USS Maine
(ACR-1), a 19th-century
ship of the
United States Navy, exploded and
sank on February 15, 1898 in an event that precipitated the
Spanish–American War
and also popularized the phrase
Remember the Maine, to Hell
with Spain! In subsequent years, the cause of the sinking of
the
Maine became the subject of much speculation. The
cause of the explosion that sank the ship remains an unsolved
mystery.
Construction
The Maine,
the first US Navy ship to be named for the state of Maine
, was a
6,682-ton second-class pre-dreadnought battleship originally designated as Armored
Cruiser #1. Maine and were unusual in that their
armament was mounted
en échelon, projected off to either
side (
Maine's forward turret was off to starboard and her
aft turret to port; the arrangement was reversed on
Texas), following a similar design of the Brazilian
battleships
Riachuelo and
Aquidabã. This
severely limited their ability to fire on a broadside.
Maine was the stronger of the two ships, but inferior in
every way to the later
Indiana-class coastal
battleships and subsequent ships.
Congress
authorized her construction on 3 August 1886, and her keel was laid down on 17 October 1888, at the Brooklyn Navy
Yard
. She was
launched on 18 November 1889,
sponsored by Miss Alice Tracey Wilmerding (granddaughter of Navy
Secretary
Benjamin F. Tracy), and
commissioned on 17 September 1895, under
the command of Captain
Arent
S. Crowninshield.
Sinking

Wreckage of the
Maine,
1898
The
Maine spent her active career operating along the East Coast of the United
States and the Caribbean
. In January 1898, the Maine was sent
from Key West,
Florida
, to Havana
, Cuba
, to protect
U.S. interests during a time of local insurrection and civil
disturbances. Three weeks later, on 15 February at 9:40
p.m., an explosion on board the
Maine occurred in the
Havana Harbor. Later investigations revealed that more than of
powder charges for the vessel's guns had detonated, virtually
obliterating the forward third of the ship. The remaining wreckage
rapidly settled to the bottom of the harbor. Most of the
Maine's crew were sleeping or resting in the enlisted
quarters in the forward part of the ship when the explosion
occurred. Two hundred and sixty-six men lost their lives as a
result of the explosion or shortly thereafter, and eight more died
later from injuries. Captain
Charles Sigsbee and most of the
officers survived because their quarters were in the aft portion of
the ship. Altogether, there were only 89 survivors, 18 of whom were
officers. On 28 March, the US Naval Court of Inquiry in Key West
declared that a
naval mine caused the
explosion.
The explosion was a precipitating cause of the
Spanish-American War that began in
April 1898. Advocates of the war used the rallying cry, "Remember
the
Maine! To hell with Spain!"The episode focused
national attention on the crisis in Cuba but was not cited by the
William McKinley administration as
a
casus belli, though it was
cited by some who were already inclined to go to war with Spain
over their perceived atrocities and loss of control in Cuba.
Causes of the sinking
Because of the uproar the sinking of the
Maine caused in
the United States,
President
McKinley demanded an immediate investigation into the cause of
the explosions. A U.S.
Naval Court of Inquiry arrived in Havana
and began
its investigation. Survivors and eyewitnesses testified for
the court, and several navy divers explored the sunken ship, hoping
to find clues as to what may have caused the disaster. All parties
involved concluded without a doubt that the explosion of the
forward six-inch (152 mm) ammunition magazines had caused the
sinking. Why those magazines had exploded, no one could determine
conclusively, and doubt remains as to the exact cause to this day.
There have been four major investigations into the sinking since
1898. From the four inquiries, two hypotheses have emerged: one,
that a mine in
Havana Harbor had
exploded underneath the battleship, causing the explosion of the
magazines; and two, that spontaneous combustion of the coal in
bunker A16 created a fire that detonated the nearby
magazines.
External mine hypothesis

Wreck of the U.S.S.
No one then, or today, disputes the fact that the overall
destruction of the ship was due to the explosion of some of her
magazines. What caused the magazines to explode, however, has been
debated since the day the ship sank. Some evidence suggests that
the initiating cause of the magazine explosion was an external
explosion.
The hypothesis that a mine, allegedly planted
by the Spanish as a way to deter the efforts of the United States
to take Cuba
, is the
assumption that some Americans came to immediately after the
sinking. This also provided the stimulus for war that many
Americans had been seeking.
If there was a mine, was it detonated accidentally, by insurgents,
by an insubordinate Spaniard, or by Spanish authorities acting
under orders? The last possibility is least likely because no
testimony or documentation or specific accusation has ever been
found. The mine could have been placed to defend the harbor and
unintentionally drifted to where the
Maine was moored.
