Bibliography
PRIMARY SOURCES
Archival Material and Manuscripts
Public Records.—The records of the agencies of the United
States government involved in the intervention and occupation
of Cuba held by the National Archives of the United States,
Washington, D.C., are numerous. Of first importance are the
Records of the Provisional Government of Cuba (Record
Group 199), which include the Confidential Correspondence
of the Provisional Governor of Cuba, public health and fiscal
reports, and cartographic records. These documents run heav
ily to reports of political and administrative affairs and eco
nomic conditions. Additional materials concerning the Provi
sional Government are located in the case files in the General
Classified Files, 1898-1945, of the Bureau of Insular Affairs,
War Department (Record Group 350). The diplomatic corre
spondence, including private letters, post reports, newspaper
clippings, and other documents, is part of the Numerical File,
1906-1910 (1,172 volumes) and consular Dispatches in the
General Records of the Department of State (Record Group
59). The military records are voluminous. The most useful
source is the Records of the War Department General Staff
(Record Group 165), which include reports from the Army
of Cuban Pacification in the papers of the Military Informa
tion Division, and the documents in the Army War College
Document File, 1903-19, in the records of the Army War
College Division. Of almost equal value are the Records
of the Adjutant-General's Office (Record Group 94), for