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Chincha Islands War

The Chincha Islands War, also known as Spanish–South American War (Spanish: Guerra hispano-sudamericana), was a series of coastal and naval battles between Spain and its former colonies of Peru, Chile, Ecuador, and Bolivia from 1865 to 1879. The conflict began with Spain's seizure of the guano-rich Chincha Islands in one of a series of attempts by Spain, under Isabella II, to reassert its influence over its former South American colonies. The war saw the use of ironclads, including the Spanish ship Numancia, the first ironclad to circumnavigate the world.

Chincha Islands War

1865 South America during the Chincha Islands War. Orange: Peru. Green: Bolivia. Yellow: Ecuador. Blue-Green: Colombia. Purple: Chile.
Date1865–1879
Location
Coasts of Peru and Chile
Result
  • Peace treaties between Spain and Peru (1879), Bolivia (1879), Chile (1883) and Ecuador (1885).
Belligerents
Spain
Nominal participation:
 Ecuador
 Bolivia
Commanders and leaders
Juan Manuel Pareja 
Casto Méndez Núñez
Mariano I. Prado
Juan Williams
Casualties and losses
300[1] 700

Background

 
The guano-rich Chincha Islands of Peru in 1863

Military expenditures were greatly increased during Isabella's reign and Spain rose to a position as the world's fourth largest naval power.[2] In the 1850's and 1860's, the Spanish engaged in colonial activities around the world, including in Morocco, the Philippines, Mexico, and the Dominican Republic, the last of which it briefly reoccupied.

At the end of 1862, Spain sent a scientific expedition to South American waters with the covert purpose of reinforcing the financial and legal claims of Spanish citizens residing in the Americas.[2] The expedition was under the command of Admiral Luis Hernández-Pinzón Álvarez, a direct descendant of the Pinzón brothers, who had accompanied Christopher Columbus on his voyage that resulted in the modern European discovery of the Americas.[citation needed] Pinzón's squadron was composed of four warships: the twin steam frigates Triunfo and Resolución, the corvette Vencedora and the schooner Virgen de Covadonga.[citation needed]

The Spanish ships arrived at the port of Valparaiso, Chile, on April 18, 1863. Spain had recognized Chilean independence since the 1840s, and both nations had maintained diplomatic relations. The expedition was cordially received, and the Admiral exchanged visits with local authorities. The vessels left Chile in July amicably and moved on to Peru.[citation needed] Even though Spain had never recognized Peruvian independence, which had been declared in 1821,[2] the squadron received a friendly welcome at the port of Callao. It stayed in port for a few weeks and then sailed bound for San Francisco, California, United States.[citation needed]

Talambo incident

On August 4, 1863, an incident took place at the Talambo hacienda, in Lambayeque, Peru. The details are fragmentary; but the episode involved a fight that broke out between two Spanish residents and 40 local citizens. As a result, one Spaniard died, and four others were injured.[3]

When news of the incident reached Pinzón, he returned with his fleet to Peru on November 13 and demanded for its government to issue an apology and for reparations be made to the affected Spanish nationals. In response, the Peruvians took the position that the episode was an internal police matter that should be handled by the Peruvian justice system and that no apology was due. At that juncture, the Spanish government in Madrid decided to demand payment of Peruvian debts stemming from the War of Independence as well, and it sent the representative Eusebio de Salazar y Mazarredo to settle the issue directly with the Peruvian authorities.

Salazar arrived in March 1864, bearing the title of Royal Commissary. That was a deliberate insult to the government of Peru because a commissary is a colonial functionary, rather than an ambassador, the normal level of diplomatic contact during consultations between independent states. The snub doomed negotiations with the Peruvian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Juan Antonio Ribeyro Estrada.

Occupation of Chincha Islands

 
The Chincha Islands of Peru were occupied by Spanish sailors on April 14, 1864.

On April 14, 1864, in retaliation for Peru's refusal to pay an indemnity, the Spanish fleet seized the lightly defended Chincha Islands, the main source for Peruvian guano resources. The Spanish placed the islands' Peruvian governor, Ramón Valle Riestra, under arrest aboard the Resolución, occupied the islands with 400 marines, and raised the Spanish flag. Spain considered the islands an important bargaining chip, as they were a major Peruvian economic asset and produced almost 60% of the government's annual revenue.[2]

The Spanish squadron also blockaded principal Peruvian ports, disrupting commerce and fostering a high level of resentment throughout Latin America. Spain expected little resistance from Peru and believed its military capabilities to be negligible. A proposal to exchange the islands for British-held Gibraltar was even entertained for a time. During the blockade, the Spanish lost the Triunfo after it was destroyed by an accidental fire.

The new Spanish Prime Minister, Ramón María Narváez, disapproved of the unilateral actions taken by Pinzón and replaced him with Vice Admiral Juan Manuel Pareja, who had been Minister of the Navy. Pareja had been born in Peru, and his father, Brigadier Antonio Pareja, had died in Chile in 1813 while he was fighting for Spain during the Chilean War of Independence. Narváez's conciliatory opinion soon changed, and he dispatched another four warships to reinforce the Pacific fleet.

