José Trinidad Cabañas

José Trinidad Cabañas
Head of State of Honduras
In office
1852–1855
Vice President José Santiago Bueso
Preceded by Francisco Gómez
Succeeded by Francisco de Aguilar
Personal details
Born 9 June 1805
Tegucigalpa, Honduras
Died 8 January 1871 (aged 65)
Comayagua, Honduras
Political party Liberal Party
Spouse(s) Petronila Barrios de Cabañas
Occupation General, Politician
Religion Catholic

José Trinidad Cabañas (9 June 1805 8 January 1871) served as President of Honduras for two separate terms: From 1 March to 6 July 1852. And 31 December 1853 to 6 June 1855. He was a General and liberal politician whose role in Honduran history began during the Civil War 1826-29. He became a Central America hero, when he attempted to reunite Central America,[1] during Francisco Morazán's tenure and after the unionist's death.

During his second term as President, Cabañas attempted to build the railroad in Honduras. He was supported by the common Central American people, but his liberal beliefs were not accepted by the conservatives, then holding power.[2] He was popularly known as being "The gentleman without blemish and without fear".[3]

Biography

José Trinidad Cabañas was born to José María Cabañas Rivera and Juana Fiallos in Tegucigalpa and was baptized on the day of his birth.in 1805

He attended school at the "Colegio Tridentino" in Comayagua, where he studied latin, rhetoric, theology and philosophy.

Military life

In 1827, when the military forces of Justo Milla invaded and besieged Comayagua, and overthrew the government of Dionisio de Herrera, Cabañas, at 22 years old, was volunteered with his brothers by his aged father, who proclaimed,

"Sir, the weight of my years does not allow me to accompany you to battlefield, but here you have my three sons that can do what I should, with a willingness to shed their blood for the flag that you defend".

Cabañas later joined the army of the Federal Republic of Central America, where he was deputy to Gen. Francisco Morazán and eventually became a General of the Federal Army, gaining political and military leadership, which earned him the position of deputy of the Constituent Assembly of 1830.

Cabañas' first military experience was at Battle of the Trinity on 11 November 1839. He participated in the battles in San Salvador, Las Charcas, and also stood out in the battles of The Holy Spirit and in the battles of San Pedro Perulapán —conducted in Salvadoran territory—, occurred on 6 April and 25 September 1839, respectively.

At 13 November of this year, he defeated the forces of General Francisco Zelaya y Ayes on the battle in El Sitio of La Soledad, on outskirts of Tegucigalpa, and he was later defeated by the same General on 31 January 1840 in Los Llanos, in Potrero.

After the liberal defeat of 1840, Cabañas and Gen. Morazán moved from Guatemala and went into exile in Panamá, then he traveled to Costa Rica.

Cabañas established a loyal friendship with General Francisco Morazán, who, as General Luis Maldonado says, told him "My Dear General" in his correspondence. After the death of Morazán in Costa Rica on 15 September 1842, General Cabañas says: "It's not possible. To us can shoot, but to General Morazán not...that would be a crime to Central America".
After this he returned to El Salvador, where he lived for several years and collaborated in the government of Salvadorean presidents Eugenio Aguilar and Doroteo Vasconcelos. He was Minister of War on December 1850 and was defeated at the Battle of Sitio in San José La Arada on February 1851.

Presidency

During his tenure, with José Santiago Bueso with Vice-President, Cabañas made important deeds to encourage the public instruction, agriculture and mining, as well as significant efforts to improve the coffee cultivation and Public Instruction. He was the first promoter of the railroad, the coffee and craft of rush. He was an educator president, that imposed taxes on exports of cattle and timber to establish the first 50 public schools paid for by the Exchequer.

While Trinidad Cabañas resided in the city San Miguel, was reported by a Senators' Commission consisted of Francisco López, Vicente Vaquero and León Alvarado, about the results of the elections conducted in Honduras in late 1851, when he was elected as President. The Legislative Assembly of Honduras sent him the Election's Decree as Honduras' Constitutional President, he made the Promise of Law and took possession on 1 March 1852.