Alternatively, the mine could have been used by Cuban rebels in the
hopes that the attack on the
Maine would be blamed on the
Spanish and so trigger a war between the United States and
Spain.
Some, but not all, of the witnesses stated that they heard two
distinct explosions several seconds apart. They believed if
anything else besides a mine had triggered the magazine explosion,
then witnesses would have only heard one blast, because the only
explosion would have been of the magazines, unless all of the
munitions contained in the magazine did not explode in the primary
explosion and instead exploded sequentially in the resulting fire
(which did occur). They thought the only reason that two explosions
would have been heard was if something besides the magazine had
exploded, such as a mine. However, due to the difference in the
speed of sound through water and through air, some witnesses may
have sensed a single explosion twice - first shock through the
water, followed by the airborne sound of the blast.
Another piece of evidence of an external mine were the observations
of divers who examined the bottom plates of the
Maine.
Three bottom plates were bent inward. If an internal explosion had
occurred, the bottom plates, they thought, would have been bent
outward, away from the explosion, and an external blast would have
blown the plates inward, consistent with the evidence. Also, a
large hole was noticed on the floor of Havana harbor, and was
presumed from the theorized external explosion. Although, it could
be argued that an explosion of the magnitude caused by the
Maine's magazines could also have put a hole in the harbor
floor.
Nevertheless, problems with the external mine theory remained. One
was the absence of dead fish in Havana harbor the next day.
Assuming that fish lived in the polluted waters of the harbor, many
of them should have been killed if a mine exploded in their
habitat, but no one reported seeing any floating in the harbor.
Second, no one reported seeing a jet of water thrown up during the
event. A common sight during the
underwater explosion of a mine is a
column of water emerging on the surface above them. Third, some
contemporaneous experts believed that the few bottom plates found
to be bent inward could be just as plausibly explained by the
physical forces acting on the sinking ship, and thus did not
necessarily indicate an explosion external to the ship.
Coal bunker fire hypothesis
Since the time of the explosion in 1898, many have advocated the
theory that an internal explosion had sunk the
Maine,
basing their conclusion on the coal bunker fire theory. Supporters
of this theory believe that
spontaneous combustion of the coal in
bunker A16 created a fire that detonated the nearby magazines,
which shared a common uninsulated steel wall with bunker A16.
Spontaneous combustion of coal was a fairly frequent problem on
ships built after the
American Civil
War. This type of fire occurs when the surface of freshly
broken coal is exposed to air. The coal surface oxidizes, producing
heat. When the coal reaches a temperature of about 750-800 °F
(400-425 °C), the coal will begin to burn. The heat from the fire
could have transferred to the magazines, which would have triggered
the explosion. And in fact, during the
Spanish-American War several ships
sustained damage when the bituminous coal in their bunkers ignited.
These fires were difficult to detect because they could smolder for
hours at low heat, giving off no smoke or flame and without raising
the temperature high enough to trigger the alarm systems on
board.
Reports indicate that bunker A16 on the
Maine had been
inspected for the final time on 15 February at 8:00AM. This would
have allowed ample time for a coal bunker fire to smolder and cause
the type of disaster that befell the ship later. Still, when bunker
A16 was inspected that morning, the reported temperature was only ,
and the
Maine's temperature sensor system did not indicate
any dangerous rise in temperature later. Furthermore, the
discipline on the
Maine was reported to be excellent, and
regular inspections of coal bunkers for hazards, as well as the
implementation of precautions for preventing bunker fires, were
diligently carried out under the supervision of the ship's cautious
executive officer
Richard
Wainwright. In addition, the likeliness of a spontaneous
ignition of coal decreases over time, as the older the coal is the
less likely it is to self-ignite. On USS
Maine, the coal
had been exposed to the air for a period of two months, which is
more than double the amount of time recommended by the US Navy.
Finally, the type of coal used onboard the USS
Maine was
known as Low-Volatile bituminous coal which was not known to
self-ignite. These idiosyncrasies have given rise – then and now –
to debate over the coal bunker fire argument’s legitimacy.
False flag conspiracy hypothesis
It has been suggested by some that the sinking was a
false flag operation conducted by the U.S.
- Mikhail Khazin,
a Russian economist who once ran the cultural section at Komsomolskaya Pravda, speaking in a 2008 Pravda
interview of the need in troubled times to change the psychology of
society, to unite it, said that "the Americans blew up their own
battleship Maine".
