The close of the 18th century was a pivotal period for
the western hemisphere north and south. It was a time of war, where
England fought its old enemy
France, who in turn supported the colonists in North America who were
struggling for independence. Spain, who was now out of the race for European
dominance of the New World, fought to keep her colonies in South America;
colonies she could hardly now afford to maintain.
The colonies in both North and South America overthrew
the monarchies—the House of Hanover, England's ruling dynasty, in the North,
and Spain's House of Bourbon in the South—and went on to write for themselves
republican constitutions.
The war of American Independence came to an end in
1781 with the surrender of General Cornwallis, the commander of English troops
in the American colonies. Great Britain recognised the government of the United
States of America as independent. Slavery was made illegal in the state of
Massachusetts on the ground that the words in the constitution of 1780 were
"All men are born free and equal", which was a nullification of
slavery. Maryland followed and also outlawed the slave trade.
George Washington was born in Bridges creek, Virginia,
in 1732. His great-grandfather was first mentioned in Virginia about 70 years
earlier, where he acquired wealth and public standing. George's father
Augustine died while George was still a little boy. George was a healthy boy,
and in 1747, he went to Mount Vernon, the residence of his eldest half-brother
Lawrence, who had inherited most of the estate. In 1748, George gained
employment with the Fairfaxes, the family of Lawrence's wife, as a surveyor of
the Fairfax property. During his employment, George learnt to hunt, to use arms
and became interested in the strategies of warfare. In 1751, George came to the
Caribbean, to Barbados to be precise, to accompany his half-brother in the last
months of his life; he died the following year of consumption. George inherited
the estate and became guardian of his niece.
In 1755, Washington became involved in warfare for the
first time, when the English colonies of America sent an expedition against the
French colonies of that continent. Four years later, he married a rich young
widow, and upon the death of his niece he became one of the richest men in
America.
The British colonies in America became involved in a
five-year quarrel with Britain in 1765. Washington first had the viewpoint of
peaceful measures and negotion, but soon changed his view in that he favoured
force to defend his countrymen's rights. He took a leading part in the
political arena, and being neither an orator nor a writer, he excelled in
common sense and management of affairs. Becoming commander-in-chief, he led the first American contingent
against the British in Boston in 1775.
In the following six years, the Americans waged a war
for independence against the British. In close alliance with the French from
1778 onwards, the war was eventually won in 1781, and George Washington
resigned his commission as commander in chief of the American army, having
accomplished his great work of defeating the British forces. In 1793 he laid
the cornerstone of the Capitol in Washington in a masonic ritual in which he
presided as master.
In the war for the independence of the British
colonies in North America, several thousand Africans had fought on both sides.
Slaves gained their freedom for serving the Union under General George
Washington. Some black regiments came from as far away as Haiti.
"The aim of the Franco-American alliance was to
evict the British from Savannah, Georgia," remarks Smithsonian Museum
their publication "The Black Presence in the Era of the American Revolution".
They continue:
"Among the coloured volunteers in the American
cause were young men destined to become famous in the Haitian revolution—among
them were André Rigaud and Luis Jacques Beauvais, non-commissioned officers at
Savannah; Martial Besse, a general under the Versailles Convention; Jean
Baptisete Mars Belley, deputy to the convention; and Henri Christophe, future
king."
French revolutionary thinkers, such as the Marquis de
Lafayette, influenced the framers of both the American and Haitian
constitutions. As a result, Haitian patriots supported Washington's war for
independence.
Among many Haitians who came to Trinidad and Tobago
were also the descendants of General Alexander Dumas, another hero of the
Haitian revolution. Today, the family of Reginald Dumas, former head of the
Public Service, still live in our country.
Africans fought also for England, as witnessed by the
Company Villages in south Trinidad. Soldiers of these Black detatchments in the
British army were transported to Trinidad and given land and freedom.
In Trinidad, 1783 was a pivotal year. It saw the
promulgation of the Cedula of Population, a document issued from the Spanish
Royal Court at Madrid that was of special importance to our island. It
established an immigration policy to Trinidad, and defined the creation of
modern Trinidad as distinct from the old, Spanish times. It opened the doors to
significant agricultural development. Even after the abolition of slavery here
in 1838, this agricultural foundation went on to make this island one of the
wealthiest territories in these parts. The cedula also served to create one of
the most racially diversified places in the world through its terms. The whole
agreement was the work of a significant man, Philippe Rose Roume de St.