Pareja arrived in Peru in December 1864 and immediately opened negotiations with General Manuel Ignacio de Vivanco, the special representative of Peruvian President Juan Antonio Pezet. The Vivanco-Pareja Treaty was signed on January 27, 1865 on board the frigate Villa de Madrid. Popular opinion in Peru considered the treaty as detrimental to its national honor. When the Peruvian Congress refused to ratify it, a general uprising followed, and Pezet's government fell on November 7.

War with Chile

In the meantime, anti-Spanish sentiments in several South American countries, including Bolivia, Chile, and Ecuador, increased. Peru and its neighbors still remained wary of any moves that might foreshadow an attempt to re-establish the Spanish Empire. Given the climate of suspicion, no one was surprised when the Spanish gunboat Vencedora stopped at a Chilean port for coal, and President José Joaquín Pérez declared that coal was a war supply that could not be sold to a belligerent nation.

From the Spanish point of view, the Chilean coaling embargo was taken as proof that Chile no longer was neutral. That was reinforced after two Peruvian steamers left the port of Valparaiso bearing weapons and Chilean volunteers bound for Peru. Vice Admiral José Manuel Pareja thus took a hard line and demanded sanctions against Chile that were even heavier than those imposed upon Peru. He then detached four wooden ships from his squadron and dispatched them to Chile while the Numancia and the Covadonga remained to guard Callao.

Pareja arrived at Valparaiso on September 17, 1865 aboard his flagship the Villa de Madrid. He demanded for the Spanish flag to be given a 21-gun salute.[4] He deliberately presented his demand on the day before Chilean National Day (September 18). Under the circumstances, the Chileans refused, and war was declared a week later on September 24.

The new Spanish prime minister, Leopoldo O'Donnell, who had replaced Narváez, ordered Pareja to withdraw, but the Spanish admiral chose to ignore the direct order. As he had no troops with which to attempt a landing, he decided to impose a blockade of the main Chilean ports. That action was unenforceable since a blockade of Chile's 1,800 miles (2,900 km) of coastline would have required a fleet that was several times larger than what Pareja had at his disposal. The blockade of the port of Valparaiso, however, caused such great economic damage to both Chilean and foreign interests that the navies of the United States and Great Britain, despite remaining neutral in the conflict, issued a formal protest.

Battle of Papudo

Even before Chile and Peru were formally allied, Spain had suffered a humiliating naval defeat at the naval Battle of Papudo on November 26, 1865. The engagement had the Chilean corvette Esmeralda capture the Spanish schooner Covadonga, taking the crew prisoner and seizing the admiral's war correspondence. That humiliation was too much for Pareja, who committed suicide two days later aboard his flagship.[5] The general command of the Spanish fleet in the Pacific was assumed by Commodore Casto Méndez Núñez, who quickly received a promotion to rear admiral. He then decided to flee, leaving behind a sizeable army and treasure.

War with Peru, Ecuador, and Bolivia

 
A Peruvian battery during the Battle of Callao

On November 7, 1865, his unwillingness to declare war on Spain and the vilification arising from his signing of the Vivanco-Pareja Treaty forced Peruvian President Juan Antonio Pezet from office. He was replaced by his vice president, General Pedro Diez Canseco.

Diez Canseco also tried to avoid war with Spain, which similarly led to his downfall only 20 days later. On November 26, General Mariano Ignacio Prado, the leader of the nationalist movement, deposed Canseco. The new government immediately declared its solidarity with Chile and its intention to declare war on Spain and to restore Peru's national honor.

Chile and Peru formally signed an alliance against Spain on December 5, 1865. The Peruvian Congress ratified the alliance on January 12, and two days later, Peru finally declared war on Spain. Chile's navy was weak and almost nonexistent. To reinforce its Chilean ally, a Peruvian squadron, commanded by Captain Lizardo Montero, was immediately dispatched to the south. Among the ships in the squadron were the steam frigates Amazonas and Apurímac.

Ecuador joined the alliance on January 30, 1866 by declaring war on Spain on that day. Bolivia, under the command of General Mariano Melgarejo, also declared war on March 22, 1866. The moves resulted in all ports on South America's Pacific coast becoming closed to the Spanish fleet. Argentina and Brazil refused to join the alliance, as they were embroiled in a war with Paraguay.

Battle of Abtao

Spain's Admiral Mendez Núñez sent two of his most powerful ships (the frigates Villa de Madrid and Reina Blanca) south to destroy the combined Chilean-Peruvian fleet. The Allied squadron had been placed under the command of Peruvian Captain Manuel Villar and had taken refuge at Abtao, a well-protected inlet near the gulf of Chiloé, in southern Chile. The Spanish squadron appeared at the entrance of the inlet on February 7, 1866, but the Spanish did not enter to avoid risking their ironclads running aground in the shallows. A cannonade, lasting several hours, was exchanged with little effect. In spite of being at anchor, without steam, and with some ships with their engines undergoing overhaul, the Allies mounted an energetic fight. The Covadonga, under the command of Lieutenant Manuel Thomson, managed to fire over an island and scored several hits on the frigate Blanca. The battle ended indecisively without further developments. Reluctant to enter shallow waters and realizing that a long-range gun duel would serve no purpose but to waste ammunition, the Spanish commanders withdrew.

Williams and the Esmeralda were not at the anchorage on the day of the battle. The commodore had sailed to Ancud for coaling. On its way back to Valparaiso, the Spanish squadron captured a Chilean steamboat, the Paquete del Maule, which was transporting sailors to crew the new Peruvian ironclads Huáscar and Independencia.[6]

Bombardment of Valparaiso

The Spanish could not attack land forces and had been frustrated in attempts to engage the Allied squadron at sea. The Spanish ships were isolated, short of supplies, and losing hope of victory. When the Chilean government ordered all vessels communicating with the Spanish fleet to be barred from Chilean ports, Admiral Mendez Núñez decided to take punitive actions against the Allied ports. The Spanish fleet shelled and burned the town and the port of Valparaiso on March 31 and destroyed Chile's merchant fleet.[7] A total of 33 vessels were burned or sunk. The damage to the Chilean merchant marine was catastrophic. Twelve years later, the total tonnage under the Chilean flag was still less than half of what it had been in 1865.

Battle of Callao

 
Numancia, flagship of the Spanish fleet

Admiral Mendez Núñez, displeased at having to resort to destroying defenseless targets such as Valparaiso and with the inconclusive result at Abtao, decided to change tactics and to attack a heavily defended port. As a result, he set sail for the Peruvian port city of Callao. The Battle of Callao took place on May 2 after which both sides claimed victory. Peruvian defenders claimed that they had halted the Spanish from regaining their lost authority and prestige in South America, prevented them from enforcing their demands upon Peru, and forced the withdrawal of the Spanish fleet, which was technically correct since Peruvian cannons fired the last shots in the battle. The Spanish claimed to have visited punishment upon its former colony. Spanish guns had managed to cause only limited damage to defenses, and most of the cannons, artillery, and buildings in Callao itself survived the battle intact.

Aftermath

Whether the suspicions of a Spanish scheme to recapture its former colonies had any basis in fact is unknown. Many in South America saw Spain's meddling in Latin America and its occupation of the Chincha Islands as proof of a long-range Spanish plot to reassert its influence over its previous colonial territories. The force sent by Spain, on the other hand, amounted to a mere squadron of ships with negligible capabilities for landing forces, and its intention may have been only to seize the islands for their valuable fertiliser resources as reparations and to regain some of Spain's lost prestige. Regardless of the reason behind the conflict, Spain found it impossible to hold its positions. With all ports south of Colombia closed to it for coaling and provisioning, the Spanish fleet withdrew from patrolling the South American coastline, vacated the Chincha Islands, and returned to Spain via the Philippines, completing a circumnavigation of the globe to do so.

Commemoration

The calle del Pacífico ("Pacific street", now Avenida de la Ciudad de Barcelona [es]) in Madrid, Spain, was named after this campaign. The street gave name to a neighborhood and metro station.

Order of battle

Spain

General Commanders

Vessel tons
(L.ton)
Speed
(Knots)
Armour
(Inch)
Main Artillery Built
Year
Notes
Ironclad frigates
  Numancia 7,500 tons 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph)
Iron belt
34 200 mm guns 1863 At the time among the most powerful ships of the world.
Screw-frigates
  Villa de Madrid 4,478 tons 15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph) 30 200 mm guns
14 160 mm guns
2 150 mm howitzers
2 120 mm guns
2 80 mm guns
1862
  Almansa 3,980 tons 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph) 30 200 mm guns
14 160 mm guns
2 150 mm howitzers
2 120 mm guns
2 80 mm guns
1864 Arrived to the Pacific in April 1866
only days before the Battle of Callao
  Reina Blanca 3,800 tons 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph) 68 guns 1864
  Berenguela 3,800 tons 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph) 36 guns 1864
  Resolución 3,100 tons 11 knots (20 km/h; 13 mph) 1 220 mm guns
20 200 mm guns
14 160 mm guns
2 150 mm howitzers
2 120 mm guns
2 80 mm guns
1861
  Nuestra Señora
del Triunfo
3,100 tons 11 knots (20 km/h; 13 mph) 1 220 mm guns
20 200 mm guns
14 160 mm guns
2 150 mm howitzers
2 120 mm guns
2 80 mm guns
1861 Lost in accidental fire in front of Pisco
on the night of 25 to 26 November 1864

Steam-schooners

  • Vencedora, Built 1861; Weight 778 tons; Speed 8 knots (15 km/h; 9 mph); weapons two 200 mm revolving guns and two 160 mm guns.
  • Virgen de Covadonga, Built 1864; Weight 445 tons; Speed 8 knots; Weapons two revolving 200 mm guns at the sides and one revolving 160 mm guns at the prow. Captured by Chile at Battle of Papudo on November 26, 1865.

Steamboats

  • Marqués de la Victoria – 3 guns

Sail transports

  • Consuelo
  • Mataura

Peru

 
The screw-frigate Amazonas
 
The Loa being fitted after its conversion in the Callao harbour, 1864

General Commanders

Screw-frigates

  • Apurímac – Built 1854; Weight 1,666-tons; Speed 9.43 knots (17 km/h); Weapons thirty-four guns[8]
  • Amazonas – Built 1851; Weight 1,743-tons; Speed 9.43 knots (17 km/h); Weapons thirty-three 200 mm guns – Beached at Abtao, near Punta Quilque, 15 January 1886

Steam-schooners

  • Tumbes – Built 1854; Weight 250-tons; Speed 7 knots (13 km/h); Weapons two 68-pounder guns

Steamboats

  • Chalaco – Built 1864 – 2 guns
  • Colón – Built 1864 – 2 guns

Ironclad monitors

  • Loa – Built 1854, conversion to ironclad ordered in 1864;[9] Weight 648-tons; Speed 10 knots (19 km/h); Weapons four 32 pdr. guns[10]
  • Victoria – Built 1865; 1 gun

Chile

General Commanders

Corvette

  • Esmeralda – Built in 1854, 854-ton weight, speed of 8 knots (14.82 km / h), armed with two guns boat 12 lb, 16 smoothbore muzzle-loading guns of 32 lb and 4 smooth-bore muzzle-loading guns of 32 lb.

Steam-schooners

  • Virgen de Covadonga – Built 1864; Weight 445-tons; Speed 8 knots (15 km/h); Weapons two revolving 200 mm guns at the sides and one revolving 160 mm guns at the prow. Captured by Chile at Battle of Papudo on November 26, 1865.

Transports

Steamers

  • Maipú – Built 1855 in England; Acquired 1857; Displacement 450 tons; Speed 8 knots; armed with 1 68 lb gun and 4 32 lb guns
  • Lautauro – Built 1852; Given by Peru to Chile for wartime use 1865; Displacement 450 tons

Notes

  1. ^ "Statistics of Wars, Oppressions and Atrocities of the Nineteenth Century (the 1800s)".
  2. ^ a b c d Tucker 1967, p. 1431.
  3. ^ Guinot 2009, pp. 307–308.
  4. ^ Burr 1967, p. 97.
  5. ^ Farcau 2000, p. 17.
  6. ^ NYT staff & April 10, 1866.
  7. ^ NYT staff & May 6, 1866.
  8. ^ Old Peruvian Ships.
  9. ^ Moore 1898, p. 1651.
  10. ^ Chesnau and Kolesnik 1979.

Sources

  • Budino, José M. (2008). "Re: The Capture of Tornado". Warship International. XLV (4): 265. ISSN 0043-0374.
  • Burr, Robert N. (1967). By Reason or Force: Chile and the Balancing of Power in South America, 1830–1905. Los Angeles and Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Chesnau, Roger; Eugene Kolesnik, eds. (1979). Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905. Conway Maritime Press. ISBN 0831703024.
  • Curana, J.; Koehler, R. B.; Silverstone, Paul H. (1990). "Question 12/89". Warship International. XXVII (2): 200–203. ISSN 0043-0374.
  • Farcau, Bruce W. (2000). The Ten Cents War: Chile, Peru and Bolivia in the War of the Pacific, 1879–1884. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger Publishers. ISBN 0275969258.
  • Greene, Jack (2008). "Re: The Capture of Tornado". Warship International. XLV (4): 265. ISSN 0043-0374.
  • Guinot, Dolores Luna (2009). Conspiracy In Mendoza. Victoria, British Columbia: Trafford Publishing. ISBN 978-1426921858.
  • Moore, John Bassett (1898). History and Digest of the International Arbitrations to which the United States Has Been a Party. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  • NYT staff (10 April 1866). "South America: High-handed Movements in Bolivia – Miscellaneous. CEntrap America: Revolution in Panama – Bogus Canal and Railroad Companies – The Barbacoas Gold Mines – The Mines a Failure – All the Miners Anxious to Return – Over One Hundred already Returned to Panama – Naval Matters". The New York Times. Retrieved 2 January 2010.
  • NYT staff (6 May 1866). "South America: From the Seat of War – Great Preparations and "Great Expectations" – The Grand Movement of the Allied Fleet Again Delayed – Paraguayan Spies and their Stories – The War Beginning to Affect the Finances of the Argentine Confederation. The Bombardment of Valparaiso: Letter from an Americal Naval Officer". The New York Times. Retrieved 2 January 2010.
  • Tucker, Spencer C. (1967). A Global Chronology of Conflict: From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-85109672-5.
  • (in Spanish). p. 4. Archived from the original on October 14, 2007. Mentions Apurimac both under her original name, and under the name Callao without appreciating that they were the same ship

Further reading

  • Barros Arana, Diego (1884–1902). Historia Jeneral de Chile (in Spanish). Vol. I–XVI. Santiago, Chile: Rafael Jover. ISBN 9780598482358.
  • García Martínez, José Ramón (1997). (PDF). Revista de Marina (in Spanish). Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 June 2009. Retrieved 1 January 2010.
  • López Urrutia, Carlos. "Chile: A Brief Naval History". Historical Text Archive. Retrieved 1 January 2010.
  • NYT staff (May 30, 2008). "Peru guards its guano as demand soars in 2008". The New York Times. New York, New York. Retrieved 2 January 2010.
  • (in Spanish). Archived from the original on December 11, 2009. Retrieved 2 January 2010.
  • "Guerra del Pacífico – 1864–1865 Conflicto de España contra Chile y Perú". Historia y Arqueologia Marítima (in Spanish). Retrieved 2 January 2010.
  • . Archived from the original on March 12, 2008. Retrieved 2 January 2010.
  • . Archived from the original on December 31, 2007. Retrieved 2 January 2010.

