"Kansans Fought in the Spanish-American War"

A Moment in Time

Kansas Historical Society


April 1998

By Virgil Dean

A monthly series from the Kansas Historical Society

The year 1998 marks the one hundredth anniversary of what John Hay called "a splendid little war." In a letter to Theodore Roosevelt dated July 27, 1898, Hay wrote that the conflict was "begun with the highest motives, carried on with magnificent intelligence and spirit, favored by that fortune which loves the brave." By the time it was over, the Spanish-American War and the concomitant conflict in the Philippines had many doubters as well, and, of course, it was not so "splendid" for those 5,462 Americans who died from disease and battle wounds or for their more numerous counterparts among their Cuban allies or Spanish adversaries. Neither so for Filipinos who resisted American domination as they had Spanish or for those Americans who opposed U.S. imperialism.

During the spring and summer of 1898, however, Americans eagerly took up arms to free Cubans from Spanish oppression. The U.S. not only accomplished this objective in short order, but also emerged from the war with an empire that included Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippine Islands.

If there had been any doubt, the Treaty of Paris, signed on December 10, 1898, confirmed America's position as a world power with widely scattered territorial possessions.

Kansans were probably not as eager for war as was the so-called "yellow press" in the East, but they certainly sympathized with the plight of the Cuban people. And once President William McKinley asked for and received a declaration of war from the U.S. Congress on April 25, 1898, most Kansans wholeheartedly supported the cause.

Soon, four regiments of Kansas volunteers would be in uniform and folks at home would be supporting the war effort in a variety of other ways. The best-know then and now was the Twentieth Kansas Volunteer Infantry, the so-called "Fighting Twentieth," commanded by Colonel Frederick Funston, an adventuresome young man who had grown up on a farm near Iola, Allen County. The Twentieth trained in California and set sail for the Philippines in November 1898. Within weeks of their arrival, Kansas soldiers, who had enlisted to fight the Spaniards in Cuba found themselves in the vanguard of the American force attempting to put down a Filipino insurrection. The islanders, who had fought in consort with the "Yanks" to rid their homeland of Spanish domination during the summer of 1898, desired independence, not a new American master.

Within the year, the men of the Twentieth Kansas had returned to the states and, for most, their previous civilian lives. The nasty conflict in which they had been involved, however, lasted until mid-1902, this despite the fact that the insurgency was dealt its death blow when its leader, Emilio Aguinaldo, was captured on March 23, 1901, in a daring mission orchestrated and lead by then General Frederick Funston.

Like the Twentieth, the other Kansas regiments were composed of volunteers who hailed from every corner of the state. The Twenty-first Kansas Volunteer Infantry regiment was organized in Topeka, May 12-14, 1898, under the command of Colonel Thomas G. Fitch of Wichita and Lieutenant Colonel Charles McCrum of Garnett. It left the capital city within days to spend the summer and early fall at Camp Thomas, Georgia, and Camp Hamilton, Kentucky. Likewise, the Twenty-second Kansas Volunteer Infantry, under the command of Colonel Henry C. Lindsey of Topeka and Lieutenant Colonel James Graham of St. Mary's, played out its military history in the humid, disease-ridden Camp Alger near Falls Church, Virginia, and later Camp Meade, near Middletown, Pennsylvania.

Of the four Kansas regiments raised for service, only the Twenty-third Kansas Volunteer Infantry saw duty in Cuba. An all African American regiment of eight companies that included recruits from Nicodemus to Pittsburg and Dodge City to Atchison, the Twenty-third was organized in July 1898 and left its Topeka camp on August 22, arriving at Santiago, Cuba, on August 31. Under the command of Lieutenant Colonel James Beck of Manhattan, these soldiers performed efficient garrison duty near San Luis, from September 1, 1898, until February 28, 1899.

The service record of the Twenty-third and that of the other three regiments filled most Kansans with pride. Likewise the men who served in them were proud of their service. When the war against Spaniards in Cuba became a war against insurgents in the Philippines, some Kansans spoke against U.S. imperialism, but the majority gloried in the exploits of the Twentieth Kansas and hailed its troops as conquering heroes upon their return in the fall of 1899. They and especially their leader, "Fighting Fred" Funston, won much fame and glory for a campaign that most would now consider a rather inglorious chapter in American history. To his own generation, however, Funston and all the other soldiers of the Spanish-American War had "broken down the doors of medieval superstition, and permitted millions of serfs to breathe the free air of modern civilization. Their heroic achievements," wrote one prominent Kansan, "are the crowning glory of the closing century."

The preceding story is an excerpt from the first in a series of articles on the Spanish-American War in Kansas History: A Journal of the Central Plains. An article in the summer issue of Kansas Heritage will feature the enthusiastic support that Spanish American War soldiers received from the Kansas home front. The Kansas Historical Society also is preparing a new entry in the Kansas Interpretive Traveling Exhibit Service (KITES) on this subject, and the Kansas Museum of History's In the Spotlight case commemorates the anniversary in May and June with "Remember the Maine."

To obtain a copies of Kansas History and Kansas Heritage, call 785-272-8681, ext. 222. The Kansas Museum of History is open 9:00 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 12:30 - 4:30 p.m. Sunday. The museum is located at 6425 SW Sixth Avenue, Topeka, KS 66615; 785-272-8681; TTY 785-272-8683; http://www.kshs.org


© Kansas Historical Society 1998


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