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10 - The Triumph of Liberty, 1859–1864

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 July 2009

Simon Collier
Affiliation:
Vanderbilt University, Tennessee
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Summary

Manuel Montt's Second Civil War

This time the entire Army remained loyal to the government. With no national hero like General Cruz to help, the Liberal-Conservative Fusion's “revolutionary committee” had to improvise forces of its own. Its strategy was to bring the government to its knees by fomenting urban insurrections and sweeping the Central Valley with guerrilla bands (montoneras) organized by sympathetic hacendados. None of the urban risings achieved more than temporary success. On February 12, 1859, San Felipe was seized by local rebels, at the cost of the accidental death (from a stray bullet) of the Intendant's sister-in-law. The future Conservative politician Abdón Cifuentes, who lived there, contrasted the impeccable behavior of the revolutionaries with that of the civic guards and soldiers who recaptured San Felipe six days later and allowed it to be brutally sacked. Poor Cifuentes lost his first frock-coat in the tumult. A French nun arriving to work in the town's hospital reported eighty deaths.

The rising in Santiago, staged by fifty mutinous civic guards, was snuffed out almost immediately. The Fusion's effort in Valparaiso (February 28) was entrusted to the poet Guillermo Blest Gana – “good for many things but not for running a revolution,” wrote one of the rebels. He was almost immediately arrested. The rebels attacked the public warehouses and set fire to the main door of the Intendancy.

Type
Chapter
Information
Chile: The Making of a Republic, 1830–1865
Politics and Ideas
, pp. 223 - 252
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2003

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