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Patriotism - An American Tradition
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Today In Guard History


Febuary 15 1898

Havana Harbor, Cuba — The USS Maine explodes, killing 260 American Sailors. The reason for this explosion is still questioned today, though most experts now feel it was an accident. Cuba was a Spanish colony, with rebels fighting to win their independence from colonial rule. Many Americans supported the Cubans in their goal of freedom. The Maine was sent as a "good will" gesture by the U.S. toward Spain. When it suddenly blew up in a Spanish controlled port, the newspapers blamed the Spanish for sabotaging the ship. The outcry for revenge finally led America to declare war against Spain on April 25. Over the next few months, 2,500 Citizen-Soldiers from S.C. would join the effort to defeat Spain. On May 28, 1898, President William McKinley appoints S.C. Civil War veteran, Maj. Gen. Matthew Calbraith Butler commander of volunteer forces in the Spanish-American War. As a member of the Cuban Peace Commission, Butler oversees the evacuation of Spanish troops from the island. He is honorably discharged on Apr. 15, 1899.



MAJ Scott Bell
S.C. National Guard Historian
yantse.scott.bell@us.army.mil
(803) 667-1013

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