 Section 29 of the South American Republics, Volume 2 by Thomas Clelland Dawson. This LibriVox recording is in the public domain. Recording by Piotr Natter. Part 6, Columbia. Chapter 4, Modern Columbia. After Bolivar's departure for Peru, a period of relative quiet ensued. Nevertheless, ambitious local politicians constantly intrigued against Santander, who in his turn was suspected of encouraging federalist agitation in the hope of overthrowing Bolivar. The United States and England recognized the independence of Columbia shortly after the expulsion of the Spaniards. But foreign troubles arose when the New Republic faced the question of paying the immense debt contracted by Bolivar's agents in recruiting and equipping the mercenary troops and buying ships, artillery and ammunition. This debt had been enormously swollen by the dishonesty of some Colombian commissioners and by the greed of moneylenders who insisted on receiving bonds for double the amount they had really advanced. The temptation to borrow more, when it was refunded, was too great to be resisted and Columbia soon saw herself burdened with foreign obligations, amounting to nearly 7 million sterling. All the revenues were insufficient to pay interest on this sum, a truly stupendous one for so poor a country. The payments fell into arrears and though the debt has been scaled down repeatedly, interest has rarely been paid. At the very beginning of her independent existence, Columbia's credit was ruined and the three countries into which she was shortly divided have remained burdened to this day with the debts then contracted. Their finances disorganized, they attempted operations blighted by the reputation of bankruptcy and their diplomatic relations hampered by the clamors of bondholders. Santander's administration was further embarrassed by Bolivar's demands for money and troops with which to pursue his conquests in Peru and Bolivia and still graver difficulties soon arose. Paeth, left in command of the army in Venezuela, became involved in disputes with the authorities of the Venezuelan cities and with the ministers at Bogota, all of whom he despised as mere civilians or as foreigners who had no right to interfere. Finally, in 1826 the central government formally deprived him of his position and summoned him to Bogota but a revolution which promptly broke out in Caracas made him dictator. The news brought Bolivar back from Lima where for two years he had reigned as absolute monarch leading the life of the voluptuous Eastern Prince. For the next four years the liberators struggled in vain to repress the rising tide of federalism and radicalism in Venezuela and New Granada. The republican theorists could not forget that he had re-established the convents, placed the schools under priestly control, abrogated government contracts for personal reasons, introduced aristocratic declarations and schemed for a hereditary senate and a life tenure of the executive. Nor that his influence had stopped the Cucuta Convention in the path of political reform, prevented the abolition of slavery and capital punishment and retained the connection of church and state and the exemption of the army and clergy from civil jurisdiction. Santander was more liberal and a better practical politician. He had shown much ability during the liberator's absence and risen to be the head of a considerable party. Bolivar succeeded in temporarily crushing some of the opposition in Venezuela and in cajoling paes and on his return to Bogota he made a faint of resigning the presidency. Congress however was still under his spell and re-elected him. He then made an attempt to secure legal sanctions for his system by summoning another constituent convention. But news had come of Peru's and Bolivia's defection and the agitation of the transcendental liberals, the universal desire for local self-government and the ambitions of a hundred intrigers for high office proved too much for him. A majority of the convention which met at Ocana in 1828 were partisans of Santander and opposed Bolivar's proposal, although the liberator at the head of three thousand soldiers watched the proceedings. Though he did his best to intimidate the majority, he shrank from frankly playing the role of a cromwell and contented himself with ordering his supporters to withdraw, leaving the convention without the quorum. It dissolved and the country trembled on the verge of disintegration. His friends called an assembly which obediently proclaimed him dictator. The liberator accepted and deprived Santander of the vice presidency. The press was mazzled, protesters banished, and military rule established. Some fiery young republicans determined to emulate the example of Brutus struck down the palace guards at midnight and rushed into the house to kill the dictator. But his mistress, Manuela Sainz, awakened by the noise, directed him to a window. He dropped a few feet to the pavement and ran and hid himself under a bridge, while the woman, in her night clothes, met the assassins on the stairs and told them they could enter only over her dead body. They pushed her aside with their bloody hands only to find the quarry escaped. The next day Bolivar returned to the palace and his spies soon hunted down the criminals. Santander, suspected of knowing of the plot, went into banishment and for the moment civil war was averted. But the incident did not revive Bolivar's waning popularity. News came in 1829 that Paeth had again assumed the dictatorship of Venezuela. This was fatal to Bolivar's hopes. With Nugrenada in a ferment behind him, he could not expect to conquer Paeth and the formidable Llaneros. He made a half-hearted attempt to raise an army, but recoiled before the insuperable difficulties. Again he resigned the presidency, protesting that he was ready to sacrifice all personal ambition to secure the integrity of the Colombian Union and the establishment of a strong and ordered government. Again he was re-elected, but meanwhile civil war was raging in Ecuador, where his own troops disavowed his authority. Rebellion also broke out in Pasto and Peru intervened in Ecuador and sent a fleet to capture Guayaquil and an army to invade Cuenca. Bolivar exhausted his last resources in dispatching troops to meet the Peruvian onslaught, but the principal result