- Richard
Williamson, bishop of the Society of St. Pius X, thinks that
"There is serious reason to believe – that in 1898, it was not the
Spaniards who sank the 'USS Maine'; that in 1917, it was not the
Germans who set up the 'Lusitania' as a target; that in 1941 it was
not the Japanese who set up Pearl Harbor for attack; that in 1963
it was not Lee Harvey Oswald who killed President Kennedy".
- Eliades Acosta,
a prominent Cuban historian, head of the CCP's Committee on Culture and former
director of the Jose Marti National Library in Habana, offered the
standard Cuban interpretation of the sinking of the Maine: that the
United States itself probably did it, in an interview to
The New York Times. But
Dr. Acosta adds that "Americans died for the freedom of Cuba, and
that should be recognized".
- Cuban officials argue that the United States
may have deliberately sunk the ship to create a pretext for
military action against Spain. The wording on the monument
describes the Maine's sailors as "victims sacrificed to the
imperialist greed in its fervour to seize control of Cuba", which
"alludes to the theory that U.S. agents deliberately blew up their
own ship to create a pretext for declaring war on Spain". (The
United States occupied Cuba between 1898 and 1902 and, as promised
in the Teller Amendment, did not
attempt to annex the island.)
The investigations
In addition to the inquiry commissioned by the Spanish Government
to naval officers Del Peral and De salas, four major investigations
have been conducted to find the actual cause of the sinking of the
Maine. Two Naval Courts of Inquiry were held in 1898 and
1911, and two major private investigations commissioned by Admiral
Hyman G. Rickover in 1976 and the National
Geographic Society
in 1999, all revealed different conclusions.
The debates on the sinking of the
Maine rest on evidence
uncovered through these four investigations.
Del Peral and De Salas Inquiry
The Spanish inquiry, conducted by Del Peral and De Salas, collected
evidence from officers of naval artillery who had examined the
remains of the Maine. Additional observations included that 1) had
a mine been the cause of the explosion a column of water would have
been observed; 2) the wind and the waters were calm on that date
and hence a mine could not have been detonated by contact but using
electricity, but no cables had been found; 3) no dead fish were
found in the harbour as would be expected following and explosion
in the water; and, 4) the munition stores usually do not explode
when mines sink ships. Del Peral and De Salas identified the
spontaneous combustion of the coal bunker that was located adjacent
to the munition stores in the Maine as the likely cause of the
explosion. The conclusions of the report were silenced by the
American press.
1898 Court of Inquiry

1898 Sampson Board
The day after the
Maine was sunk in Havana harbor,
Assistant Secretary to the Navy
Theodore Roosevelt
stated that "we shall never find out definitely" the cause of the
disaster.Immediately after the sinking in 1898, President
William McKinley ordered a naval inquiry
into what caused the
Maine to explode. This 1898 Court of
Inquiry headed by Captain
William
T. Sampson began its work on
21 February.
Ramón Blanco y
Erenas, Spanish governor of Cuba, had proposed instead a joint
Spanish-American investigation of the sinking. Captain Sigsbee had
written that "many Spanish officers, including representatives of
General Blanco, now with us to express sympathy." In a cable, the
Spanish Minister of Colonies,
Segismundo Moret, had advised Blanco “to
gather every fact you can to prove the
Maine catastrophe
cannot be attributed to us.â€
Survivors and eyewitnesses testified for the court, and several
navy divers explored the sunken ship, hoping to find clues as to
what may have caused the disaster. Though several volunteered, no
experts outside the Navy were called upon for advice. The Sampson
Board concluded that the
Maine had been blown up by a
mine, which in turn caused the explosion of her forward magazines.
The
official report from the board, which was presented to the Navy Department in Washington
on 25 March, specifically stated the
following:
1911 Court of Inquiry
By 1908, the war drums had long stopped beating, and many parties
demanded that the
Maine be raised from Havana harbor.
Cuban officials became worried about the safety of having a sunken
ship in their harbor, U.S. officials wanted the remains of the
sailors trapped in the wreck recovered and buried, and a few people
wanted to confirm the cause of the sinking. Begun in December 1910,
a huge waterproof
cofferdam was built
around the wreck and water was pumped out, finally exposing the
wreck by late summer 1911. Sections of the hull of the
Maine were numbered, many photographs were taken, and
models of the
Maine and her wreckage were built by the
single Navy employee assigned to the job in Havana. Except for many
souvenir items retained by the Navy and frequently distributed to
the public, most of the tangled wreckage was dumped into the sea
off the coast of Cuba. Between 20 November and 2 December 1911 a
court of inquiry headed by Rear Admiral
Charles E. Vreeland visited the wreck. The
conclusions of the Vreeland Board differed with the Sampson Board
only in detail. The Vreeland Board agreed that the explosion of the
magazines was triggered by an external blast, but the damage to the
Maine was much more extensive than the Sampson Board had
thought. It was also concluded that the initiating blast occurred
further aft on the ship, and a lower powered explosive breached the
hull than was originally thought.
