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they returned Florida
John Hay was the Secretary of State who pushed for war with Spain. However, he wasn't the Secretary of State when the war started but he was when the war ended.
The colonies of East and West Florida was returned to Spain.
None of the original 13 colonies were returned to Spain; all 13 colonies (Rhode Island, North Carolina, New York, Virginia, New Hampshire, South Carolina, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Georgia, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware) became the first states.The territory known as Florida chose not to participate in the Continental Congress and also did not participate in the Revolutionary War. It was given to Spain by Great Britain in the 1783 Treaty of Paris, however in 1819 Spain officially ceded Florida to the United States, where it finally became the 27th state in1845.
If you are asking about Francisco Franco the answer is never. Once he returned to Spain to begin the Spanish Civil War he never again left the country.
In 1783, Florida was returned to Spain. This came about because the Treaty of Paris, signed in 1763, meant that Britain gained control of Florida. This treaty, between Great Britain, France and Spain, ended the French and Indian War, also known as the Seven Years' War.Florida was returned to Spain after another Treaty of Paris, signed in 1783, formally ended the American Revolutionary War between Great Britain and the USA, which had risen up against British rule.
No, Spain had no relevance to Texas after 1821.
No one was the dictator of Spain during the Spanish Civil War. The war was fought to determine whether Spain would be a left-leaning republic (or perhaps a communist state) or a fascist dictatorship. It was only after the war that there was a dictator of Spain.
1898 (a six month long war). Aka the Splendid Little War.
Spain
The destruction of the United State warship Maine on the month of February is one of the factors that increased the public support to enter into a war with Spain.
The United States did not invade Spain during World War II in order to minimize the war. Although Spain was an Axis-aligned State in World War II, it remained officially neutral since it could not afford a war after the Spanish Civil War of 1936-1939.