In the 1890s, Assistant Secretary of the Navy Theodore Roosevelt led a
campaign to modernize the navy. Paramount in Roosevelt's vision was the
creation of a fleet of modern, steel-hulled warships armed with the most
powerful weapons available. The future president and his intellectual
soul mate, Captain Alfred Thayer Mahan, firmly believed that America's
emerging global expansion would only reach its full potential through
sea. power. The swift and overwhelming US victor in the Spanish-American
War of 1898 vindicated the views of Theodore Roosevelt and Captain
Mahan, and marked the debut on the world stage of the modern US Navy.
Theodore Roosevelt, the U.S. Navy and the Spanish American War considers
the impact Roosevelt had on the US navy in general and how his reforms
affected the course and outcome of the Spanish-American war in
particular. The nine contributors to this volume include leading
historians, and prominent naval officers from the US and Spain. With
essays ranging from the Roosevelt family's naval heritage to the impact
of the Spanish-American War on enlisted forces in the navy, this work is
a major contribution to our understanding of Theodore Roosevelt and
'his' navy.