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A Case of Guilt, Shame, or Amnesia? A Case of Guilt, Shame, or Amnesia?

A Case of Guilt, Shame, or Amnesia? - PowerPoint Presentation

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A Case of Guilt, Shame, or Amnesia? - PPT Presentation

The PhilippineAmerican War Kevin M Mariano 5 Focus Questions What lessons can be learned from studying the PhilippineAmerican War and should it be more of a focus in American public education ID: 693481

filipinos american 000 war american filipinos war 000 philippine philippines public dead americans men filipino conflict sources spanish military

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Slide1

A Case of Guilt, Shame, or Amnesia?The Philippine-American War

Kevin M. Mariano Slide2

5 Focus Questions

What lessons can be learned from studying the Philippine-American War and should it be more of a focus in American public education

? Explain.

 

E

xplain

the impact that guerilla tactics had on both the Americans and Filipinos

.

Why did Gen

. Emilio Aguinaldo

try

to appeal to both the American government and the American

public?

 D

etermine

if the Philippine-American war is a case of "Guilt, Shame, or Amnesia" for the American public and how this should be

addressed?

Examine the

use of learning with textbooks and learning with primary sources: why is it valuable to learn from different sources and why are textbooks often limited in their information?Slide3

Spanish American War

Background (Review)1854 U.S. wants to buy Cuba from Spain

1886 American Sugar Plantations

1895 Cuban revolutionaries destroy American property

 why?

General “Butcher” Weyler Yellow JournalismDeLome Letter ScandalU.S.S. MaineSlide4

“REMEMBER THE MAINE!”

Feb 18,1898 USS Maine suddenly blows up in Havana Harbor260+ US men died

Cause? Initially, people thought that Spain was responsible

$50,000 reward!Slide5

Yellow Journalism

A type of journalism that downplays legitimate news in favor of eye-catching headlines that sell Slide6

Spanish-American War

April 1898 McKinley asks Congress for permission to use force against SpainThe Philippines

11,000 Americans joined forces with Filipino rebels

George Dewey – friends with T. Roosevelt. - commander of Navy’s Asiatic squadron – May 1

st

: enters Manila Bay with superior fire power – Spanish surrender in 1 day – 381 Spanish dead – 1 American deadSlide7

DATES OF CONFLICT:

BEGAN: February 4, 1899

ENDED: July 4, 1902 (This is the "official" end of the war, as proclaimed by U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt. Fighting continued on several islands for years to come.)

CAUSES: the U.S. government's quest for an overseas empire and the desire of the Filipino people for freedom

a clash between the forces of imperialism and nationalism.

CASUALTY FIGURES (estimated):U.S.-- 4,234 dead and 2,818 wounded. Philippines-- 20,000 military dead and 200,000 civilian dead

Some historians place the numbers of civilian dead at 500,000 or higher.UNIQUE FACTS OR TRENDS:

This was the first major land campaign fought by the U.S. outside of the Western Hemisphere. 2. The Philippine-American War can be considered America's first "Imperialistic" conflict.Slide8

Philippines

Annexation of the Philippines – McKinley said “must take them all and educate the Filipinos and uplift and Christianize them”

 Philippines becomes central issue around which U.S. imperialism is debated –

Feb. 1899 Philippines annexed by U.S

.

Philippine-American War – Jan. 1899 Emilio Aguinaldo declares Philippines independent  Feb. armed conflict – Guerilla Warfare

When else was the U.S. involved in conflict against native peoples?

How was this fight different?

No reservations (to settle on)

No railroads/American settlers

Must pacify Filipinos not just defeat them b/c US citizens are not “moving there”Slide9
Slide10

USA Artillery v.

Filipino ArtillerySlide11

Guerrilla Warfare

the irregular warfare and combat in which a small group of combatants use mobile military tactics in the form of ambushes and raids to combat a larger and less mobile formal army Slide12

Balangiga

Massacre, September 28, 1901

Company C, 9th US Infantry = 1

st

month = fraternization with Filipinos (romance, parties, baseball, competitions/demonstrations)

September 22, 1901- Two drunken US soldiers molest Filipino girl

 girl’s two brothers mauled the men, not killed

Valeriano Abanador – local chief, mastermind of Filipino guerilla attack

- Women/children escorted out in the middle of the night - August 28th, at 6:45am: 34 Filipinos cross dressed “as worshipers”

Abanador

stole US soldier’s gun, hit him in the head, and yelled,“

Atake

,

mga

Balangigan

-on! (Attack, men of

Balangiga

!).

A bell in the church tower was rung seconds later, to announce that the attack had begun.

500 Filipinos hack Americans to death; close combat

Most Americans initially defend themselves with chairs, utensils

Filipinos retreat when remaining US organize their weapons

Effects:

48 of 76 US men killed; of 26 remaining, 22 severely wounded

Filipinos also took 100 rifles with 25,000 rounds of ammunition; 28 Filipinos died and 22 were wounded

US wants revengeSlide13

Reactions to

Balingiga

Massacre

US public shocked

US newspapers: “…the worst disaster suffered by the U.S. Army since Custer's last stand at Little Big Horn.”

Maj. Gen. Adna R. Chaffee,( military governor for the “unpacified” areas of the Philippines),to the media: “The situation calls for shot, shells and bayonets as the natives are not to be trusted… If you should hear of a few Filipinos more or less being put away don't grow too sentimental over it."

Chaffee informed his officers that it was his intention "to give the Filipinos 'bayonet rule' for years to come."

President Theodore Roosevelt ordered Chaffee to adopt "in no unmistakable terms," the "most stern measures to pacify Samar."

After the massacre at Balangiga, US General Smith issued his infamous Circular No. 6, and ordered his command thus: "I want no prisoners" and "I wish you to kill and burn; and the more you burn and kill, the better it will please me." Then he tasked his men to reduce Samar into a "howling wilderness," to kill anyone 10 years old and above capable of bearing arms. Slide14

How did America try to pacify the

Filipinos?

“Civilization”: Built railroads, telegraph lines, telephone lines, schools bridges (but did Filip. want/need this? Who does it “really” help?)

Torture, called Filipinos “niggers” or “gugus,” massacred, herded 300,000 civilians into concentration camps

Hypocrisy?Slide15

The “Cost” of Philippine- American War

(From class text: The Americans. McDougal

Littell

. Evanston, Illinois. 1998): “20,000 Filipinos rebels die” // 4,000 US”

San Juan, Jr. Article: 1.4 million Filipinos died (1,400,000)

 who is telling the truth?$400 million = 20 times what the US paid for the islandsAnti-Americanism

Growing RacismNew Resources to US Geographically: greater

presence in Asia (China. Boxer Rebellion)

http://waterboarding.org/firsthandSlide16

Assessment (use at least four sources overall)

With this background knowledge, use the primary sources, and the San Juan Jr. Article, to answer either of the following Inquiry Questions in essay format:

What lessons can be learned from studying the Philippine-American War and should it be more of a focus in American public education

? Explain.

Determine

if the Philippine-American war is a case of "Guilt, Shame, or Amnesia" for the American public and how this should be addressed?