battle of Santiago
- American blockade of Santiago Harbor.
- Guantanamo Bay seized by Huntingtons battalion
of Marines. - Amphibious landing at Daiquiri.
- Confusion between Army and Navy Shafter and
Sampson. - Rough Riders Teddy Roosevelt.
- Leads charge at the Battle of San Juan Hill.
- Spanish governor orders fleet to flee harbor - 1
July 1898. - Sampson / Schley command controversy.
- Results and lessons
- Spanish home fleet recalled while en route to the
Philippines - U.S. technological superiority overwhelms
Spanish. - U.S. becomes dominant power in the Caribbean Sea.
- Improvement needed in fire control and amphibious
doctrine.
18TheRough Riders
- Battle of San Juan Hill
- 1 July 1898
19Teddy Roosevelt
20Rough Riders
21USS Oregon Battle of Santiago
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23Battle of Santiago
24Fighting the War
- Pacific
- Philippines Phase I
- Deweys Descent
- Spanish Fleet sunk at anchor
- Dewey national Hero
- Siege of Manila
25CommodoreGeorgeDeweyCommanderU.S. Asiatic
SquadronSpanish-American War
26AdmiralDon PatricioMontojo
- Commander
- Spanish Fleet
- Battle of Manila Bay
27Battle of Manila Bay1 May 1898
- U.S. Asiatic Fleet sails from Hong Kong to
Manila. - Dewey orders increased training and gunnery
practice. - Spanish use shore guns to augment anchored fleet.
- Dewey You may fire when you are ready,
Gridley. - Spanish fleet sunk at anchor.
- Superior American gunnery.
- Dewey becomes a national hero.
- Siege of Manila follows with Army troops.
- War against Aguinaldo's Philippine Nationalists.
- Philippine Insurrection or Filipino-American War-
1899-1902. - U.S. establishes control of entire Philippine
Archipelago.
28Battle of Manila Bay
Philippines
. MANILA
Manila
Manila Bay
Dewey from Hong Kong
29Battle of Manila Bay
30BattleofManila BayYou may fire when ready,
Gridley.
- Commodore George Dewey
31CaptainCharles V.GridleyCommandingOfficerUS
S OlympiaBattleofManila Bay
32Battle of Manila Bay
1 May 1898
33CommodoreGeorge DeweyBattle of Manila Bay
34Battle of Manila Bay
Deweys Flagship
35Fighting the War
- Pacific
- Philippines Phase I
- Deweys Descent
- Spanish Fleet sunk at anchor
- Dewey national Hero
- Siege of Manila
- Other islands- Wake seized, Guam seized, Hawaii
annexed - Philippines Phase II
- War against Philippine Nationalists
- U.S. bogged down
36U.S. Empire Established
- From Spain in 1898
- Puerto Rico
- Guam
- Philippines
- Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba
- (Spain sells other island territories in the
Pacific to the German Empire in 1899.) - Formerly Independent
- Hawaii (Annexed 1898)
- Wake Island - 1899
- American Samoa (Harbor of Pago Pago) - 1899
37American Pacific TerritoriesCoaling Stations for
Ships
38U.S. Navy after the War
- Battle Ships principle warship
- Mahan's advocacy of fleet engagements vindicated.
- Commerce raiding discredited.
- Construction programs to be completed by 1905
- 10 first-rate battleships.
- 4 armored cruisers.
- Global empire yields
- Overseas bases.
- Expanded obligations to protect overseas
interests. - Dewey heads new Navy General Board.
- First U.S. peacetime strategic planning
apparatus. - Missions are to devise war plans and assess
foreign navies capabilities.
39Progressive Era Politics (1901-1914)
- Strong Presidents
- Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and
Woodrow Wilson. - Republican Congress funds battleships and canal
construction. - Large increases in federal budget.
- Large increase in percentage of federal budget
for Department of the Navy. - Dewey and General Board
- Access to Secretary of the Navy and / or the
President on a regular basis due to increased
importance of the Navy.
40Prewar International Concerns1900-1914
- Expanding Interests of Germany, U.S. attention to
Caribbean - Expanding Interests of Japan, U.S. attention in
Pacific
41The Caribbean
- Threat Germany
- U.S. has stake in Caribbean
- Annexation of Puerto Rico
- Naval base in Cuba
- Germany has strong interest in Latin America
- Venezuela Crisis (1902)
- Germany wants base there
- Germany (plus Britain, Italy) blockades to
recover from default on 12.5 million loan
42Roosevelt Corollary to Monroe Doctrine
- Caribbean Sea
- Vital defense of the U.S. - Navy protects access
to Panama Canal. - European relations with Latin America.
- Venezuela Crisis (1902) demonstrates need for
U.S. to ensure European powers need not intervene
in Western Hemisphere.
43The Big Stick
- Theodore Roosevelt (December 1904)
- U.S. obligated in flagrant cases of wrong-doing
or impotence (in Latin America) to the exercise
of an international police power. - Constant interventions by Navy and Marines
- Haiti, Nicaragua, and the Dominican Republic.
- Cuba - Platt Amendment.
- Vera Cruz, Mexico.
- Yankee Imperialism despised by many Latin
Americans.
44Panama Canal
- Renewed U.S. desire for canal in Central America.
- Link between Atlantic and Pacific Fleets.
- Need for the canal is highlighted by USS Oregons
long transit to the Battle of Santiago. - Strong support from President Theodore Roosevelt.
- Essentially Mahanian
45Panama Canal
- Panamanian Revolution against Colombia - 1903.
- Engineered and influenced by U.S.
- Panama Canal Zone ceded to U.S.
- Construction of the canal begins in 1904.
- Completed in 1914.