of the war was to put General Flores in a position to make himself independent dictator of Ecuador. Despairing of longer maintaining himself, but loathe to give up his ever cherished idea of union, the liberator entered into negotiations with European diplomats to appoint a prince of a reigning family as king of Colombia. But the idea was impracticable, there was no place for a monarch, either native born or foreign, on the Granadan highlands, and Venezuela had already virtually separated. Although a rebellion in Antioquia, headed by his old companion in arms General Cordoba, failed in the fall of 1829, at the end of the year word came that Venezuela had formally declared her independence and had pronounced a sentence of perpetual banishment against the liberator. This was the last straw and Bolivar made no further resistance to his fate, but summoned the Congress and retired to his country house, penniless, sick and heartbroken. All his vast estates had been sacrificed due to the cause of independence, the hardships of his innumerable marches over the cold mountain roads had broken his health and his mode of life during the intervals of peace had not tended to restore it, although only 47 he was a dying man. Still he clung to his hopes of vindication and reelection, but seeing that even the bulk of his own friends opposed, he at last sent in a formal resignation. He lived only a few months after a Congress had elected Moschera presidents. Though Bolivar's overthrow was a triumph for the Federalists and Red Republicans, Congress shrank from going too far and installed a wealthy aristocrat as president. However, his feeble administration was soon driven from power by the revolt of General Urdaneta, who made use of Bolivar's name as a rallying cry, but who in fact was actuated alone by personal ambition. The Federalists and anti-Bolivarists did not leave him long in possession, and in May 1831 he was expelled in his turn. Obando and Lopeth, both bitter enemies of the Liberator during his lifetime, and the latter suspected of complicity in the cowardly murder of the great Marshal Sucre, came to the head of affairs. New Granada's intestine troubles made her too weak to attempt the coercion of Venezuela and Ecuador, so their independence was recognized and the Colombian Republic ceased to exist. A Federalist constitution for New Granada was framed in 1832, and shortly afterwards Santander became the first legal president. Unquestionably the strongest man in the nation, a good administrator and a shrewd politician, he was helpless to check the tendency toward disintegration, though he reduced Bolivar's army of 20,000 to less than one half, and did much to establish civil administration. His energy in enforcing order earned him the title of the quote-unquote Man of Laws, and many Granadans regard him as the real founder of their nationality. Marquef, who succeeded to the presidency in 1837, was not radical enough to suit the advanced Federalists and Republicans, although the first serious rebellion, which broke out against him, was caused by his suppression of convents in reactionary and Catholic pasto. At the same time Obando was intriguing against the government, and many of the provincial governors aided the plots. When summoned to trial, Obando fled to the wilds of Papayan and Pasto, and civil war raged through 1839 and 1840. In this latter year Panama successfully revolted, maintaining its independence until 1842. Thomas Mosquera, the Minister of War, with the help of his son-in-law, General Erran, eventually triumphed over the rebels. In 1841 the latter became president and set vigorously to work to strengthen the power of the central government. By this time all the people who took any interest in politics had divided into two parties. The liberals insisted on universal suffrage, the separation of church and state, the granting the provinces the fullest autonomy, the division of the greater portion of the national revenue among the provincial governments, and even opposed the theoretical right of any government to impose its will on the individual citizen. The conservatives believed in respecting the clergy, in continuing the old system of education under priestly control, and resisted any further emasculation of the national government. Erran recalled the Jesuits, and under his direction a conservative convention framed a more centralizing constitution than that of 1832. Bolivar's ashes were delivered to the Venezuelan government with impressive solemnities, and his memory apotheosized as the father of the nation and the apostle of centralization. Erran was succeeded by his father-in-law, Thomas Moschera. During his administration, which lasted until 1849, steam navigation was introduced on the Magdalena, the Panama Railway was begun, the finances were brought into some sort of order, the army was further reduced, and the post office system was improved. The liberals and federalists were constantly becoming more powerful and more discontented. Disturbances broke out from time to time, and when Moschera's term expired, the attempt to elect a successor in an orderly and constitutional manner utterly failed. Riots and bloodshed followed, and it was officially announced that no candidate had received a majority of the popular vote. The duty of making a choice fell upon Congress and Lopez, a general of the War of Independence who had taken part in the overthrow of Bolivar, was installed. This meant a resumption of the march toward complete decentralization, temporarily checked during Erran's and Moschera's administrations. The constitution was reformed so as to reduce the power of the national executive and guarantee greater privileges to the provinces. The latter was divided and subdivided to suit the exigencies of local politicians until their number reached 35. Lopez had been a revolutionist himself and did not know when he might be won again, and his abolishment of the death penalty for the political crimes met with the hurty approval of the large number of Grenadon politicians who were in the same case. The central government transferred a large part of its revenues to the provinces and gave up to them the control of judicial administration, of education, and of transportation. The tide of liberal legislation also swept over the privileges