After the investigation, the newly located
dead were buried in Arlington National Cemetery
and the hollow, intact portion of the hull of the
Maine was refloated and ceremoniously scuttled at sea on
16 March 1912.
Ever since they were published, doubts about the validity of the
Navy's 1898 and 1911 findings have been expressed by historians and
scientists.
1976 Rickover investigation
The argument was not touched for another half a century, until a
private investigation in 1976 was triggered by Admiral
Hyman G. Rickover after he read a newspaper article
on the sinking. He and several scientists from the
U.S. Navy launched an
investigation based on the evidence collected during the two Courts
of Inquiry. Rickover believed that the new knowledge collected
since
World War II on analyzing ships
damaged by internal and external explosions would shed new light on
the sinking of the
Maine. The Rickover analysis came to a
completely different conclusion than the Courts of Inquiry.
Rickover found that the cause of the explosion did not originate
outside the ship. The cause of the explosion originated within the
ship, but what actually happened could not be precisely determined.
Rickover believed that the most likely cause was a fire within a
coal bunker, which had heated the magazines to the point of
explosion. His 170-page book,
How the Battleship Maine Was
Destroyed, was first published in 1976. The world accepted
this new conclusion, and for more than a quarter of a century, the
coal bunker fire theory reigned over the external mine
theory.
1999 National Geographic investigation
In 1999, to commemorate the centennial of the sinking of the
Maine,
National
Geographic Magazine commissioned an analysis by Advanced Marine
Enterprises, using computer modeling that was not available for
previous investigations. The AME analysis examined both theories
and concluded that "it appears more probable than was previously
concluded that a mine caused the inward bent bottom structure and
the detonation of the magazines." Some experts, including Admiral
Rickover’s team and several analysts at AME, do not agree with the
conclusion, and the fury over new findings even spurred a heated
90-minute debate at the 124th annual meeting of the
U.S. Naval Institute.
Memorials
In
February 1898, the recovered bodies of sailors who died on the
Maine were interred in the Colon
Cemetery, Havana
. Some injured sailors were sent to hospitals
in Havana and Key West. Those who died in hospitals were buried in
Key West.
In December 1899 the bodies in Havana were
disinterred and brought back to the United States for burial at
Arlington
National Cemetery
where there is a memorial to those who died and
which includes the ship's main mast. 165 were buried at
Arlington—although remains of one sailor were exhumed for his home
town; of the rest only 62 were known.
Some bodies were
never recovered and the crewmen buried in Key West
Cemetery remain there under a statue of a U.S.
sailor holding an oar—27 are buried in the US Navy Plot..

Replica of the anchor once used by the
USS
Maine
There is
also a memorial, consisting of the shield and scrollwork from the
bow of the ship, in Bangor,
Maine
. The base of the Maine's conning tower is
currently on display at Westbrook Veterans' Memorial Park in
Canton,
Ohio
, hometown of President McKinley.
Shells
from the main battery were placed along with small plaques as
memorials at the Soldier's Home in Marion, Indiana
(now a VA Hospital and
national cemetery), at the St.
Joseph County Courthouse lawn in South Bend, Indiana
, and at the Old
soldiers' home in Minneapolis, Minnesota
. A shell from the main battery is located
just inside of the Pine St. entrance of city hall in Lewiston,
Maine
. There is a monument for the Maine with a
portion of a bronze engine room ventilator shaft in Pompton
Lakes, New Jersey
.
The
explosion-bent fore mast of the Maine is located at the
United
States Naval Academy
at Annapolis, Maryland
, causing a traditional in-joke among midshipmen that the Maine,
with its main mast in Arlington National Cemetery (Northern
Virginia) and its fore mast in Annapolis, is the longest ship
in the Navy.
On 5 August 1910, Congress authorized the raising of the
Maine to remove it as a navigation hazard in Havana
Harbor.
On 2 February 1912, she was refloated under
supervision of the Army Corps of
Engineers and towed out to sea where she was sunk in deep water
in the Gulf of
Mexico
on 16 March 1912, with appropriate military honors
and ceremonies. During the salvage remains of 66 more were
found of whom only 1 (an engineering officer) was identified and
returned to his home town; the rest were reburied at Arlington
Cemetery making a total of 229 buried there.
