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Topic: Philippine-American War


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In the News (Tue 24 Nov 09)

  
 Philippine-American War - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Philippine-American War was a conflict between the armed forces of the United States and insurgent groups in the Philippines from 1899 through 1913.
''Benevolent Assimilation: The American Conquest of the Philippines, 1899-1903.
"Benevolent Assimilation": The American Conquest of the Philippines, 1899–1903.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Philippine-American_War   (5039 words)

  
 The History Guy: Philippine American War
Many American officers and non-coms had served in the Indian Wars, and thus applied the old belief that "the only good Indian was a dead Indian" to their relations with the Filipinos.
In 1898, Spain fought a losing war with the United States in which her colonies of Cuba, Puerto Rico, and Guam were overrun with relative ease by the U.S. Army and her Atlantic Fleet devastated outside of Santiago, Cuba.
American forces held the capitol of Manila, while Aguinaldo's army occupied a trench-line surrounding the city.
www.historyguy.com /PhilipineAmericanwar.html   (1235 words)

  
 John M. Gates, Ch. 3, The Pacification of the Philippines - Title
American goals for the world in 1900 were not totally incompatible with many of the desires of the liberal revolutionaries in the Philippines, although the United States was clearly a threat to their nationalist aspirations.
Although tensions within the revolution were heightened by the American presence, one important division in Philippine society was masked by it, that between liberal revolutionaries seeking to enhance their political and economic power in a modernizing Philippine state and peasants longing for the stability and continuity of traditional village life.
Considerable evidence exists, however, to support the argument that atrocious acts of war, for all their widespread publicity, were neither the major nor the most important feature of the army's approach to pacification, as the leaders of the Philippine revolution recognized at the time.
www.wooster.edu /history/jgates/book-ch3.html   (5422 words)

  
 Philippines (09/05)
Philippine security forces captured an Indonesian terrorist with links to Jemaah Islamiyah in 2002; he escaped from custody in July 2003, but police pursued and killed him in October.
Philippine soldiers and police have participated in a number of multilateral civilian police and peacekeeping operations, and a Philippine Army general served as the first commander of the UN Peacekeeping Operation in East Timor.
The Philippines is a member of the UN and some of its specialized agencies, and began a 2-year term as a member of the UN Security Council in January 2004, serving as UNSC President in September 2005.
www.state.gov /r/pa/ei/bgn/2794.htm   (6981 words)

  
 The Philippine-American War: Introduction
The San Juan incident and the outbreak of the Philippine American War tilted sentiment in favor of acquiring the Philippines, and thus the treaty was ratified by the U.S. Congress.
This marked the beginning of the Philippine-American War, which lasted for three years until the establishment of the civilian colonial government of Governor-General William Howard Taft on July 4, 1902.
Since the U.S. Congress, like the American public, was evenly split between the anti-imperialists and pro-annexationists, the treaty was expected to experience rough sailing when submitted to the Chamber for ratification.
opmanong.ssc.hawaii.edu /filipino/philam.html   (178 words)

  
 The Philippine-American War (1899-1902) from Filipino-Americans.com
The Americans viewed the fighting as an insurrection, not a war.
Hence, Americans refer to this episode as the Philippine Insurrection, not the Philippine-American War.
During the duration of the war, the Philippines was ruled by the president of the United States in his capacity as commander-in-chief of the United States Armed Forces.
www.filipino-americans.com /filamwar.html   (7214 words)

  
 The Philippine-American War: Links
Other provisions of the treaty include the exchange of prisoners of war; the grant of similar treatment status to Spanish ships as American ships in Philippine ports for ten years; the right of former Spanish colonies to exercise their religion; and the respect of Spanish rights of property in the former colonies.
To rationalize the annexation of the Philippines, U.S. President William McKinley issued the Benevolent Assimilation Proclamation on December 21, 1898 which stated the U.S.’ "altruistic" mission in acquiring the Philippines.
It was estimated that due to war, pestilence, and famine, only 200,000 of the former 300,000 population of Batangas survived.
opmanong.ssc.hawaii.edu /filipino/PAWLinks.html   (732 words)

  
 The Philippine American War: HistoryWiz
It took three years for America to win the Philippine-American war.
War between the Filipinos and the Americans was the result.
His most famous essay satirizing the war in the Philippines was To the Person Sitting in Darkness.
www.historywiz.com /philippines.htm   (491 words)

  
 Philippine American War Atrocities
This was a "dirty" war treacherously begun when the United States from 1899 to 1902 snatched away the gains of the newly-born Philippine republic, and committed atrocities of genocidal proportions in a conflict which was objectively an American war of conquest.
The term "Philippine Insurrection" implies an uprising against an already established American regime in the Philippines where for the most part, the conflict was objectively an American War of conquest, invasion and forcible occupation.
It is also inconsistent with the desire of an increasing number of American taxpayers from U.S. churches, academe, trade unions, professionals, etc. not to use the U.S. armed forces in foreign conflicts and interventionist policies.
www.yonip.com /main/articles/apology.html   (912 words)