of the clergy. Laws were voted suppressing the tithes, giving the nomination of parish priests to the civil authorities, taking control of education out of their hands, separating church and state, and establishing civil marriages. But it was easier to pass such laws than to enforce their observance by the Grenadons. The clergy were enormously powerful among the common people and the conservative aristocrats. The banishment of the Archbishop and several suffragans roused the conservatives. Politics became the principal preoccupation of the educated classes, hardly a village in the country but had its political club and more than a hundred party newspapers, besides innumerable pamphlets thundered against their opponents. The conservative revolution broke out in 1851, beginning in Pasto and immediately spreading over the whole western half of the republic and even to the eastern plateau. Antiochia was the stronghold of the clericals and there they gathered a force of a thousand men which was beaten at Rio Negro on the 10th of September 1851 while the insurgent bands in dozen other provinces were reduced in detail. Although the liberal government was thus triumphant in the field, the danger had been too great and was still too menacing to make it safe to maintain an uncompromising attitude on the religious question. Lopez procured the election of Obando, another political general of the same type and opinions as himself as his successor in the presidency. The new president's first act was to summon a convention which abolished the last traces of Erran's moderately centralizing constitution and depriving the executive of the power of naming provincial governors. Obando gave satisfaction to no one and in 1854 General Mello, commander of the cavalry in Borota incited the garrison and working men of that city to join him in an insurrection. However, the chiefs of the conservative party would have none of him. The recent concessions to the clergy had removed the strongest motives for rousing fanaticism to arms and the clericals declared in his favor in only a few provinces. The property-holding and educated classes were practically unanimous against him. Mosquera and Erran, the most powerful men in New Granada and the historical chiefs of the moderate conservatives had modified their views to suit the exigencies of the situation and become in effect moderate liberals. It was Mosquera himself who led the provincial militia against Borota and overcome the dictator after much bloody street fighting. The unhappy country, tired of continual internist disorder and exhausted by the harrying civil wars rested willingly for two years under the compromise administration of Mayarino in which representatives of both parties and most of the principal factions had a voice. As a matter of fact, the federal government had almost ceased to exercise the greatly reduced functions which nominally remained to it. The executive had only the shadow of a control over the provinces. Its revenues sank to well 9-0. Its army was reduced to 800 men. The very name of the country was changed from the Republic of New Granada to the Granadine Confederation. And the organization of powerful and independent federal departments was begun for shadowing the abolition of the old provincial system. In 1857 three candidates had presented themselves. Ospina, representing the clerical conservatives, Murillo, the advanced liberals and Mosquera, the moderates. Suffrage had been made universal and under the conditions necessarily prevailing among the population almost entirely illiterates and used for centuries to monarchical and military government a satisfactory election was impossible. On the face of the returns Ospina received a plurality but the radicals were able to force the adoption of a new federal constitution in 1859 which abolished the old provinces. However the new system had not the sympathy of the conservative and clerical president. He tried to usurp control of the elections. The liberals accused him of acting unconstitutionally. Insurrections broke out in various parts of the country and the confusion became worse confounded. In the state of Bolivar the liberal insurrectionists triumphed while in Santander the conservatives themselves started a revolution which Ospina only succeeded in suppressing by the bloody battle of Oratorio. Meanwhile Mosquera had become governor of Kauka and when the conservatives of that state tried to expel him he beat them and took advantage of his victory to declare himself independent of Ospina. The latter advanced but Mosquera defeated him and invaded the Upper Magdalena gaining the battle of Segovia. In every state there was an insurrection against Ospina and three ex-presidents accompanied the insurgent armies. On the surface the civil war appeared to be a mere contest for personal power between Mosquera and Ospina but the former had insured federalism and the latter's triumph would probably have meant a strengthening of the national government and certainly a reaction from the radicalism which had gained ground year by year since the fall of Bolivar. Supported by the clericals conservatives and reactionists Ospina fought tenaciously and with a fair prospect of success but the federalist armies advanced relentlessly from both north and south and one after another the provinces of the eastern Plateaus were arrested from him by bloody and well contested battles. Mohota was finally taken and the president imprisoned but Mosquera's opponents kept up the conflict for some time in the state of Panama, Santander and Antiochia and it was near the end of 1861 before the federalists were everywhere triumphant. With Mosquera at the head of affairs under the title of supreme dictator a congress was summoned whose members were called not deputies, representatives or delegates but plenty potentiaries of the sovereign states. The congress adopted a new constitution New Grenada's 6th since 1830. The triumphant liberals expelled the Jesuits abolished ecclesiastical intales extinguished the monastic orders confiscated church property decreed the absolute separation of church and state imprisoned the archbishop and secularized the schools. Suffrage was made nominally universal and the death penalty abolished. The name of the country was changed to the United States