Spanish American War
Spanish American War (1898-1898) - Triggered by the explosion of the Battleship Maine in Havana Harbor 15 Feb 1898 and declared in April 1898. Hostilities ceased in Aug 1898 and the war was ended by the Treaty of Paris in Dec 1898. As a result of the war the United States gained ownership of the Island of Puerto Rico, Guam and the Philippines.
Mobilization
President McKinley approved the organization of eight army corps, each with three or more divisions with three brigades each. Each brigade was to have three regiments, each regiment with about 1,200 officers and men.
- Regiment 1,200 officers and men
- Brigade 3,600 officers and men
- Division 11,000 officers and men
- Corps 33,000 officers and men
The regular U.S. Army had about 25,000 effective officers and men scattered at posts all over the country, not nearly enough it was thought, to provide an effective invasion force. They were mobilized, concentrated at Camp Alger and Camp George H. Thomas, and finally shipped to the port camps at Tampa, Jacksonville and New Orleans.
President McKinnley issued two calls for volunteers, the first call for 125,000 volunteers was issued with quotas for each state and was meant to mobilize the state National Guard units for Federal service. The regiments were organized by the states at state muster camps and then shipped to Federal camps to be organized into brigades, divisions and corps. Each of the eight corps was to have a camp or camps to organize and train the state units. The organized and trained troops would then advance toward embarkation camps at Tampa, Jacksonville and Fernandia.
The Presidents second call for volunteers was for 75,000 men and since the National Guard units were already depleted these troops would be raw recruits for the most part. Thirteen new regiments were created from this set of volunteers with the designation of U.S. Volunteer Regiments (3 cavalry and 10 infantry) and shipped off to recruit training camps. The regular Army was also expanded to 62,597 officers and men. Raw recruits were necessary for this expansion.
The Army was totally unprepared for this rapid mobilization and influx of 200,000 new troops. The organization and training camps for the eight Army Corps were hastily selected, poorly sited and many lacked even the most basic sanitation needs. Some of the larger camps had to be moved to new locations because of the mistakes in siting and the resulting spread of disease. Had the war not ended so quickly and the troops mustered out so quickly a greater tragedy could have happened. As it was, many of the units that did not go overseas lost personnel to disease and those that did get overseas suffered even greater losses.
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