In 1913, a
USS Maine Monument was completed and dedicated
in New York City.
Located at the SW corner of Central Park
at the Merchant's Gate entrance to the park.
On the park side of the monument is fixed a memorial plaque that
was cast in metal salvaged from the ship.
In 1914,
one of the Maine’s six anchors was taken from the Washington
Navy Yard
to City Park in Reading, Pennsylvania
, and dedicated during a ceremony presided over by
Franklin D. Roosevelt, who was then assistant
Secretary of the Navy. The ceremony commemorated those who died in
the explosion.
In 1926
the Cuban government also erected a memorial to the victims of the
Maine on the Malecon
in Havana, near the Hotel
Nacional
in commemoration of the assistance of the United
States in acquiring Cuba's independence from Spain. The
memorial was damaged by crowds following the
Bay of Pigs Invasion in 1961 and the
eagle on top was broken and removed.. The Communist government then
added its own inscription blaming "imperialist voracity in its
eagerness to seize the island of Cuba" for the Maine
disaster.
Notes
- USS Maine (Navy Historical
Center)
- Friedman, 21.
- .
- Naval Historical Center
- "The Fire Below Spontaneous Combustion in Coal," Environment
Safety & Health Bulletin (DOE/EH-0320), 93-4 (May 1993), U. S.
Department of Energy, Washington, D.C. 20585
- Mikhail Khazin, " In
3 years, most of our oligarchs will go bankrupt", an interview
with Komsomolskaya Pravda, 29 October
2008
- Bishop Richard Williamson, " The Society of St. Pius X: mired in
anti-Semitism", Anti-Defamation League, 26
January 2009
- Remember the Maine? Cubans See an American Plot
Continuing to This Day, The New York Times, 14 February
1998
- Remembering the Maine, CNN, 15 February 1998
- Conner Gorry and David Stanley, " Cuba travel guide", ISBN 1740591208, 3rd edition,
2004, p. 82
- Hugh Thomas,
Memoria del 98 (1997 edition), chapter 7 ("La explosión
del Maine"), page 104
- "G.J.A. O’Toole, The Spanish War: An American Epic
1898 (New York: W.W. Norton, 1984), 128.
- O’Toole, The Spanish War, 11.
- O’Toole, The Spanish War, 125.
- Maine (2nd Class Battleship),
NavSource Online: Battleship Photo Archive
- The First Funeral of the Crew of the Battleship
MAINE
- The USS Maine Mast Memorial, Arlington Cemetery
website
- U.S. Navy Plot, Key West Cemetery website
- Published: 25 May 1913
- Baker, Christopher P., "Moon Cuba", Avalon Travel Publishing;
4th edition (9 October 2006),ISBN 1566918022
- The Rough Guide to Cuba ISBN 978 1 84353 811 0
p.159
References
- Alden, John D. American Steel Navy: A Photographic History
of the U.S. Navy from the Introduction of the Steel Hull
in 1883 to the Cruise of the Great White Fleet. Annapolis,
Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1989. ISBN 0870212486
- Friedman, Norman. U.S. Battleships: An Illustrated
Design History. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press,
1985. ISBN 0870217151
- Reilly, John C. and Robert L. Scheina. American Battleships
1896-1923: Predreadnought Design and Construction. Annapolis,
Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1980. ISBN 0870215248
Further reading
- Chapter 3, "U.S.S. Maine", pages 80–114, John Harris,
Without a Trace: A Fresh Investigation of Eight Lost Ships and
Their Fates, Atheneum, 1981, hardcover, 244 pages, ISBN
0-689-11120-7
- Samuels, Peggy and Harold Samuels 1995 Remembering the Maine.
Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington DC and London ISBN
1-56098-4743-0
- Phiip S. Foner. The Spanish-Cuban-American War and the Birth of
American Imperialism 1895-1902. 2 Volumes, New York/London 1972
(very detailed with plenty of sources from US archives)
- Rickover, Hyman George. How the Battleship Maine was
Destroyed. 2nd revised edition. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval
Institute Press, 1995.ISBN 1557507171
- Weems, John Edward. The Fate of the Maine. College
Station, Texas: Texas A&M University Press, 1992. ISBN
0890965013
- Blow, Michael. A Ship to Remember: The Maine and the
Spanish-American War. New York: William Morrow & Co.,
1992. ISBN 0688097146
- Allen, Thomas B. "Remember the Maine?" National
Geographic, Vol. 193, No 2 (February 1998):92-111.
- Allen, Thomas B. ed. "What Really Sank the Maine?" Naval
History 11 (March/April 1998): 30-39.
External links