of Columbia and it became little more than a league of 9 federal states for the purpose of defense against foreign attack. The national government was expressly prohibited from interfering in the affairs of the states even for the preservation of order and a clause of the constitution provided that quote when one sovereign state of the union shall be at war with another or the citizens of any states shall be at war among themselves the national government is obligated to preserve the strictest neutrality end quote the federal judiciary had no power to decide any constitutional question nor could its decision bind the state authorities the national government was deprived of half its revenue for the benefit of the states and the receipts of the latter equaled the federal income this constitution remained in force for 22 years during which civil wars and factional disputes continually racked Columbia Moreno, the clerical dictator of Ecuador, had aided Ospina during the civil war and to punish him Mosquera undertook a campaign which resulted in a Colombian victory that was put on the 30th of December 1863 however he desisted from his announced intention of deposing Moreno and installing an anti-clerical government in Ecuador and granted peace without the imposition of any onerous terms Murillo was elected president in 1864 for the ensuing two years to which short period the term had been reduced the religious question would not down and he found a conservative revolution going on in the state of Antioquia it triumphed and Murillo prudently recognized the successful insurgents as the legal government he followed the same policy in regard to other revolutions in the states of Bolivar, Magdalena and Panama and cautiously refrained from all interventions even when conservative insurrections occurred in the neighborhood of Bogota itself or when the clericals of Antioquia invaded Cauca and defeated the liberals one of the last acts of his administration was to impose on the impoverished federal treasury the settlement of all the forced loans and confiscations made during the three years of terrible civil wars Mosquera who succeeded Murillo in 1866 was not content to remain a mere figurehead although it was under his leadership that the federal system had been definitely established he bought ships and artillery without authorization from congress and claimed the power of intervening by force whenever the legal government of a state was unable to maintain order this attack on the right of revolution outraged the radical republicans according to their theory and practice the federal government was merely an alliance between the peoples of the states but Mosquera's doctrine would tend to make it an alliance between the state governments creating a ruling oligarchy whose power might be continued indefinitely denounced as the assassin of columbian liberty he broke off relations with the liberal majority in congress and in 1867 assumed dictatorial powers but the bohota garrison was suborned by his enemies and its revolt was followed by his deposition and the substitution of Acosta president renewed Murillo's policy of non-intervention columbia had begun to reap a benefit from the increasing foreign demand for tropical products exports grew in value and with them imports and revenue but expenditures grew faster the poorer states demanded and received subsidies from the federal treasury public buildings and local improvements were planned beyond the nation's ability to pay 5 employees and pensioners buttoned on the public revenues under the concession of 1850 the panama railway had agreed to pay 3% of its net revenue to the government and the receipts from this source amounted to $14,000 a year columbia had stipulated for the right to purchase the road in 1870 for the ridiculously low price of 5 million dollars but acosta's administration invested and was greedy for ready cash so the franchise was extended until 1966 for 1 million dollars down and an annual subsidy of a quarter of a million in 1887 under the pressure of poverty the installments until 1908 were alienated under Gutierrez's administration 1868 to 1869 when the governor of Cundinamarca gathered troops and assumed a dictatorship the president deposed him even a liberal administration found it impracticable to carry out the theory of non-intervention an attempt was now made to secure the nation's creditors by authorizing the hypothecation of specific revenue a measure which left the administration insufficient means to meet ordinary running expenses under Salgar 1870 to 1872 the acknowledged deficits amounted to 50% of the total revenue the increasing revenues had proven a curse instead of a blessing for the demands of the states and officials were insatiable and the sums spent in subsidies and internal improvements grew beyond all reason meantime the most extreme and unrestrained liberalism dominated the politics of the country congress passed a formal vote of condolence for the death of López Paraguay's unspeakable tyrant who had just succumbed to Brazil and Argentina after having devoted to destruction 9 tenths of his people all honorary and useless military titles and employments were abolished and the law on that subject contains the following curious provision quote in naming the 8 generals spoken of by the constitution must be chosen the commander in chief of the army all columbians over 21 shall be considered as generals of the republic end quote Murillo was elected for a second term in 1872 and at once devoted himself and with considerable success to the reorganization and regulation of the finances the law of 1868 which had hypothecated the revenues and orders of the public debt was repealed and the foreign bonds were scaled down to less than one third their face by such measures the president succeeded in paying the government employees and taking care of pressing home necessities and even showed a nominal surplus at the end of his term during the administration of Santiago Perez 1874 to 1876 the first mutterings of civil war soon to burst over the country were heard the state of Panama defied his authority and imprisoned his officers but he applied conscientiously the constitutional doctrine of non-intervention and disavowed a general who on his own responsibility had deposed the