Laurent, who had been born in the island of Grenada. Roume de St. Laurnet later
served the French government as 'ordinateur' (judge) in Tobago. He represented
Napoleon Bonaparte as one of the commissioners of Haiti. When he married
Marianne Rochard, a coloured woman from Tobago, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
Toussaint L'Ouverture and his brother were their witnesses.
Simon Bolivar
1783 was also the year that Simon Bolivar, the great
liberator of South America, was born in Caracas. For more than 200 years, this
city had been one of the great centres of Spanish imperial power in South
America. Ever since de Losada had founded it in 1567, Caracas had grown in
size, power and influence.
The Bolivars were one of the great families of
Caracas. In their veins ran the blood of Africa, of the Iberian peninsula, and
of the natives of the Andes. They owned large estates of sugar cane which were
worked by slave labour, as well as silver mines that produced tremendous
wealth. Simon's grandfather had been granted a colonial title of nobility by
the Spanish court.
Orphaned before his fifteenth birthday, Simon
Bolivar's maternal grandfather, Feliciano Palacios, took him in his care and
arranged for him to have the best possible education in Venezuela and in Spain.
Amongst his tutors were Simon Rodriguez and Andres Bello. Simon distinguished
himself during the years of his education in Spain with his academic
accomplishments. There, at the age of 18, he fell in love with Teresa del Toro,
who was a year younger. The families insisted on a year's delay of marriage. At
the end of the year, Bolivar married Teresa and took his wife back to one of
the family's plantations in the valley of Aragua, near Caracas. Not long after,
Teresa died of a malignant fever, and the heartbroken Simon swore never to
remarry. He kept his oath, however, he always enjoyed the company of women and
admitted that the inspiration he gained from them was a necessity to him.
Single, young Bolivar returned to Europe. He was the
guest of the Marquis de Uztaiz, who gave him access to one of the greatest
private libraries of Spain, famous for its collections on the physical
sciences, history, philosophy and politics. It was during this period at Cadiz
that Simon met Francisco de Miranda.
Miranda was a remarkable person. He was the type of
intellectual that revolution turns into a military leader, and he became the
precursor of Venezuela's fight for independence. Born in Caracas, Francisco's
education was immense. He had devoted many years to the study of politics.
Simon Bolivar was greatly influenced by the older man's grasp of culture and
history, and of the philosophy of the "rights of man". Bolivar became
a member of Lodge Lautro in Cadiz in 1803, together with two other great South
American patriots, José de San Martin, later the liberator of Argentina, and
Bernardo O'Higgins, later the national hero of Chile.
Argentine soldier and statesman, national hero of
Argentina, José de San Martin was born in Yapeyu in 1778. Played a great part
in winning independence for his native land, Chile and Peru. Officer in the
Spanish army (1789-1812), but helped Buenos Aires in its struggle for independence
(1812-1814). Raised army in Argentina, and in January 1817 marched across the
Andes to Chile, where he and Bernardo O'Higgins defeated the Spanish at
Chacabuco and Maipo, thus winning independence for Chile. Subsequently, he won
independence for Peru and became this country's protector. He resigned in 1822
after differences with Bolivar and died in exile in Boulogne in 1850.
Bernardo O'Higgins, the Chilean revolutionary, born in
Chillán in 1778, illegitimate son of Ambrosio O'Higgins, the Irish-born viceroy
of Chile and Peru. Played a great part in the Chilean revolt of 1810-1817, and
became known as the 'Liberator of Chile'. In 1817-1823 he was the new
republic's first president, but was deposed after a revolution and retired to
Peru, where he died in 1842.
This was a time when words like "liberty"
and "equality" were powerful concepts. The term "rights of
man" can be understood only against the background of a Europe dominated
by autocratic monarchs, supported by aristocracies that excluded vast
majorities of the population. The furnace of the French Revolution had branded
those ideas upon the consciousness of a generation. The revolution in France
was followe by the era of Napoleon Bonaparte, and there was a growing interest
in science and the roots of another revolution, the Industrial Revolution.
In Paris, Simon Bolivar met the great German scientist
and explorer Alexander von Humboldt, who knew South America well. Bolivar told
him his feelings of the dignity of life in his homeland, and to this von
Humboldt replied:
Bolivar traveled to Rome in the company of his former
tutor Simon Rodriguez. There, one golden afternoon, they climbed to the top of
the Aventin Hill, where more than 2000 years before the ancient Romans had been
accustomed to reaffirm their right for freedom.
