USS Maine — Sinking That Started a War

Overview
On the evening of February 15, 1898, the battleship USS Maine sat at anchor in Havana Harbor, Cuba, a 6,600-ton symbol of American military power sent to protect U.S. interests during the Cuban revolution against Spanish rule. At 9:40 PM, a massive explosion ripped through the forward part of the ship, splitting the hull, detonating the forward magazines, and sending the Maine to the bottom of the harbor. Two hundred and sixty of the ship’s 354 crew members were killed — most of them enlisted men sleeping in the forward berthing compartments.
Within hours, the explosion became the defining event of its era. The yellow press — led by William Randolph Hearst’s New York Journal and Joseph Pulitzer’s New York World — declared it an act of Spanish aggression. “DESTRUCTION OF THE WAR SHIP MAINE WAS THE WORK OF AN ENEMY,” blared Hearst’s front page, citing no evidence whatsoever. “REMEMBER THE MAINE, TO HELL WITH SPAIN!” became the rallying cry of a nation hurtling toward war.
Two months later, the United States declared war on Spain. Ten weeks after that, Spain surrendered, ceding the Philippines, Guam, and Puerto Rico to the United States and granting Cuba nominal independence under American oversight. The Spanish-American War transformed the United States from a continental republic into a global imperial power — and it was launched on the back of an explosion whose cause has never been definitively established.
Was the Maine sunk by a Spanish mine? An accidental coal fire? A deliberate American false flag? More than a century later, the answer depends on which investigation you trust — and the investigations disagree.
Origins & History
Cuba in Crisis
The context for the Maine’s deployment was the Cuban War of Independence (1895-1898), a brutal conflict between Cuban revolutionaries and the Spanish colonial government. Spain’s response to the uprising — most notoriously, General Valeriano Weyler’s policy of “reconcentration,” which herded Cuban civilians into fortified camps where tens of thousands died of disease and starvation — generated enormous sympathy for Cuba in the American press.
The yellow press covered the Cuban conflict with a ferocity that had little to do with journalistic integrity. Hearst and Pulitzer were locked in a circulation war, and Cuba provided the perfect story: a romantic revolution, a villainous colonial power, and suffering civilians. Stories were frequently exaggerated or fabricated. The famous apocryphal quote attributed to Hearst — “You furnish the pictures and I’ll furnish the war” — captures the spirit of the coverage, whether or not the words were actually spoken.
The Maine Arrives
President William McKinley ordered the Maine to Havana in January 1898, ostensibly as a “friendly” show of the flag but actually as a warning to Spain and a safeguard for American citizens and property in Cuba. The Spanish government, understanding the provocative nature of the deployment, responded by sending the cruiser Vizcaya to New York Harbor in a tit-for-tat display.
Captain Charles Sigsbee of the Maine was under orders to maintain strict neutrality and avoid incidents. The ship arrived on January 25, 1898, and anchored in a position assigned by the harbor’s Spanish authorities. For three weeks, the Maine sat at anchor without incident.
The Explosion
At 9:40 PM on February 15, the calm was shattered. Witnesses described two explosions in rapid succession — a smaller initial blast followed immediately by a massive secondary detonation as the forward magazines ignited. The force of the explosion lifted the forward section of the ship out of the water and broke the hull. The Maine settled to the bottom of the harbor with her superstructure still visible above the waterline.
Captain Sigsbee survived and sent a telegram to the Navy Department with a now-famous closing line: “Public opinion should be suspended until further report.” It was the last reasonable thing anyone said about the Maine for months.