governor the governor of the state of Magdalena took possession of the custom houses at the mouth of the river and the troops of the state of Bolivar attacked federal detachments passing along the Magdalena a river which is interstate and whose navigation was free by the terms of the constitution the popular election of 1879 was so disturbed that congress assumed the power of selecting a president and Parra was installed the following spring an internecine conflict broke out in Cauca the president started to intervene and the states of Antiochia declared war against him although guerilla bands in Cundinabarca Boyacá and Santander managed the government's rare 25,000 recruits were raised and sent against the rebelling states Antiochia was beaten at Ciancos and Garrapata and the rebels of central Colombia at Ladon Juana in battles where the largest numbers of soldiers ever gathered on colombian soil were engaged this was followed by a general amnesty because the victorious liberals dared not proceed to extremities against their adversaries Trujíos installed as president without opposition and the herit country recovered somewhat from the exertions and disasters of the terrible year of 1876 the finances were however in terrible disorder expenses amounted to enormous figures the deficits became greater the total revenues interest on the public debts which had been regularly kept up since 1873 was indefinitely suspended disturbances soon began to break out again and the National Guard deposed the governors of Cauca and Magdalena the president showed an inclination towards centralization he formed alliances with state governors encouraged them to prolong their terms and systematically fostered divisions in the liberal party Trujíos was succeeded by Núñez nominally a liberal but who at heart had also second of the federalist system and was looking for an opportunity to strengthen presidential prerogatives the constitution stood during his first term and those of his two successors but when he was re-elected in 1884 the policy which he followed soon cost him to be denounced by the liberals as a traitor of the constitution the failure of a liberal insurrection in 1885 was followed by a complete unitarian and clerical reaction in 1886 a new constitution was adopted which substituted a consolidated republic for the Luz Confederation the country's name was changed from the United States of Colombia to Republic of Colombia in order to express the dominating principle of the new regime the sovereignty of the individual states was expressly denied in the document and the two most refractory ones Panama and Cundinamarca temporarily reduced to territorial dependencies the governors were named from Bogota instead of being elected and the right of federal intervention reaffirmed Safret was limited by an educational and property qualification the clergy were admitted to participation in politics the Roman Catholic was declared to be the national religion although individual freedom of worship was permitted the presidential term was extended to six years and an attempt was made to ensure judicial independence by a life tenure under this constitution there was for a long time less disorder in Colombia political hatreds are however incredibly virulent and persistent because party differences are fundamental and irreconcilable the clericals regard their opponents as pestilent enemies of religion and order and the liberals anatomize the ruling party as a reactionary, corrupt and benighted oligarchy the exiled liberals have made repeated efforts to regain power and the administrations have not been able to avoid a constantly mounting national expenditure and the continuation of deficits and repudiation in 1899 a formidable insurrection aided from Venezuela broke out President San Clemente was imprisoned and in 1900 Vice President Marroquín assumed the executive functions this terrible civil war ended only in November 1902 when the insurgents surrendered their fleet and stores President Marroquín and the conservative government seem now firmly established packed as they are by the tremendous influence of the church among the masses the people are returning to their usual avocations though business has been demoralized by the stupendous deprecation of the paper currency the vast expenditures of the French canal company boomed Panama but the resulting prosperity was confined to the Isthmus the Bogota government hoped for a great increase of income when the canal should be completed and the abandonment of the enterprise was a disappointment the principal subject of public preoccupation during 1903 was the negotiation with the United States concerning the permission desired by the latter to continue the work Columbia proper has its outlets down the Magdalena to the Caribbean and therefore has no greater special commercial interest in the building of a canal than Venezuela, Guyana and Cuba but the Columbians of the continent regard the possession of the isolated Isthmian region as their most valuable national birthright and believe that this invaluable strategic position should be used so as to obtain the utmost possible advantages for the Bogota government as well as for the people of Panama the revenue from the Panama railway had been one of the important sources of government income and the ruling political classes considered that they were entailed to have this income largely increased if a canal was built the special congress summons to consider the treaty already signed by the executive failed to ratify the agreement and adjourned after empowering the president to try and negotiate a new one which would give Columbia a larger bonus and revenue but the rejection of the treaty was followed by a declaration of independence on the part of the people of Panama who believed that the United States would pay no larger sum than that already agreed upon and who saw their own interests being sacrificed for the sake of a far distant interior region with which they had few commercial ties and when's invasion and coercion need not be feared because of the lack of practicable roots of communication the United States and other powers promptly recognized the new nation which at once made the canal treaties similar to that rejected by the Borota Congress at Borota the first impression