East Carolina University

SEARCH   ECU Website People GO

Joyner Library
BlackBoard
Help Desk
PirateID
Index
Email
OneStop
Calendar
BlackBoard IT Help Desk PirateID Index Email and Phone OneStop Calendar

Go back to the Staff Picks

The "Maine"

Source: The "Maine"; an account of her destruction in Havana Harbor, Joyner Rare E 721.6 S57

Staff Person: Ralph Scott

Description:

USS Maine, a 6682-ton second-class battleship, was built at the New York Navy Yard and commissioned in September 1895. Her active career was spent operating along with U.S. east coast and in the Caribbean area. In January 1898, Maine was sent to Havana, Cuba, to protect U.S. interests during a time of local insurrection and civil disturbances. Three weeks later, on 15 February, the battleship was sunk by a massive explosion that killed the great majority of her crew. This volume is the personal narrative of Captain Charles D. Sigsbee. His conclusion as to the destruction of the vessel largely follow the findings of the official Navy inquiry, which found that an external mine sunk the vessel. In 1976 Admiral Hyman Rickover, using World War II explosion data, concluded that the damage came from inside the vessel, probably from a coal bunker. A 1999 investgation using more modern methods was inconclusive. President Theodore Roosevelt, Assistant Secretary of the Navy at the time of the sinking, stated, "We will probably never find out definitely," what happened. Conspiracy theorists of course still have a field day with the sinking of the vessel.

Joyner Rare E 721.6. S57

Charles D. Sigsbee, The "Maine"; an account of her destruction in Havana Harbor, New York Century Company, 1899. 270pp.

Click on the image to view an enlarged version.

4/3/2009

 
ecu centennial  logo
Joyner Library, East Carolina University
East Fifth Street | Greenville, NC 27858-4353 USA
252.328.6518 | Contact Webmaster
terms of use | Last Updated: 10.01.2008