The Spanish American War, which lasted
from March to December in 1898, was a short war; but
it was significant in bringing the United States into
the world arena as a major power. The United States
defeated the Spanish forces in naval and land battles
in the Philippine Islands, in Cuba, and in Puerto Rico.
In many ways, the war was a comedy of errors and a "lark"
for Americans, who saw the war as a romantic adventure
to save the native Filipinos and Cubans from the oppressive
Spanish government and to defend the honor of the United
States.
Like other states, Utah became involved in the war when
the federal government called for 125,000 volunteers
to augment the small regular army of the United States.
Utah's original quota of volunteers was 425, but by
the end of the conflict Utah had sent 800 troops. Most
Utahns served in units organized within the state which
were formerly National Guard units; but because of a
technicality in the law, the National Guardsmen were
prohibited from serving outside the boundaries of the
United States. The states got around this technicality
by having the guardsmen resign and then reenlist as
members of federal units. The units from Utah that served
in this fashion were batteries A and B of the Utah Light
Artillery; Troop A, Utah Cavalry (regular cavalry);
and Troop I of Torrey's Roughriders (a special troop
of mounted riflemen). Most of the enlistment into the
artillery batteries A and B, Utah Volunteers, came from
the National Guard of Utah A and B batteries; and Troop
A, Utah Cavalry, came mostly from the National Guard
Cavalry Troop C. Torrey's Regiment was designated as
special cavalry for the state and was recruited from
throughout the state. Company K of Engineers, 2nd Engineer
Regiment, U.S. Volunteers, was recruited from Salt Lake
City, and another two hundred men from Utah were recruited
into the 4th U.S. Cavalry, the 14th U.S. Infantry, and
the 11th U.S. Cavalry. In addition, two Afro-American
regiments--the 24th Infantry, Regular Army, stationed
at Fort Douglas, and the 9th Cavalry, Regular Army,
stationed at Fort Duchesne in eastern Utah--left the
state to fight in the Cuban and Philippines campaigns.
The service rendered by each of these units varied:
some saw military action; others were stationed in areas
of the United States and Hawaii. Batteries A and B,
Utah Light Artillery, were mustered in on 9 May 1898
and proceeded to the Manila campaign in the Philippines.
The officers appointed to lead these units were Captain
Richard W. Young (a West Point graduate, former regular
army artilleryman, and a son of Brigham Young), and
Captain Frank Grant (who had served in the Utah National
Guard as a colonel). In the Philippines, these units
fought as the 2nd Brigade, 2nd Division. The American
campaigns resulted in the capture of Manila and the
surrender of the Spanish troops on 14 August 1898.
After the defeat of the Spanish troops, the war moved
into the Philippine Insurrection phase, in which the
Americans fought against the Filipinos who were trying
to gain their independence. American troops, assisted
by the Utah Artillery until 1899, continued to fight
until the insurrectionists were defeated in 1901. Utah
A and B batteries left the Philippines on 24 June 1899,
having fought in more than one hundred engagements and
suffering casualties of fifteen men killed by fighting
or disease and fourteen others wounded.
The other Utah troops to see action were the black units,
the 24th Infantry Regiment and the 9th Cavalry Regiment,
who were engaged at San Juan Hill in the fight for Santiago,
Cuba. These troops left Fort Douglas, Utah, on 20 April
and returned to Fort Douglas on 2 September 1898. They
were noted for their heroic attack up San Juan Hill
and for their humane nursing of yellow fever patients
at Siboney Hospital in Cuba. The 24th and 9th regiments
returned to Fort Douglas after the Cuban campaign; however,
in 1899 members of these units were reassigned to other
posts in the United States. The leadership of their
commander, General J. Ford Kent, was highly praised
during the war.
The other units from Utah did not get opportunity to
prove their gallantry in war. Troop I of Torrey's Roughriders,
led by Utah Adjutant General John Q. Cannon, spent the
period from 11 May to 24 October 1898 in federal service,
most of the time in camp at Panama Park, Jacksonville,
Florida. They suffered from the heat and many became
sick with malaria and dysentery; some from the regiment
died. The First Troop of Utah Cavalry, under the command
of Captain Joseph E. Caine, did guard duty in Yosemite,
Sequoia, and General Grant parks in California. Their
duty was to patrol the parks to insure that these areas
were protected from any threats from herdsmen of Spanish
descent who tended sheep and cattle there. Artillery
Battery C assumed post duties on Angel Island in San
Francisco Bay; and Company K of Engineers spent the
war near Diamond Head Mountain on Oahu, Hawaii, constructing
permanent military barracks.
As units of the Utah Volunteers began to arrive home,
Governor Heber Wells proclaimed the arrival day of Batteries
A and B--19 August 1898--a holiday. A special "arch
of triumph" was placed at 200 South and Main streets
in Salt Lake City; a parade, with almost all of the
volunteers represented, marched through Salt Lake City;
and festivities and speeches at Liberty Park honored
the soldiers.
Richard C. Roberts