External links

  Media related to Chincha Islands War at Wikimedia Commons

chincha, islands, also, known, spanish, south, american, spanish, guerra, hispano, sudamericana, series, coastal, naval, battles, between, spain, former, colonies, peru, chile, ecuador, bolivia, from, 1865, 1879, conflict, began, with, spain, seizure, guano, r. The Chincha Islands War also known as Spanish South American War Spanish Guerra hispano sudamericana was a series of coastal and naval battles between Spain and its former colonies of Peru Chile Ecuador and Bolivia from 1865 to 1879 The conflict began with Spain s seizure of the guano rich Chincha Islands in one of a series of attempts by Spain under Isabella II to reassert its influence over its former South American colonies The war saw the use of ironclads including the Spanish ship Numancia the first ironclad to circumnavigate the world Chincha Islands War1865 South America during the Chincha Islands War Orange Peru Green Bolivia Yellow Ecuador Blue Green Colombia Purple Chile Date1865 1879LocationCoasts of Peru and ChileResultPeace treaties between Spain and Peru 1879 Bolivia 1879 Chile 1883 and Ecuador 1885 BelligerentsSpain Chile Peru Nominal participation Ecuador BoliviaCommanders and leadersJuan Manuel Pareja Casto Mendez NunezMariano I Prado Juan WilliamsCasualties and losses300 1 700 Contents 1 Background 2 Talambo incident 3 Occupation of Chincha Islands 4 War with Chile 4 1 Battle of Papudo 5 War with Peru Ecuador and Bolivia 5 1 Battle of Abtao 5 2 Bombardment of Valparaiso 5 3 Battle of Callao 6 Aftermath 6 1 Commemoration 7 Order of battle 7 1 Spain 7 2 Peru 7 3 Chile 7 3 1 Corvette 7 3 2 Steamers 8 Notes 9 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksBackground Edit The guano rich Chincha Islands of Peru in 1863 Military expenditures were greatly increased during Isabella s reign and Spain rose to a position as the world s fourth largest naval power 2 In the 1850 s and 1860 s the Spanish engaged in colonial activities around the world including in Morocco the Philippines Mexico and the Dominican Republic the last of which it briefly reoccupied At the end of 1862 Spain sent a scientific expedition to South American waters with the covert purpose of reinforcing the financial and legal claims of Spanish citizens residing in the Americas 2 The expedition was under the command of Admiral Luis Hernandez Pinzon Alvarez a direct descendant of the Pinzon brothers who had accompanied Christopher Columbus on his voyage that resulted in the modern European discovery of the Americas citation needed Pinzon s squadron was composed of four warships the twin steam frigates Triunfo and Resolucion the corvette Vencedora and the schooner Virgen de Covadonga citation needed The Spanish ships arrived at the port of Valparaiso Chile on April 18 1863 Spain had recognized Chilean independence since the 1840s and both nations had maintained diplomatic relations The expedition was cordially received and the Admiral exchanged visits with local authorities The vessels left Chile in July amicably and moved on to Peru citation needed Even though Spain had never recognized Peruvian independence which had been declared in 1821 2 the squadron received a friendly welcome at the port of Callao It stayed in port for a few weeks and then sailed bound for San Francisco California United States citation needed Talambo incident EditOn August 4 1863 an incident took place at the Talambo hacienda in Lambayeque Peru The details are fragmentary but the episode involved a fight that broke out between two Spanish residents and 40 local citizens As a result one Spaniard died and four others were injured 3 When news of the incident reached Pinzon he returned with his fleet to Peru on November 13 and demanded for its government to issue an apology and for reparations be made to the affected Spanish nationals In response the Peruvians took the position that the episode was an internal police matter that should be handled by the Peruvian justice system and that no apology was due At that juncture the Spanish government in Madrid decided to demand payment of Peruvian debts stemming from the War of Independence as well and it sent the representative Eusebio de Salazar y Mazarredo to settle the issue directly with the Peruvian authorities Salazar arrived in March 1864 bearing the title of Royal Commissary That was a deliberate insult to the government of Peru because a commissary is a colonial functionary rather than an ambassador the normal level of diplomatic contact during consultations between independent states The snub doomed negotiations with the Peruvian Minister of Foreign Affairs Juan Antonio Ribeyro Estrada Occupation of Chincha Islands Edit The Chincha Islands of Peru were occupied by Spanish sailors on April 14 1864 On April 14 1864 in retaliation for Peru s refusal to pay an indemnity the Spanish fleet seized the lightly defended Chincha Islands the main source for Peruvian guano resources The Spanish placed the islands Peruvian governor Ramon Valle Riestra under arrest aboard the Resolucion occupied the islands with 400 marines and raised the Spanish flag Spain considered the islands an important bargaining chip as they were a major Peruvian economic asset and produced almost 60 of the government s annual revenue 2 The Spanish squadron also blockaded principal Peruvian ports disrupting commerce and fostering a high level of resentment throughout Latin America Spain expected little resistance from Peru and believed its military capabilities