  
 Philippine-American War Subject Guide LRC@TCC
The Philippine American War documents from the war.
Philippine-American War Centennial information on cultural, social, political events leading to the war, and related current issues.
Philippine-American War provides comprehensive information about the Philippine-American war, with a focus on important people and events.
www.tcc.edu /lrc/guides/warphil.htm   (173 words)

  
 Spanish American War vs. Philippine American War
The Spanish American War was a global war, being fought physically in the Philippines, Guam, Puerto Rico and Cuba.
The Spanish American War and the Philippine American War:
When the war broke out, the U.S. forces who were present to fight were basically the same forces which had fought in the Spanish American War.
www.spanamwar.com /genealogy6.html   (1404 words)

  
 Philippine American Literary House
For the Filipiniana collector, this is a collection of Telfer's letters during the Philippine American War at the turn of the century.
The Americans occupied the Philippines following the Spanish American War, and educational books such as this one were published in America for use in America's new possession.
An American published textbook used in the Philippines when the Philippines was a U.S. colony, this small book maps, black and white photos, and articles about the different regions of the Philippines.
www.palhbooks.com /used_rare.html   (7672 words)

  
 Workers World Feb. 18, 1999: Philippine-American War of 1899
In the Philippines, the schools were reorganized by U.S. colonial administrators to make sure that an entire generation of Filipinos was miseducated about the war.
The Philippine-American War of 1899 is remembered by Filipinos and by working class and progressive people around the world as the first national liberation struggle fought in Asia against the United States.
This was obviously a war of expansion, but this knowledge did not prevent U.S. officials from lying to both the Filipino patriots and to their own people.
www.workers.org /ww/1999/philip0218.php   (1844 words)

  
 Philippine American War Plaque in Minnesota Capitol
These events make Minnesota the first state in the nation to correct a misleading commemorative concerning the Philippine American War (1899-1902).
The new plaque, designed by Duluth artist Ann Klefstad, now hangs immediately below the offending plaque, which commemorates Minnesota soldiers who volunteered to fight Spanish domination in the Philippines‹but were then ordered to wage war against Filipinos.
To read historian Kyle Ward's (Vincennes University) acclaim for the new plaque as a commemoration of the 13th Minnesota and their role in the Philippine War, click here (Adobe Acrobat 4.0)
www.crcworks.org /plaque.html   (557 words)

  
 Philippine-American War
The Philippine-American War marked the first protracted war in southeast Asia embarked upon by the United States, and showed plainly the horrors of an expansionary military policy.
Pictures and soldiers' letters tell the story vividly.
www.boogieonline.com /revolution/multi/war/philippine.html   (35 words)

  
 Philippines
The Philippine-American War is certainly one of the the most forgotten war in U.S. Military history.
However, the surrender was given by the governor of Manila, not the Spanish governor of the Philippines, who had already left the country.
Ironically, America had, in part gone to war because of the reconcentration camps introduced by the Spanish General, Weyler.
www.spanamwar.com /Philippines.htm   (753 words)

  
 Philippine-American War
Philippine-American War under Emilio Aguinaldo fired on American forces at Manila, starting skirmishes lasting several days.
Before the insurgents were driven out and scattered, 57 Americans were killed and 215 wounded.
This was the beginning of a rebellion against U.S. rule that was the beginning of a rebellion against U.S. rule that lasted until March 23, 1901, when Aguinaldo was captured by General Frederick Funston at Palawan, Luzon.
www.usahistory.com /wars/philippi.htm   (79 words)

  
 Omniseek: /Arts & Humanities /Humanities /History /War /Philippine-American War
Sixty-three colorized photographs of the Philippine-American War that were published in The United States of the World (Chicago: International View Co., 1902).
Mark Twain's writings on the Philippine-American War and both contemporary and recent articles about both his criticisms and his 10-year involvement as a vice president of the Anti-Imperialist League.
Mission Statement of the Philippine-American War (1899-1902) Centennial Initia
www.omniseek.com /srch/{70091}   (412 words)

  
 Omniseek: /Lifestyle /History /War /Philippine-American War
Provides comprehensive information about the Philippine-American war, with a focus on important people and events.
The complete book of 127 photographs published in 1899 during the Philippine-American War.
Historical info on cultural, social, political events leading to the war, and related current issues.
www.omniseek.com /srch/{53579}   (78 words)

  
 The Philippine American War
The war lasted three years, and cost the Americans 10,000 casualties and US $600 million.
The United States, by title of purchase in the 1898 Treaty of Paris, bought the Philippines from Spain, for US$20,000,000.
About 200,000 civilians succumbed to pestilence, disease, and crossfire during the war.
www.msc.edu.ph /centennial/philam.html   (116 words)