- Increased importance of U.S. control of Caribbean
Sea. - Protection of Panama Canal is vital to defense of
the U.S.
46U.S. Interests in the Far East
- War Plan Orange
- U.S. Navy plan for war with Japan.
- Defense of the Philippines and defeat of the
Japanese Navy.
47The Open Door
- U.S. Open Door policy in China
- Policy has two aspects.
- (1) Ensure territorial integrity of China.
- (2) Ensure free trade in China for all countries.
- Chinas Boxer Rebellion - 1900
- U.S. Marine Regiment attached to U.S. Army force
protecting Westerners. - Counter European and Japanese attempts at
spheres of influence. - Yangtze River Patrol - U.S. gunboats protect
American commerce.
48The Rise of Japanese Sea Power
49Opening and Modernization
- Commodore M.C. Perry - 1854
- Treaty of Kanagawa
- European powers quickly follow U.S. lead.
- Meiji Restoration - 1868
- End of Tokugawa Shogunates feudal system.
- Emperor restored to power.
- Increased trade with the West.
- Rapid modernization of industry and armed forces.
- Colonial expansion begins on Pacific Islands.
- Japanese Navy
- From the Age of Galleys directly to the Modern
Age. - Skips entirely the Age of Sail.
50Sino-Japanese War1894-95
- Conflict with China
- Ryukus
- Taiwan
- Korea
- Japanese make a surprise first strike.
- Prior to declaration of war.
- Battle of the Yalu
- Chinese fleet takes V formation.
- Japanese divide fleet into two squadrons.
- Outcome Expansion of Japanese Empire in East
Asia. - Korea
- Taiwan (Formosa) and Pescadores
- Port Arthur
51Battle of the Yalu - 17 September 1894
52AdmiralHeihachiro Togo
53Russo-Japanese War 1904-05
- Japan forced to withdraw from Korea and Port
Arthur - Russian Expansion into the Far East
- Trans-Siberian Railway
- Chinese allow Russian construction through
Manchuria. - Russian Naval Base at Vladivostok
- Port Arthur and Manchuria
- Occupied by Russian forces.
- Korea threatened.
- Anglo-Japanese Alliance - 1902
- Attempt by Japan to keep European powers out of
the war. - Japanese strike first again.
- Battle of the Yellow Sea.
54Russian Warships
55Russian Battleship Navarin
56Japanese Battleship Mikasa
57Japanese Battleship Asahi
58Japanese Battleship Shikishima
59Japanese Armored Cruiser Yakuma
60Balance of Power
- Japan
- Disadvantages
- Number of Troops
- Fleet Strength
- Natural Resources
- Advantages
- Strategic Center
- Multiple Naval Bases
- First Strike
- Russia
- Advantages
- Number of Troops
- Fleet Strength
- Natural Resources
- Disadvantages
- Division of Forces
- Three Fleets
- Lines of Communication
- Trans-Siberian RR
- Initial Defensive Strategy
61Battle of Tsushima Strait
- Baltic Fleet commanded by Admiral Zinovi
Rozhestvenski. - Transit to Vladivostok.
- Protection of supply ships.
- Vice Admiral Heihachiro Togo
- Togo Crosses the T -- Decisive Japanese
victory. - Lessons learned
- Rear Admiral Nebogatov - Surrender not an option.
- Heavy armor and guns.
- Semi-independent divisions.
- Dividing the fleet.
- Treaty of Portsmouth - President Theodore
Roosevelt - Port Arthur and Southern Sakhalin ceded to Japan.
- Japan becomes the dominant power in the Far East.
62Increases in U.S. Naval Power
- By 1898
- 4 1st Class Battleships Indiana, Massachusetts,
Oregon, and Iowa. - 2 2nd Class Battleships Texas and Maine.
- 2 Armored Cruisers.
- 10 Protected Cruisers.
- Gunboats, Monitors, Torpedo Boats.
- Modern technology in the fleet
- Steam, armor, and rifled breech-loading guns.
63PresidentTheodore RooseveltandRear
AdmiralRobley D. Fighting Bob EvansPrior to
the sailing of the Great White Fleet - 1907.
64The Great White Fleet
65Route of the Great White Fleet 1907-08
66Technology Improvements
- Improved gunnery
- Smokeless powder.
- HMS Dreadnought - 1907
- First all big-gun battleship launched by Great
Britain. - Makes all other battleships obsolete.
- Battle Cruisers
- Same armament as dreadnoughts but less armor.
- Faster speeds.
- Destroyers - Vital part of fleet - protection
from torpedoes. - Submarines
- USS Holland - 1900
- Diesel engines developed allow greater
maneuverability. - Radios - Improved communications.
67HMS Dreadnought - First all big gun
Battleship. - Eight 12-inch guns.
68HMS Dreadnought
69HMS Dreadnought
70Wright Brothers
- Kitty Hawk, North Carolina
- 17 December 1903
71Eugene Ely
- USS Birmingham (CL 2)
- 14 November 1910
72How it all Started!!!
73Dawn of Naval Aviation
- Wright Brothers -- Kitty Hawk, North Carolina
1903 - Eugene Ely
- First flight of an aircraft from a ship in 1910.
- First landing of an aircraft on a ship in 1911.
- Glenn Curtiss - First seaplane landing - 1911.
- Lieutenant Spuds Ellyson Naval Aviator 1.
- Royal Navy in a similar stage of development in
aviation.
74Dawn of Naval Aviation
- Birthday of Naval Aviation 8 May 1911.
- U.S. Navy purchases two Curtiss biplanes.
- Office of Naval Aeronautics established in 1914.
- Early naval aviation missions
- Scouting location of the enemy fleet.
- Directing naval gunfire.
75Discussion
Next time The U.S. Navy and World War I,
1914-1918