Front cover illustration: USS Olympia leads the Asiatic Squadron into battle. May 1, 1898. (Edouard A. Groult)
MANILA BAY 1898
Dawn of an American Empire
In April 1898, the United States and Spain declared war on each other. Led by Commodore George Dewey, the small US Asiatic Squadron departed China and attacked the Spanish naval squadron defending Manila Bay on May 1. Simultaneously, an insurrection under a charismatic young Filipino named Emilio Aguinaldo liberated most of the Philippines on its own and laid siege to Manila. This resulted in three warring sides vying for supremacy, with each fixed on their own unique political goals.
Here, respected author Brian Lane Herder explores why the 1898 US campaign in the Philippines permanently transformed US foreign policy, and highlights the importance of the Filipino rebels in defeating the Spanish. Illustrated with stunning battlescenes, photographs, and informative maps and diagrams, this work covers the May 1 naval battle between the US and Spanish cruiser squadrons, the May-August Philippines land campaign, the capture of Guam, and the annexation of Hawai’i. The resultant work is one of the first to address the entire Pacific theater of the Spanish-American War, including both military and diplomatic developments.
OSPREY PUBLISHING
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Brian Lane Herder 2025
Illustrated by Edouard A. Groult
ISBN: 9781472865427
Maps by Bounford
3D BEVs by Paul Kite
Index by Alison Worthington
Typeset by PDQ Digital Media Solutions
Printed by Repro India Ltd
Osprey Publishing supports the Woodland Trust, the UK's leading woodland conservation charity.
96 pages
7.25" x 9.75"