In order to restore the Federation, Cabañas was appointed as Vice-Chief of State by the Constituent Assembly of Central America, met in Tegucigalpa on 13 October 1852. However Cabañas rejected this charge and said: "I'm not ready for so high office, I'm a soldier, I have not public administration knowledges" so that the Vice President Pedro Molina took over the task to celebrate assemblies in El Salvador and Nicaragua .

At 23 June 1853, he signed the first contract for construction of the Inter-Oceanic Railroad of Honduras, to communicate Omoa with Amapala, a project that came developing since 1590 but was shelved by the Council of the Indies and realized in Panama. As this idea required borrowings from foreign banks, Cabañas, saw this option as a threat to the transfer and loss of national sovereignty, so he withdrew and the project was conducted in the government Jose Maria Medina.

War against Guatemala

At 1853, Cabañas appointed Jose Francisco Barrundia, Minister Plenipotentiary in Washington. During this year, were constants the harassment of the President of Guatemala, General Rafael Carrera to General Cabañas. Thus, Cabañas deposited the presidency to General Francisco Gómez during the period from 9 May to 31 December 1853, to personally lead the military campaign against Guatemala, and installed in Gracias his headquarters.

Statue in honor of José Trinidad Cabañas. Located in city Tela, Atlántida Department.

He returned to the presidency on 1 January 1854 and faced difficult political conditions. On July to this year, he sent a military column to Nicaragua under the leadership of General Francisco Gomez, who died attacked by cholera on 25 July 1854, without achieve the objectives to impose the supporters of the old Federation.

Due to attempts of Cabañas to restore the Central American Federation and to his conflicts with the conservative Nicaraguan government of Rafael Carrera, he declared that his aim in Honduras was to overthrow to General José Trinidad Cabañas, which achieved backing the Honduran conservatives, who, led by General Juan Lopez, invaded the nation and defeated to Cabañas on the Battle of Masaguara, in the plains of Santa Rosa and Gracias on 6 October 1855, forcing him to resign the presidency and take refuge in El Salvador. General Juan López called the Vice-President José Santiago Bueso to hold the presidency of the Executive, on 18 October of same year.

In El Salvador, Cabañas became both a Minister in the government and head of the National Congress. Cabañas traveled to Nicaragua to seek support to regain the Honduran presidency to the Nicaraguan president Patricio Rivas, who didn't give him for alleged influences of adventurer William Walker. So he returned to El Salvador, where he lived for many years and served as minister and civil and military governor of San Miguel in the government of his friend Gerardo Barrios (1858–1863).

Last years

During the last years of his life, General Cabañas retired from politic and could return to Honduras at 1867 and settled in Comayagua. In Honduras, he began a campaign against the presence of William Walker in Central America, then was appointed by the administration of President José María Medina as quartermaster of the Customs of Trujillo, Colón. Cabañas died on 8 January 1871, at age 65.

After his death, The Government of Honduras awarded him the title of "Soldier of the motherland" and the Republic of El Salvador named "Cabañas Department" in his honor. His remains rest in the church of San Sebastian de Comayagua.

References

  1. Mac Gaffey, Leta, Marshall Cavendish Corp. (1999).Cultures of the World: Honduras, New York. ISBN 0-7614-0955-6
  2. Mac Gaffey, cultures of the World
  3. APUNTES BIOGRAFICOS SOBRE JOSE TRINIDAD CABAÑAS Miguel Cálix Suazo, Consejo Nacional Anti-Corrupcion 2010, Retrieved 10 March 2010
  1. ^ Woodward, Ralph Lee (1993). Rafael Carrera and the Emergence of the Republic of Guatemala, 1821-1871. University of Georgia Press. ISBN 0-8203-1448-X

Sources

All in Spanish: