166 THE POLITICS OF INTERVENTION
graphical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the U.S. Military
Academy Supplement, 1900-1910 (Saginaw, Mich., 1910). See also
Bangs, Uncle Sam Trustee, passim.
- Wood to McCoy, September 24, 1906, Wood Papers; Wood to
de Armas, January 18, 1907, Wood Papers; McCoy to Wood, October
18, 1906, McCoy Papers. Among the Wood Papers is a "hello... wish
you were here" telegram sent from Havana by Steinhart, McCoy, Black,
Greble, Foltz, and Ladd.
- McCoy to Wood, October 18, 1906, McCoy Papers. "Undoubtedly
he (Steinhart) was a man of great influence with the Wood Adminis
tration. In the second intervention, he actually controlled Magoon and
was the invisible government." E. H. Crowder to Henry P. Fletcher,
October 29, 1921, quoted in Robert F. Smith, The United States and
Cuba (New York, 1960), p. 25.
- Steinhart to Wood, October 27, 1907, Wood Papers. Steinhart
hoped that Congress would discuss making Cuba a protectorate. Stein-
hart to McCoy, December 31, 1906, McCoy Papers.
- Crowder to Maj. Gen. J. F- Bell, May 20, 1907, Crowder Papers.
- Maj. H. J. Slocum to Col. H. L. Scott, December 15, 1906, Scott
Papers.
"... there are many hours when General Rodriguez and myself and
Other people here look back to those days under General Wood's con
trol." Slocum to McCoy, June 6, 1907, Wood Papers.
- Lt. Col. E. StJ. Greble to Scott, October 10, 1906, Scott Papers.
- Greble to Wood, January 4, 1907, Wood Papers.
- Greble to Wood, June 7 and July 31, 1908, Wood Papers.
- Maj. J. R. Kean to Wood, January 9, 1908, Jefferson R. Kean
Papers, Manuscript Division, University of Virginia Library. The Kean
Papers, which include Kean's official and personal correspondence and
letters received while adviser to the Department of Sanitation, are a
valuable source on the occupation, public health affairs in Cuba, and
the Army's attack on tropical diseases.
- Kean to Maj. M. W. Ireland, April 7, 1907, Kean Papers.
- Kean to Ireland, October 19, 1907, Kean Papers.
- Entry for November 30, 1907, Notebook 10, Bullard Papers.
See also Robert L. Bullard, "How Cubans Differ from Us," North
American Review, CLXXXVI (November, 1907), 416-21.
Magoon was highly displeased with an earlier Bullard article on the
lack of political opportunity for the Cuban Negro, also published in
the North American Review. He considered it too sensitive politically.
When Bullard learned his second article was published, therefore, he
purchased most of the November issues of the magazine when they
reached Havana to prevent their circulation.
- Capt. A. G. Dougherty to Capt. J. A. Ryan, August 8, 1907, File
146-9, CC/PGoC, RG 199.
- E. V. Morgan, Minister to Cuba, to Root, October 17, 1906,
Case 244/334, Num. File, 1906-1910. Vol. XXXVII, RG 59.