to be negligible A proposal to exchange the islands for British held Gibraltar was even entertained for a time During the blockade the Spanish lost the Triunfo after it was destroyed by an accidental fire The new Spanish Prime Minister Ramon Maria Narvaez disapproved of the unilateral actions taken by Pinzon and replaced him with Vice Admiral Juan Manuel Pareja who had been Minister of the Navy Pareja had been born in Peru and his father Brigadier Antonio Pareja had died in Chile in 1813 while he was fighting for Spain during the Chilean War of Independence Narvaez s conciliatory opinion soon changed and he dispatched another four warships to reinforce the Pacific fleet Pareja arrived in Peru in December 1864 and immediately opened negotiations with General Manuel Ignacio de Vivanco the special representative of Peruvian President Juan Antonio Pezet The Vivanco Pareja Treaty was signed on January 27 1865 on board the frigate Villa de Madrid Popular opinion in Peru considered the treaty as detrimental to its national honor When the Peruvian Congress refused to ratify it a general uprising followed and Pezet s government fell on November 7 War with Chile EditIn the meantime anti Spanish sentiments in several South American countries including Bolivia Chile and Ecuador increased Peru and its neighbors still remained wary of any moves that might foreshadow an attempt to re establish the Spanish Empire Given the climate of suspicion no one was surprised when the Spanish gunboat Vencedora stopped at a Chilean port for coal and President Jose Joaquin Perez declared that coal was a war supply that could not be sold to a belligerent nation From the Spanish point of view the Chilean coaling embargo was taken as proof that Chile no longer was neutral That was reinforced after two Peruvian steamers left the port of Valparaiso bearing weapons and Chilean volunteers bound for Peru Vice Admiral Jose Manuel Pareja thus took a hard line and demanded sanctions against Chile that were even heavier than those imposed upon Peru He then detached four wooden ships from his squadron and dispatched them to Chile while the Numancia and the Covadonga remained to guard Callao Pareja arrived at Valparaiso on September 17 1865 aboard his flagship the Villa de Madrid He demanded for the Spanish flag to be given a 21 gun salute 4 He deliberately presented his demand on the day before Chilean National Day September 18 Under the circumstances the Chileans refused and war was declared a week later on September 24 The new Spanish prime minister Leopoldo O Donnell who had replaced Narvaez ordered Pareja to withdraw but the Spanish admiral chose to ignore the direct order As he had no troops with which to attempt a landing he decided to impose a blockade of the main Chilean ports That action was unenforceable since a blockade of Chile s 1 800 miles 2 900 km of coastline would have required a fleet that was several times larger than what Pareja had at his disposal The blockade of the port of Valparaiso however caused such great economic damage to both Chilean and foreign interests that the navies of the United States and Great Britain despite remaining neutral in the conflict issued a formal protest Battle of Papudo Edit Main article Battle of Papudo Even before Chile and Peru were formally allied Spain had suffered a humiliating naval defeat at the naval Battle of Papudo on November 26 1865 The engagement had the Chilean corvette Esmeralda capture the Spanish schooner Covadonga taking the crew prisoner and seizing the admiral s war correspondence That humiliation was too much for Pareja who committed suicide two days later aboard his flagship 5 The general command of the Spanish fleet in the Pacific was assumed by Commodore Casto Mendez Nunez who quickly received a promotion to rear admiral He then decided to flee leaving behind a sizeable army and treasure War with Peru Ecuador and Bolivia Edit A Peruvian battery during the Battle of Callao On November 7 1865 his unwillingness to declare war on Spain and the vilification arising from his signing of the Vivanco Pareja Treaty forced Peruvian President Juan Antonio Pezet from office He was replaced by his vice president General Pedro Diez Canseco Diez Canseco also tried to avoid war with Spain which similarly led to his downfall only 20 days later On November 26 General Mariano Ignacio Prado the leader of the nationalist movement deposed Canseco The new government immediately declared its solidarity with Chile and its intention to declare war on Spain and to restore Peru s national honor Chile and Peru formally signed an alliance against Spain on December 5 1865 The Peruvian Congress ratified the alliance on January 12 and two days later Peru finally declared war on Spain Chile s navy was weak and almost nonexistent To reinforce its Chilean ally a Peruvian squadron commanded by Captain Lizardo Montero was immediately dispatched to the south Among the ships in the squadron were the steam frigates Amazonas and Apurimac Ecuador joined the alliance on January 30 1866 by declaring war on Spain on that day Bolivia under the command of General Mariano Melgarejo also declared war on March 22 1866 The moves resulted in all ports on South America s Pacific coast becoming closed to the Spanish fleet Argentina and Brazil refused to join the alliance as they were embroiled in a war with Paraguay Battle of Abtao Edit Main article Battle of Abtao Spain s Admiral Mendez Nunez sent two of his most powerful ships the frigates Villa de Madrid and Reina