was one of profound dismay the executive offered to declare martial law, suspend the constitution and ratify the rejected treaty in spite of the senate General Reyes, the foremost living columbian, immediately departed for Panama as a special envoy to endeavor to persuade the people there to return to their allegiance, but his overtures were rejected and he went to Washington on the hopeless errant of inducing the United States government temporarily to abandon its policy of forbidding fighting on the Isthmus so that Colombia might reduce the people of Panama to obedience meanwhile many columbians blamed the Marroquin administration for the irreparable loss of Panama and 10 million badly needed dollars. Some popular demonstrations occurred and the hot-headed demanded that war be declared against the United States and an army marched across the Atrato swamps to attack Panama from the land, but the financial and topographical difficulties were so evidently insurmountable that the war talk soon died down and demonstrations against the government seized and most elements seem to have acquiesced in the election of General Reyes to the presidential term which begins in 1904. It will be under his able guidance that Colombia will start on the tedious road leading to internal peace and regeneration, to financial rehabilitation and to the reconcilment of those fierce factions whose wars have drenched their country's soil with blood for so many decades. End of section 29 Section 30 of the South American Republics, volume 2 by Thomas Clelland Dawson. This LibriVox recording is in the public domain, recording by Piotr Natter, part 7, Panama, the events leading to independence. The history of Panama is for the most part identified with that of Colombia, which is narrated elsewhere in the present volume. It will however be convenient to review certain movements and tendencies of the last half century in order to obtain a robust understanding of the position and prospects of the New Republic. All the principles of advanced democratic government were included in the program of the party which ruled Colombia from 1863 to 1883 and the statute books of the time afford ample proof that the leaders earnestly tried to put those principles into practical effect. They dreamed a utopia but practically their efforts only aggravated the anarchical tendencies bequeathed by the Spaniards and Bolivar. Colombian liberals still insist that the persistent enforcement of the constitution and principles of 1863 would ultimately transform the character of the people that religious bigotry and priestly influence would gradually disappear, that the progressive enlightenment of the masses would make military despotism and revolutions impossible and that in process of time the states to the federal government would reach a satisfactory and workable basis. But so far as the experiment went no progress was made toward unifying the nation and pacifying the adverse elements. Discontents, disorders, civil wars increased in violence as the years went by. Though one fifth of the federal revenues were spent on the public school system and one tenth of the children were nominal citizens, the clergy were permitted to have no share in their control and retaliated by excommunicating the parents. The devotedly pious creole mothers and wives threatened with the closing of the confessionals and the denial of absolution through their incalculable influence against the atheistic government. The destruction of the convents and the confiscation of the vast ecclesiastical states violently changed the ownership two thirds of the land in the confederation. But this imposition of new landlords on the industries oppressed, half enslaved tenantry did not much modify real agricultural conditions. No extensive subdivisions of states resulted and the Creole aristocracy continued to pay more attention to political intrigue than to improving their property. No less disappointing in its practical working was the independence of the states. Not only did the local bosses constantly abuse autonomy for their own selfish purposes but the presidents at Bogota often ignored the constitutional rights of the states and selected for coercion precisely those states which were farthest from the capital and most needed wide autonomous powers. Though Panama's position was isolated, its population cosmopolitan, its commercial and social structure peculiar and though in colonial times its dependence on Bogota had only been nominal, the liberal presidents usually ruled it like a conquered province. Members of the Andean oligarchy poured in to button on its revenues. The autonomy guaranteed by the constitution proved illusory and discontent led to repeated efforts to achieve absolute independence. Rival ambitions among its own leaders were furnished, however, the immediate cause for the downfall of the liberal party. A close oligarchy grew up and that inevitable corollary, a powerful faction of dissident liberals while the clericals remained formidable and irreconcilable even after their bloody overthrow in 1876. Raphael Dunyev, a brilliant writer, a resolute and ambitious party chief and a leader in the confiscation of church property had been defeated in his candidacy for the presidency in 1875. The younger and dissatisfied liberals rallied behind him in his war against the oligarchy and in 1880 the old-fashioned liberals could not prevent his election to the presidency. He vigorously strengthened the prerogatives of the federal executive and built up his personal following but although the issue of paper money and the discontinuance of interest on the foreign debt, a debt which only ten years before had been scaled down to ten million dollars one sixth its original amount on a solemn promise that at least this much would be faithfully paid, placed large funds at his disposal, the old line liberals were strong enough to prevent his re-election in 1882. Their victory was illusory and temporary. Dunyev controlled both houses of Congress and was able to defeat President Saldua at every turn. Eight years old and in feeble health, the latter died after a year of fruitless struggle. After a short at interim administration in which Dunyev's influence predominated he was re-elected to the presidency and installed in 1884. By this