National Geographic History - 03.2019 - 04.2019

(Brent) #1

REMEMBER


THE MAINE


THENEWSOFTHESINKINGOFTHEMAINEIN HAVANA
INFLAMED AN ALREADY JITTERY AND JINGOISTIC AMERICA.
CAPITALIZING ON THE APPALLING LOSS OF YOUNG LIFE IN
THE EXPLOSION,THE EVER RESOURCEFUL YELLOW PRESS
MANIPULATEDEVIDENCETOTURNTHETRAGEDYINTOA
RALLYING CRY FOR WAR.

REMEMBER THE MAINE!To hell with
Spain!” Up went the cry, amplified by
the American press, after the sinking
of the armored cruiserMaineon the
evening of February 15, 1898. Some
260 sailors, most of them sleeping at
the time, perished when an explosion
near the ship’s powder magazine rent
the forward part of the vessel and sent
it to the bottom of Havana Harbor.
When informed of theMaine’s sink-
ing, Hearst told his editors to “spread
the story all over the page. This means
war.” Joseph Pulitzer’sWorldeditori-
alized that “Nobody outside a lunatic

asylum” would think Spain stupid
enough to do such a thing, but this did
not stop the newspaper from darkly
reporting “Spanish treachery.”
Along with the New York Journal,
theWorld published a so-called sup-
pressed cable from the Maine’s cap-
tain to Navy Secretary John D. Long
saying the explosion was not acci-
dental. The cable was a fake. Hearst
offered a $50,000 reward for solving
the mystery of the Maine’s sinking,
but made it clear whom he consid-
ered guilty. A front-page drawing
two days after the ship went down in

THE SHIP’S COMPANY
OF THE U.S.S.MAINEIN AN
1896 PHOTOGRAPH

OVER OF THE 1898 SHEET MUSICCALLS DOWN VENGEANCE ON SPAIN FOR THE TRAGEDY.

THE MAINE TRAGEDY,
DEPICTED IN A DRAMATIC
CHROMOLITHOGRAPH BY
THE KURZ AND ALLISON
STUDIO, CHICAGO
GRANGER/AGE FOTOSTOCK

DETROIT PUBLISHING/LIBRARY OF CONGRESS

ALAMY/ACI
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