Simon Bolivar gazed long at the monuments and the
ruins of classical buildings spread before him. Then, all of a sudden, he
turned to Rodriguez and said:
Thus, great decisions are made, and this one was to be
the turning point for South American affairs. Sometimes, a person would move to
the moment of decision so gradually that at first, there is no sign of change
or of the turn in his or her life. But to others, it is a bolt from the blue, a
moment of revelation, such as happened to Paul on the Damascus Road.
Not long after his stay in Rome, upon his return to
Caracas, Bolivar met with a group known as the Patriotic Society. They were in
disorder and had no idea how to go forward. Bolivar forced the issues, cried
out to them:
Events moved swiftly. Bolivar, Andres Bello and others
went to London in search of British help. They also persuaded Francisco de
Miranda to return and lead the armies of Liberation. It was his second attempt
to break the shackles that bound the southern continent to Spain.
But the general, who had once commanded an army on the
Rhine, was now too old - he could not adapt himself to guerrilla warfare,
bungled the campaign and accepted terms from the Spanish. Bolivar arrested him.
The rot, however, had set in.
The revolution was smashed, the leaders arrested.
Miranda was sent to Spain in chains. Bolivar escaped to Curaçao and eventually
to Haiti, where Toussaint L'Ouverture offered asylum. All his property and
estates in Venezuela were confiscated. Notwithstanding, he kept his courage and
his flaming faith in the cause of liberation.
When Bolivar returned to Venezuela, the tide was
turned from the neighbouring island of Trinidad. From there, a small band of
men, remembered as the "Immortal 45", crossed the Gulf of Paria under
the command of a young man by the name of Santiago Moreño. They took the
coastal towns, drawing thousands to their cause.
Bolivar's famous Cartagena manifesto demonstrated the
importance for all American States to work together for independence. The
second phase of the revolution was now underway. Final victory was yet a long
way away., however.
Simon Bolivar kept the course and held before him the
lesson "Let no motive therefore make you swerve from your duty, violate
your vows or betray your trust."
"United we are strong" is a concept as old
as humanity. In the history of nations, it manifests itself in the form of
federations. Simon Bolivar had a dream of a federation of South American
states, with his home country, Venezuela, being part of that. Partly liberator
and elected president, partly dictator, Bolivar succeeded in joining Venezuela,
Colombia and New Granada into a republic called Colombia. In 1822, Ecuador was
joined, and in 1824 Peru. Upper Peru was named Bolivia in his honour, however,
the inhabitants of that state were not at all satisfied with Bolivar's
consitution and drove out his troops. In 1828, also the republicans in Colombia
rebelled against Bolivar's supreme power, and in 1829, Venezuela split from the
federation and elected José Antonio Páez as president. A year later, Bolivar
died, leaving behind a shattered federation, but a dream of federation very
much alive in the former Spanish colonies of South America.
Páez' power collapsed in the 1840s, when liberal ideas
became stronger. From 1846 to 1858, control of the country was in the hands of
José Tadeo Monagas and his brother José Gregorio. They were not liberal, and
apart from the abolition of slavery in 1854, nothing much was achieved for the
people.
After the collapse of the Monagas regime, chaos and
turmoil struck Venezuela for twelve years. Páez tried to once more restore
order in the early 1860s, but failed. The turmoil ended with Antonio Guzmán
Blanco assuming power in 1870 and assuming dictatorial rule until 1888.
A quantity of Venezuelan families from both Caracas
and the coastal towns came to Trinida in the period of the dictators. Others
merely renewed older links with the island. French creole families, such as the
Ganteaumes and the Pantins, and German creoles such as Wuppermann and Siegert,
married into Caracanian families, such as Machado and de Tova.
Guzmán, like the other dictators, did not achieve any
alleviation in the mass poverty of Venezuela. He rebuilt Caracas, but the rural
masses remained in their hovels. After his regime ended, the country again fell
into chaos, until stability was re-gained at the terrible price of oppression
and brutality. Cipriano Castro ruled from 1899 to 1908, followed by Juan
Vicente Gómez from 1908 until 1935.
"Bolivar's dreams of liberty and freedom proved
illusory," writes Esmond Wright (ed.) in "History of the World".
Dr. Philip Sherlock adds in a lecture on Radio Guardian, 1964:
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