CENTENARY OF THE DESTRUCTION OF USS MAINE - A TECHNICAL AND HISTORICAL REVIEW

Citation
Is. Hansen et Dm. Wegner, CENTENARY OF THE DESTRUCTION OF USS MAINE - A TECHNICAL AND HISTORICAL REVIEW, Naval engineers journal, 110(2), 1998, pp. 93-104
Citations number
7
Categorie Soggetti
Engineering, Civil","Engineering, Marine",Oceanografhy
Journal title
ISSN journal
00281425
Volume
110
Issue
2
Year of publication
1998
Pages
93 - 104
Database
ISI
SICI code
0028-1425(1998)110:2<93:COTDOU>2.0.ZU;2-K
Abstract
The USS Maine exploded in Havana harbor on February 15, 1898 with the loss of 266 lives. Its loss sparked the battle cry ''Remember the Main e,'' it became one of the causes of the Spanish-American War, and the ship and the event now symbolize an era. The ship has grabbed the publ ic's interest and fascination for one hundred years, in large part due to the perceived mystery surrounding the cause of the disaster. The o fficial investigations at the time blamed a mine, but this was not uni versally accepted. Lingering doubts resulted in much speculation witho ut putting the ''riddle'' to rest. Admiral Hyman Rick-over became inte rested and assembled a team to see what could be determined from the o riginal evidence when modern knowledge of explosion damage was applied . The results, which were published in his book of 1976, dispelled the main part of the mystery-there was no mine. A new foreword and a new addendum to the technical appendix of the book were provided by the au thors of this article when a new edition was published in 1995. The ve rdict is still the same. Among several magazine articles occasioned by the centenary of the disaster, the National Geographic Magazine repor ts on the result of a new study they commissioned. That study maintain s that the ''riddle'' still persists. This article summarizes the hist orical background and the technical factors which lead to the conclusi on that a mine did not cause the destruction of the Maine.