  
 Picturesque Old Philippines:
Philippine-American War
The captions are the original ones and show the American point of view (1899)
Their great endurance of hardship and swiftness of foot in carrying heavy burdens were found to be of valuable service to the medical department."
Most of these were so badly wounded that they died before they could be romved.
www.univie.ac.at /Voelkerkunde/apsis/aufi/pop/pop-phaw.htm   (198 words)

  
 Battles
Battles of the Philippine-American War Battle of Mabitac (September 17, 1900) Balangiga Massacre (1901)...
Battles of the Spanish-American War The following are known Battles of the Spanish-American War.
Battles of the Mexican-American War The following are known Battles of the Mexican-American War.
www.brainyencyclopedia.com /topics/battles.html   (198 words)

  
 Philippine-American War - free-definition
One is that calling the war the Philippine Insurrection made it appear to be a rebellion against a lawful government, when, in fact, the only part of the Philippines under American control was Manila.
During the war, 4,234 American soldiers were killed and 2,818 were wounded.
Subsequent American defeats at Mabitac and Balangiga were not, however, sufficient to turn the tide of the struggle.
www.free-definition.com /Philippine-American-War.html   (198 words)

  
 American Civil War --  Encyclopædia Britannica
The war followed more than a decade of growing estrangement between the British crown and a large and influential segment of its North American colonies that was caused by British attempts to assert greater control...
The bloodiest battle of the Civil War began as an unplanned skirmish.
The Treaty of Paris (1898) transferred Philippine sovereignty from Spain to the United States but was not recognized by Filipino leaders, whose troops were in actual control of the entire...
www.britannica.com /eb/article?tocId=9006104   (198 words)

  
 Spanish-American
During this pause the first Philippine Scout units were organized and large numbers of additional troops began to arrive, bringing the strength of the American force (Eighth Army Corps) to some 47,500 men by the end of the year and 75,000 a year later.
The Americans were forced to hug the ground at the edge of the clearings, and strain their eyes for moments when they could catch a glimpse of the enemy.
As the American troops boarded the transports for their trip back to the United States, they were issued summer uniforms - just in time for the sharp sea breezes and chilly nights at Montauk Point.
www.22ndinfantry.org /spanishamerican.htm   (198 words)

  
 Philippine News Online: Veterans: One war won, many battles lost
Quesada, U.S. representative of the Veterans Federation of the Philippines (VFP) who is based in Nevada, is one of the tireless FilAm war veterans lobbying Congress to address the plight of Filipino World War II veterans.
The war in the Pacific robbed them of their youthful years; the current war they are fighting robbed them of their pride and dignity.
He said it was common knowledge during this time that it would have cost the Americans some $3 billion to cover the wages, benefits and allowances of the thousands of Filipino soldiers tapped by FDR to fight under the Usaffe.
www.philippinenews.com /news/view_article.html?article_id=f7faf2ecabda4b0e5736fa035752e2b2   (198 words)

  
 Spanish American War
Texas was also represented in the service in the Philippine Islands by the 33rd United States Volunteer Infantry, which was organized at San Antonio, Texas, under Colonel Luther R. Hare, a native Texan of the regular army, afterwards promoted to Brigadier General of volunteers for gallantry.
No artillery was called for from Texas during the war but all the artillery organizations signified their desire to serve the country and used their influence to its fullest extent in efforts to get into the service.
In 1897, before a state of war was declared to exist between the United States and Spain, only two incidents of importance occurred in the Texas Volunteer Guard.
www.kwanah.com /txmilmus/tnghist15.htm   (198 words)

  
 Philippine History: Filipino-American War
The American people, at that time, were being fed with lies by their own government as far as its war of aggression in the Philippines was concerned.
The Philippine-American War was, therefore, a war of aggression, on the one hand, and the continuation of a war of national liberation, on the other.
The strength of the Philippine revolutionary armed forces was enough to defeat the Spaniards, but not enough for the sheer might of the reinforced American invasion and occupation forces.
www.tribo.org /history/american.html   (198 words)

  
 Films from Spanish-American War and Philippine Revolution
This occurrence led to the Spanish-American War, a war that brought the United States to prominence as an imperial power.
From the Spanish-American War onward, the American public would only be as far away from war as they were from a motion picture or television screen.
A lesser-known fact is that the Spanish-American War was also the first U.S. military conflict that was documented on film.
www.loc.gov /loc/lcib/9803/film.html   (198 words)

  
 The Spanish American War
Victory in the Spanish American War made the U.S. a nation with global interests.
April 24 - The Spanish American War officially began when Spain declared war on the U.S. The following day Congress passed a declaration of war, effective April 21.
Many other Americans, however, talked of manifest destiny and the duty of the U.S. to spread its form of civilization far and wide.
www.usahistory.com /wars/spanamer.htm   (198 words)

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