time his centralizing tendencies were manifest and the measures he adopted unmistakably pointed to the substitution of a unified republic for the old loose confederation. Many of his liberal supporters fell away and he was driven into an alliance with the conservatives. Appointments of members of that party to important positions were followed by the great revolt of 1885. The insurrectionists delivered their main attack on the Caribbean coast wither the importation of arms was easy. Much of the department of Magdalena fell into their hands and they besieged Cartagena in force. But when one of their expeditions invaded the Isthmus burning Cologne and interrupting traffic on the Panama Railway the president appealed to the United States, as previous presidents had done in similar cases to carry out the guarantee of free transit contained in the Treaty of 1846. At the same time the government troops attacked and defeated the isolated insurrectionists at Cologne and shortly afterwards the latter's main army suffered a bloody repulse in an assault on Cartagena. This broke the back of the movement against Nunez and the liberals abandoned the hopeless struggle. The insurrection had been undertaken for the purpose of defending the 1863 constitution and its defeat meant the destruction of departmental independence. As the logical and natural result of his victory the president proclaimed the abolishment of the constitution and summoned the convention to adopt a new one. Thence forward until his death 10 years later Rafael Nunez and his political ideas were supreme in Colombia and Panama was held in the most rigid subjection. The old United States of Colombia were replaced by the Republic of Colombia, one and indivisible. The departments became mere administrative divisions whose governors were appointed from Borota. The presidential term was increased to 6 years the radical liberal projects were abandoned, the clergy regained many of their privileges and the historical conservatives continued the dominant party. As long as Nunez lived there were few outbreaks and no serious civil war though the ousted liberals never ceased to plot the government's role. The centralizing system held departments in a rigid control from whose inconvenience Panama suffered far more than the mountain districts. Practically she was allowed no voice in either her own or general affairs. The very delegates who nominally represented her in the constitutional convention of 1885 were residents of Borota appointed by Nunez. Military rule became a permanent thing on the Isthmus. All officials were strangers sent from the Andean Plateau and the million dollars of taxes rung each year from the people of Panama were spent on maintaining the soldiers who kept them in subjection. In January 1895 the Harast province broke out in a rebellion which was suppressed by an overwhelming force of Colombian troops in April. Meanwhile in Colombia proper the opposition to the ruling clique became stronger and stronger. Persecution united the liberals and they began organizing for revolt all over the republic. The conservatives themselves divided into two parties one of which opposed the administration. Nunez did not live to finish the second term to which he had been elected in 1892. But his successor managed to suppress the premature revolt of 1895. And in 1898 Nunez was elected, the opposition refraining from going to the polls. The new president soon found his position very difficult and unlike Nunez was unable to dominate his own party and hold the opposition in check. The French canal company whose concession granted in 1878 would expire in 1904 offered a million dollars for a renewal desiring to recoup by a sale to the United States a part of the 200 millions sunk by deliceps. San Clemente's government wished to accept, but the opposition and even the conservative congress insisted on the forfeiture of the French rights. The administration rapidly lost prestige the discontented elements saw their opportunity and the long brewing storm now broke on the hapless country. The liberals heredly completed their preparations and in the fall of 1899 a civil war began the most terrible and destructive that had ever devastated the Republic. Before it ended in 1902 more than 200 battles and armed encounters had been fought and 30,000 Colombians slain. The detailed history of the campaigns had not yet been written but it is apparent that the insurrectionists at first gained many successes. They endured martial law suspending the functions of congress and the extension desired by the French canal company was granted by executive decree but the pecuniary relief thus obtained did not materially help the floundering administration. San Clemente became a mere figurehead for his more resolute ministers and in July 1900 the vigorous vice president Marroquin seized power by a coup d'etat throwing San Clemente into a prison where he remained until his death. Thereafter the war against the rebels was prosecuted with more energy and the tide turned with the defeat of an army of Venezuelans 8,000 strong which had invaded the eastern provinces to cooperate with the insurrectionists. However the liberals were still strong in the west and north. On the Eastmus four insurrections had broken out from October 1899 to September 1901 and though each had been promptly suppressed in 1902 the liberals were able to make a last great effort to establish themselves at Panama. They had considerable forces near the mouth of the Magdalena and gunboats on the Pacific. The secure possession of the Eastmus would have enabled them to reinforce this Magdalena army, cut off Marroquin from the sea and take a campaign against the interior. At first all went well for them. Their gunboats captured the government's vessels on the Pacific side. They concentrated a respectable army there and finally defeated and captured 2,000 of Marroquin's troops at Agua Dulfe near Panama. But this was their last success. Marroquin poured reinforcements into Cologne and though the American admiral at first refused to allow them to be transported over the railroad to Panama permission was granted when it became evident that there would be no fighting near the line. News came of the defeat of the liberal army near the Magdalena and General Herrera, the victor