Key Claims
The Spanish Mine Theory
- Spain deliberately mined the Maine to drive the Americans out of Havana Harbor
- The explosion pattern was consistent with an external mine detonation
- The 1898 Sampson Board investigation and the 1911 Vreeland Board both concluded an external mine was the cause
- A 1998 National Geographic study using computer modeling supported the mine theory
The Accidental Explosion Theory
- A fire in coal bunker A-16 — located adjacent to the forward magazines — spontaneously ignited and eventually detonated the magazines
- Spontaneous coal bunker fires were a known hazard on warships of the era; at least a dozen had occurred on other U.S. Navy vessels
- The Maine’s coal bunkers were not equipped with adequate temperature monitoring
- Admiral Hyman Rickover’s 1976 investigation concluded the explosion was most likely internal
The False Flag Theory
- The U.S. government — or elements within it — deliberately destroyed the Maine to create a pretext for war with Spain
- Proponents cite the fact that officers were quartered aft (and mostly survived) while enlisted men slept forward (and mostly died)
- Assistant Secretary of the Navy Theodore Roosevelt had publicly advocated for war with Spain and used the Maine disaster as ammunition
- The rapid, politicized investigation is cited as evidence of a predetermined conclusion
Evidence
The Sampson Board (1898)
The Navy convened a Court of Inquiry under Captain William T. Sampson within days of the explosion. The board examined the wreckage — much of which was underwater and inaccessible — and interviewed survivors. It concluded that the Maine had been destroyed by an external mine, which detonated the forward magazines. The board did not assign blame to any nation.
The investigation had significant limitations. No Spanish witnesses were interviewed. No divers examined the hull’s exterior thoroughly. The board was under enormous political pressure to reach a conclusion quickly. The report was delivered to Congress on March 28, 1898 — six weeks after the explosion — and war was declared less than a month later.
The Vreeland Board (1911)
In 1911, the wreck of the Maine was raised from Havana Harbor as part of a harbor-clearing project. A new board of inquiry, chaired by Rear Admiral Charles Vreeland, examined the exposed hull. It confirmed an external explosion but placed the mine at a different location than the 1898 board had concluded. The wreck was then towed out to sea and scuttled in deep water — making any future examination impossible.
Rickover’s Investigation (1976)
Admiral Hyman G. Rickover, the legendary father of the nuclear navy, commissioned a private investigation using modern engineering analysis. Rickover’s team — led by naval engineers Ib Hansen and Robert Price — concluded that the most likely cause was an internal coal fire that ignited the forward magazines. They noted that coal bunker fires were common, that bunker A-16 was known to run hot, and that no evidence of an external mine was conclusive.
Rickover published his findings in How the Battleship Maine Was Destroyed (1976). The book was controversial but influential, and his theory became the dominant academic interpretation for two decades.
National Geographic Study (1998)
On the centennial of the explosion, the National Geographic Society funded a study using computer modeling and modern explosive analysis. The team, led by analysts from Advanced Marine Enterprises, concluded that an external mine — possibly a small improvised device — was the most likely cause. They argued that the damage pattern was more consistent with an external blast than a coal fire.
The study was criticized by some experts for relying on modeling rather than physical evidence and for being funded by an organization with an interest in a dramatic narrative.
Debunking / Verification
The USS Maine case cannot be definitively resolved. The wreck was scuttled in 1911, making further physical examination impossible. The evidence supports multiple interpretations, and expert opinion remains genuinely divided.
Against the Spanish mine theory: Spain had no motive to attack the Maine. The Spanish government was actively seeking to avoid war with the United States, which it knew it would lose. Blowing up an American warship in a harbor under Spanish control would have been irrational.
Against the coal fire theory: While coal fires were common, no coal fire on record had ever caused a magazine explosion on a U.S. Navy vessel. The Maine’s crew had not reported any signs of a coal fire before the explosion.
Against the false flag theory: No documentary evidence — no orders, no correspondence, no whistleblower testimony — has ever surfaced to support deliberate American sabotage. The theory requires a conspiracy of silence among whoever planted the explosives, and no such conspiracy has been credibly alleged.
The most historically defensible position is that the cause of the explosion is unknown, and that the political exploitation of the disaster — not the explosion itself — was the real conspiracy. The yellow press and war hawks in Congress used the Maine to stampede the nation into a war that served expansionist interests, regardless of whether Spain was actually responsible.