Blanca south to destroy the combined Chilean Peruvian fleet The Allied squadron had been placed under the command of Peruvian Captain Manuel Villar and had taken refuge at Abtao a well protected inlet near the gulf of Chiloe in southern Chile The Spanish squadron appeared at the entrance of the inlet on February 7 1866 but the Spanish did not enter to avoid risking their ironclads running aground in the shallows A cannonade lasting several hours was exchanged with little effect In spite of being at anchor without steam and with some ships with their engines undergoing overhaul the Allies mounted an energetic fight The Covadonga under the command of Lieutenant Manuel Thomson managed to fire over an island and scored several hits on the frigate Blanca The battle ended indecisively without further developments Reluctant to enter shallow waters and realizing that a long range gun duel would serve no purpose but to waste ammunition the Spanish commanders withdrew Williams and the Esmeralda were not at the anchorage on the day of the battle The commodore had sailed to Ancud for coaling On its way back to Valparaiso the Spanish squadron captured a Chilean steamboat the Paquete del Maule which was transporting sailors to crew the new Peruvian ironclads Huascar and Independencia 6 Bombardment of Valparaiso Edit Main article Bombardment of Valparaiso The Spanish could not attack land forces and had been frustrated in attempts to engage the Allied squadron at sea The Spanish ships were isolated short of supplies and losing hope of victory When the Chilean government ordered all vessels communicating with the Spanish fleet to be barred from Chilean ports Admiral Mendez Nunez decided to take punitive actions against the Allied ports The Spanish fleet shelled and burned the town and the port of Valparaiso on March 31 and destroyed Chile s merchant fleet 7 A total of 33 vessels were burned or sunk The damage to the Chilean merchant marine was catastrophic Twelve years later the total tonnage under the Chilean flag was still less than half of what it had been in 1865 Battle of Callao Edit Main article Battle of Callao Numancia flagship of the Spanish fleet Admiral Mendez Nunez displeased at having to resort to destroying defenseless targets such as Valparaiso and with the inconclusive result at Abtao decided to change tactics and to attack a heavily defended port As a result he set sail for the Peruvian port city of Callao The Battle of Callao took place on May 2 after which both sides claimed victory Peruvian defenders claimed that they had halted the Spanish from regaining their lost authority and prestige in South America prevented them from enforcing their demands upon Peru and forced the withdrawal of the Spanish fleet which was technically correct since Peruvian cannons fired the last shots in the battle The Spanish claimed to have visited punishment upon its former colony Spanish guns had managed to cause only limited damage to defenses and most of the cannons artillery and buildings in Callao itself survived the battle intact Aftermath EditWhether the suspicions of a Spanish scheme to recapture its former colonies had any basis in fact is unknown Many in South America saw Spain s meddling in Latin America and its occupation of the Chincha Islands as proof of a long range Spanish plot to reassert its influence over its previous colonial territories The force sent by Spain on the other hand amounted to a mere squadron of ships with negligible capabilities for landing forces and its intention may have been only to seize the islands for their valuable fertiliser resources as reparations and to regain some of Spain s lost prestige Regardless of the reason behind the conflict Spain found it impossible to hold its positions With all ports south of Colombia closed to it for coaling and provisioning the Spanish fleet withdrew from patrolling the South American coastline vacated the Chincha Islands and returned to Spain via the Philippines completing a circumnavigation of the globe to do so Commemoration Edit The calle del Pacifico Pacific street now Avenida de la Ciudad de Barcelona es in Madrid Spain was named after this campaign The street gave name to a neighborhood and metro station Order of battle EditSpain Edit General Commanders Vice Admiral Luis Hernandez Pinzon 1863 1864 Vice Admiral Jose Manuel Pareja 1864 1865 Rear Admiral Casto Mendez Nunez 1865 1866 Vessel tons L ton Speed Knots Armour Inch Main Artillery BuiltYear NotesIronclad frigates Numancia 7 500 tons 12 knots 22 km h 14 mph 5 Iron belt 34 200 mm guns 1863 At the time among the most powerful ships of the world Screw frigates Villa de Madrid 4 478 tons 15 knots 28 km h 17 mph 30 200 mm guns14 160 mm guns2 150 mm howitzers2 120 mm guns2 80 mm guns 1862 Almansa 3 980 tons 12 knots 22 km h 14 mph 30 200 mm guns14 160 mm guns2 150 mm howitzers2 120 mm guns2 80 mm guns 1864 Arrived to the Pacific in April 1866only days before the Battle of Callao Reina Blanca 3 800 tons 12 knots 22 km h 14 mph 68 guns 1864 Berenguela 3 800 tons 12 knots 22 km h 14 mph 36 guns 1864 Resolucion 3 100 tons 11 knots 20 km h 13 mph 1 220 mm guns20 200 mm guns14 160 mm guns2 150 mm howitzers2 120 mm guns2 80 mm guns 1861 Nuestra Senoradel Triunfo 3 100 tons 11 knots 20 km h 13 mph 1 220 mm guns20 200 mm guns14 160 mm guns2 150 mm howitzers2 120 mm guns2 80 mm guns 1861 Lost in accidental fire in front of Piscoon the night of 25 to 26 November 1864Steam schooners Vencedora Built 1861 Weight 778 tons Speed 8 knots 15 km h 9 mph weapons