at Agua Dulfe, found himself isolated. In desperation he sent an expedition in October which surprised and captured Cologne. But French and American Marines were promptly landed to prevent fighting in that city. The expedition had no alternative but to surrender. And a few days later General Herrera with the main body capitulated on the Pacific side. The three years of war left Columbia in frightful demoralization. The victorious government was little better off than the defeated liberals. Commerce and industry had been prostrated. Revenues dwindled to nothing. The paper currency was worth less than 1%. The exhaustion of its adversaries, not its own strength, enabled Marroquin's government to continue in power. In such a situation the administration welcomed the opportunity which now offered of renewing the building of the Eastmian canal. The United States government determined to undertake this great work itself and finally decided in favor of Panama as against the Nicaragua route. 40 million dollars was agreed upon as a just price for the work already done by the French company and nothing remained but to obtain Columbia's consent to the transfer. The civil war helped to delay the negotiation of a satisfactory treaty but as soon as it was over the Marroquin administration lost little time in coming to an agreement with the United States. Columbia was to receive a bonus of 10 million dollars for consenting to the transfer and enlarging the terms of the original concession. Her sovereign rights were reserved and guaranteed although she agreed to police and sanitary control of the canal strip by the United States. When this treaty was submitted to the Colombian Senate for ratification opposition developed which the administration was not strong or resolute enough to overcome. Among the politicians at Bogota the opinion was almost universal that the executive should have demanded more. The Colombian people have ever regarded the political control of the Isthmus as their most valuable national heritage and cherished extravagant hopes that someday they would be vastly enriched by the sale or rental of this strategic bit of ground for its natural use as the greatest artery of the world's commerce. Many now insisted as they had done in 1898 on enforcing a forfeiture of the French rights or at least on receiving a proportion of the 40 million dollars to be paid for them. It was also said that the Americans could well afford a larger bonus and the opponents of the treaty made the further point that the agreement was unconstitutional and contained insufficient guarantees of Colombian sovereignty. Against this storm the feeble administration probably could do little and certainly did nothing. The Senate was allowed to adjourn without ratifying the treaty and an attempt was made to negotiate a new one providing for a larger bonus and more stringent guarantees of Colombian sovereignty. The United States however absolutely refused to consider any other terms than those already agreed upon and the civilized world saw the completion of an enterprise promising incalculable benefits to mankind indefinitely postponed by the opposition of Andean provinces whom the accidents of war and international politics had given an arbitrary control over a region with which they had no natural connection. The situation was particularly hard for the people of the Isthmus whose confident hopes were now disappointed of at last receiving by the prosperity which would follow the building of the canal some compensation for the oppression and losses they had suffered during 80 years of misrule by the Bogota oligarchies. Hardly had the treaty been rejected when plotting for a declaration of independence began. The resident population was unanimous and good grounds existed for believing that even the Colombian garrison would offer no resistance unless reinforcement should come from Bogota. In case of an armed conflict with Colombia, the people of Panama could count on the sympathy of all America and Europe. The stockholders of the French company had a direct pecuniary interest in their success. If once they could establish independence and a de facto government Colombia could not deliver an effective attack without violating the neutrality and security of transit guaranteed to the Isthmus by the United States. Everything pointed to the success of a well-conducted movement. Though the preparations for the revolt could not be concealed, the Bogota government took no effective measures to forestall it. Warned that trouble was impending, the United States sent ships to prevent fighting that might interfere with transit. The New Republic was proclaimed at Panama on the 3rd of November 1903. The Colombian authorities made no resistance. The garrison surrendered without firing a shot, and the entire population acquiesced in the appointment of a provisional government pending the calling of a convention and the adoption of a constitution. A small force of Colombians had been landed at Cologne, but the revolution at Panama found it still on the Atlantic side. On November 4th the American naval commander refused to give these troops permission to use the railroad for war-like purposes. The vital portion of the New Republic is virtually neutral under the Treaty of 1846. The provisional government having established itself in peaceable possession was safe from external attack. The useless Colombian troops at Cologne either joined the people of Panama or retired. The inhabitants of Cologne and the outlying districts immediately sent in their adherents, and the peace of the whole Isthmian region remained unbroken. On the 13th of November the United States recognized the New Republic, being followed by France on the 18th and then by all other nations as soon as diplomatic formalities could be complied with. Dr. Manuel Amador Guerrero was elected first president of the Republic of Panama being inaugurated on February 1904. A treaty with the United States for the building of the canal was framed on substantially the same lines as the one which had been negotiated with Colombia. By the end of February it had been ratified and proclaimed and the United States at once made preparations for the beginning of the work. End of Section 30 End of South American Republics Volume 2 by Thomas Clelland Dawson