Cultural Impact
“Remember the Maine” became the American battle cry for the Spanish-American War and entered the permanent vocabulary of American political culture. The phrase — later echoed by “Remember Pearl Harbor” and “Remember 9/11” — established the template for how traumatic events are converted into political mandates for military action.
The Maine disaster is also a foundational case study in media manipulation. The role of the yellow press in manufacturing public support for war is taught in every journalism school in America. Hearst and Pulitzer’s coverage of the Maine is the standard example of how media can shape — or distort — public opinion on matters of national security.
For historians of American empire, the Spanish-American War is the hinge point at which the United States transformed from a continental republic into a global power. The war gave America control of the Philippines, Guam, and Puerto Rico, established its dominance in the Caribbean, and launched a tradition of overseas military intervention that continues to the present day. The Maine was the match that lit that fire — whether or not the match was struck by accident.
In Popular Culture
- The phrase “Remember the Maine” has been referenced in countless political contexts since 1898
- Citizen Kane (1941) — Orson Welles’s film, based on William Randolph Hearst, indirectly addresses the yellow press era
- The Maine is frequently cited in discussions of the Gulf of Tonkin and other alleged false flag events
- The Spanish-American War (PBS documentary) covers the Maine incident extensively
- The War Lovers (2010) by Evan Thomas — examines Roosevelt, Hearst, and the push for war
Key Figures
- Captain Charles Sigsbee — Commanding officer of the Maine; survived the explosion
- William Randolph Hearst — Publisher of the New York Journal; his papers aggressively blamed Spain
- Joseph Pulitzer — Publisher of the New York World; Hearst’s rival in the circulation war
- William McKinley — U.S. President who ordered the Maine to Havana and ultimately asked Congress for a declaration of war
- Theodore Roosevelt — Assistant Secretary of the Navy; war hawk who leveraged the Maine disaster politically
- Admiral Hyman Rickover — Led the 1976 investigation that concluded the explosion was likely internal
Timeline
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1895 | Cuban War of Independence begins against Spain |
| Jan 25, 1898 | USS Maine arrives in Havana Harbor |
| Feb 15, 1898 | Explosion destroys the Maine; 260 sailors killed |
| Feb 17, 1898 | Hearst’s New York Journal blames Spain in banner headlines |
| Mar 28, 1898 | Sampson Board concludes external mine caused the explosion |
| Apr 25, 1898 | United States declares war on Spain |
| Aug 12, 1898 | Spain agrees to peace terms; cedes Philippines, Guam, Puerto Rico |
| 1911 | Maine wreck raised, examined by Vreeland Board, then scuttled in deep water |
| 1976 | Admiral Rickover publishes investigation concluding coal fire was likely cause |
| 1998 | National Geographic study supports external mine theory |
Sources & Further Reading
- Hyman G. Rickover, How the Battleship Maine Was Destroyed (1976)
- John Edward Weems, The Fate of the Maine (1958)
- Evan Thomas, The War Lovers: Roosevelt, Lodge, Hearst, and the Rush to Empire, 1898 (2010)
- Peggy and Harold Samuels, Remembering the Maine (1995)
- Thomas Allen, “Remember the Maine?” National Geographic, February 1998
- Louis A. Perez Jr., The War of 1898: The United States and Cuba in History and Historiography (1998)
- W. Joseph Campbell, Yellow Journalism: Puncturing the Myths, Defining the Legacies (2001)
Related Theories
- Gulf of Tonkin False Flag — another disputed naval incident used to justify war
- False Flag Operations — the broader concept of staged provocations to justify military action
- Nayirah Testimony — manufactured testimony used to build public support for military intervention

Frequently Asked Questions
What actually sank the USS Maine?
Did William Randolph Hearst really say 'You furnish the pictures and I'll furnish the war'?
Was the USS Maine a false flag operation?
How did the sinking lead to the Spanish-American War?
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