two 200 mm revolving guns and two 160 mm guns Virgen de Covadonga Built 1864 Weight 445 tons Speed 8 knots Weapons two revolving 200 mm guns at the sides and one revolving 160 mm guns at the prow Captured by Chile at Battle of Papudo on November 26 1865 Steamboats Marques de la Victoria 3 gunsSail transports Consuelo MatauraPeru Edit Main article List of Peruvian Navy ships The screw frigate Amazonas The Loa being fitted after its conversion in the Callao harbour 1864 General Commanders Captain Lizardo Montero Captain Manuel VillarScrew frigates Apurimac Built 1854 Weight 1 666 tons Speed 9 43 knots 17 km h Weapons thirty four guns 8 Amazonas Built 1851 Weight 1 743 tons Speed 9 43 knots 17 km h Weapons thirty three 200 mm guns Beached at Abtao near Punta Quilque 15 January 1886Steam schooners Tumbes Built 1854 Weight 250 tons Speed 7 knots 13 km h Weapons two 68 pounder gunsSteamboats Chalaco Built 1864 2 guns Colon Built 1864 2 gunsIronclad monitors Loa Built 1854 conversion to ironclad ordered in 1864 9 Weight 648 tons Speed 10 knots 19 km h Weapons four 32 pdr guns 10 Victoria Built 1865 1 gunChile Edit General Commanders Captain Juan Williams RebolledoCorvette Edit Esmeralda Built in 1854 854 ton weight speed of 8 knots 14 82 km h armed with two guns boat 12 lb 16 smoothbore muzzle loading guns of 32 lb and 4 smooth bore muzzle loading guns of 32 lb Steam schooners Virgen de Covadonga Built 1864 Weight 445 tons Speed 8 knots 15 km h Weapons two revolving 200 mm guns at the sides and one revolving 160 mm guns at the prow Captured by Chile at Battle of Papudo on November 26 1865 Transports Paquete del Maule Captured by Spain Speed 13 knots 24 km h armament 2 guns Steamers Edit Maipu Built 1855 in England Acquired 1857 Displacement 450 tons Speed 8 knots armed with 1 68 lb gun and 4 32 lb guns Lautauro Built 1852 Given by Peru to Chile for wartime use 1865 Displacement 450 tonsNotes Edit Statistics of Wars Oppressions and Atrocities of the Nineteenth Century the 1800s a b c d Tucker 1967 p 1431 Guinot 2009 pp 307 308 Burr 1967 p 97 Farcau 2000 p 17 NYT staff amp April 10 1866 NYT staff amp May 6 1866 Old Peruvian Ships Moore 1898 p 1651 Chesnau and Kolesnik 1979 Sources EditBudino Jose M 2008 Re The Capture of Tornado Warship International XLV 4 265 ISSN 0043 0374 Burr Robert N 1967 By Reason or Force Chile and the Balancing of Power in South America 1830 1905 Los Angeles and Berkeley University of California Press Chesnau Roger Eugene Kolesnik eds 1979 Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1860 1905 Conway Maritime Press ISBN 0831703024 Curana J Koehler R B Silverstone Paul H 1990 Question 12 89 Warship International XXVII 2 200 203 ISSN 0043 0374 Farcau Bruce W 2000 The Ten Cents War Chile Peru and Bolivia in the War of the Pacific 1879 1884 Westport Connecticut Praeger Publishers ISBN 0275969258 Greene Jack 2008 Re The Capture of Tornado Warship International XLV 4 265 ISSN 0043 0374 Guinot Dolores Luna 2009 Conspiracy In Mendoza Victoria British Columbia Trafford Publishing ISBN 978 1426921858 Moore John Bassett 1898 History and Digest of the International Arbitrations to which the United States Has Been a Party Washington D C U S Government Printing Office NYT staff 10 April 1866 South America High handed Movements in Bolivia Miscellaneous CEntrap America Revolution in Panama Bogus Canal and Railroad Companies The Barbacoas Gold Mines The Mines a Failure All the Miners Anxious to Return Over One Hundred already Returned to Panama Naval Matters The New York Times Retrieved 2 January 2010 NYT staff 6 May 1866 South America From the Seat of War Great Preparations and Great Expectations The Grand Movement of the Allied Fleet Again Delayed Paraguayan Spies and their Stories The War Beginning to Affect the Finances of the Argentine Confederation The Bombardment of Valparaiso Letter from an Americal Naval Officer The New York Times Retrieved 2 January 2010 Tucker Spencer C 1967 A Global Chronology of Conflict From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 85109672 5 Old Peruvian ships in Spanish p 4 Archived from the original on October 14 2007 Mentions Apurimac both under her original name and under the name Callao without appreciating that they were the same shipFurther reading EditBarros Arana Diego 1884 1902 Historia Jeneral de Chile in Spanish Vol I XVI Santiago Chile Rafael Jover ISBN 9780598482358 Garcia Martinez Jose Ramon 1997 La Campana del Pacifico 1862 1866 PDF Revista de Marina in Spanish Archived from the original PDF on 17 June 2009 Retrieved 1 January 2010 Lopez Urrutia Carlos Chile A Brief Naval History Historical Text Archive Retrieved 1 January 2010 NYT staff May 30 2008 Peru guards its guano as demand soars in 2008 The New York Times New York New York Retrieved 2 January 2010 Espana y la Guerra del Pacifico in Spanish Archived from the original on December 11 2009 Retrieved 2 January 2010 Guerra del Pacifico 1864 1865 Conflicto de Espana contra Chile y Peru Historia y Arqueologia Maritima in Spanish Retrieved 2 January 2010 Liberation of the Chinchas Archived from the original on March 12 2008 Retrieved 2 January 2010 The War with Spain of 1865 1866 Archived from the original on December 31 2007 Retrieved 2 January 2010 External links EditPortals Bolivia Chile Ecuador Peru Media related to Chincha Islands War at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chincha Islands War amp oldid 1140090576, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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