Friday, October 25, 2019
The Rough Riders :: essays papers
The Rough Riders    Towards the end of the nineteenth century, William McKinley defeated  Grover Cleveland for the presidency and there was a huge push for the  United States of America to expand beyond its continental boarders.    (Lorant, p. 281)  With an enthusiasm for a new urge for international  Manifest Destiny, the American people wanted to match Europe^s imperial  power by making America^s weight felt around the world. (Boger p.714)    The extent of expansionism was felt in the Pacific Ocean with the  occupation of the Hawaiian Islands and Guam, but the most famous  example of Americas enthusiasm for international assertiveness came in  the Caribbean with the war for Cuban independence against Spain. (Boger  p.714)  The Spanish-American war was a war that made the United States  emerge as a world power and has sense been thought of as the most  popular war in American history. (Lorant, p. 281)  As John Hay had  said, ^It has been a splendid little war, begun with the highest  matters, carried on with mag!  nificent intelligence and spirit,  favored by the fortune which loves the brave.^ (Lorant, p. 297)  Words  that truly captured the feelings of all Americans at the time.  In the  American people^s eyes, the war was not won by political jargon or a  decisive Naval campaign, but by a rugged Lieutenant Colonel and his  band of outlaws, cowboys, and Harvard polo-players, more commonly known  as the Rough Riders. (Lorant, p. 295)  Although the war was not won by  Roosevelt^s Rough Rider charge up San Juan Hill, the battle gave the  war its romantic essence, which still fills history books today.    Roosevelt^s Rough Riders were a key part in the fight for Cuban  Independence by brave yet unconventional means that made them one of  the most popular fighting forces in American history.    Soon after McKinley^s presidential victory in 1896, he appointed  Theodore Roosevelt to the office of Assistant Secretary of the Navy  under John D. Long. (Lorant, p. 281)  The main problems of the time  were the occupation of Cuba by Spain and the fact that relations with  Spain were steadily worsening.  American sympathy was with the Cubans  who were rebelling against the corrupt and evil Spanish overlords.    (Lorant, p. 281)  Americans attitude towards the Cuban people was  mainly on humanitarian motives, but other reasons came into play to  push the United States into a fight.  The first reason was being  economic. (Lorant, p. 281)  The trade with Cuba, which had been one  hundred million dollars in 1893, was badly disrupted by the  insurrection. (Lorant, p. 281)  Another reason was geo-political.  					    
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