One sailor and three Marines were awarded Medals of Honor for bravery during the Second Samoan Civil War, April 1, 1899.
The combatants were Samoans, Americans and British, who fought against the Germans and a rival Samoan group.
U.S. and British forces landed on the island of Upolu at Apia. They
marched 10 miles along the coast to Vailele to fight. This expeditionary
force included 26 Marines, 88 sailors and 136 Samoans.
When they arrived at Vailele, they were ambushed by over 800 enemy
Samoans hiding in the jungle. Alarmed, the allied Samoans ran off,
leaving the sailors and Marines to do the fighting. The leader of the
expeditionary force, Navy Lt. Philip Lansdale, ordered the men to fall
back, as they were badly outgunned and outnumbered.
During the fight, Lansdale was wounded and couldn't move. Navy Ensign
John R. Monaghan disobeyed the order to fall back and continued
fighting. After the battle, Monaghan and Lansdale were found dead, side
by side.
Marine Corps Pvt. Henry L. Hulbert, despite suffering wounds, conducted a
one-man delaying action, laying down heavy fire that enabled the
landing force to withdraw to a defensible position covered by the guns
of the warships offshore.
Under fire from three sides, Hulbert stood his ground until the main group established a new defensive perimeter.
In support of the Medal of Honor, which was awarded, Navy Secretary
John Davis Long wrote: "The gallantry of [Pvt.] Henry L. Hulbert, who
remained behind at the fence till the last and who was with Lansdale and
Monaghan when they were killed, I desire especially to mention."
Marine Corps Sgt. Michael Joseph McNally, Marine Corps Sgt. Bruno
Albert Forsterer and Navy Petty Officer 1st Class Frederick Thomas
Fisher, who also distinguished themselves in battle, were all awarded
the Medal of Honor as well.
Forsterer was, ironically, born in Konigsberg, Germany, July 14, 1869.
He served in the Marine Corps for 13 years, attaining the rank of
gunnery sergeant. After serving, he became the editor of the Oakland
Tribune newspaper. He died June 13, 1957, and is buried in Arlington
National Cemetery, Virginia.
Hulbert, born in Kingston upon Hull, England, Jan. 12, 1867, served
in the Marine Corps from 1898 to 1918, attaining the rank of sergeant
major and later captain. During World War I, he fought in the battles of
Belleau Wood, Château-Thierry and Blanc Mont Ridge, all in France. On
Oct. 4, 1918, he was killed in action at Blanc Mont Ridge, posthumously
earning the Navy Cross, Distinguished Service Cross and French Croix de
Guerre. He is buried in Arlington National Cemetery. The destroyer USS
Hulbert, commissioned in 1920, was named after him.
McNally, born June 29, 1860, in Manhattan, New York, served from 1897
to 1915, attaining the rank of sergeant major. On Nov. 2, 1916, he
disappeared from a Baltimore Steam Packet Company steamer. His body was
recovered three weeks later; he was buried in Portsmouth, Virginia.
Fisher, born in England, June 3, 1872, died April 15, 1906, while
serving aboard the battleship USS Kearsarge and was buried in Los
Angeles.
President Theodore Roosevelt awarded all four Medals of Honor in 1901.
Although Monaghan was never awarded the Medal of Honor because naval
officers at the time were not eligible, the destroyer USS Monaghan,
launched in 1911, was named for him and served in World War I. Also, the
destroyer USS Monaghan, launched in 1935, was named for him and served
during World War II before sinking during a typhoon in December 1944.
The Tripartite Convention of 1899 concluded the Second Samoan Civil
War, in which Germany gained Western Samoa and the United States gained
Eastern Samoa. Also, the Samoan monarchy was abolished, and Samoan
autonomy officially ended. On Aug. 29, 1914, during the early days of
World War I, New Zealand forces seized Western Samoa from Germany. New
Zealand retained control of Western Samoa until 1961, when it was
granted independence and became Samoa.
The United States made American Samoa a U.S. territory in 1900. The
U.S. Navy administered the territory until 1951, when the Interior
Department took over.
The territory's capital, Pago Pago, has a deep natural harbor that is considered strategically important to the United States.
Samoa, in the South Pacific, consists of two large islands and seven
tiny ones, totaling 1,093 square miles and American Samoa, 50 miles
east, across the International Date Line, consists of seven small
islands totaling 77 square miles.