History of Ecuador (1860–1895)

This is a summary of the history of Ecuador from 1860 to 1895. Gabriel García Moreno is the father of Ecuadorian conservatism and no doubt the most controversial figure in the nation's history, condemned by Liberal historians as Ecuador's worst tyrant but exalted by Conservatives as the nation's greatest nation-builder. In the end, both appraisals may be accurate; the man who possibly saved Ecuador from disintegration in 1859 and then ruled the nation with an iron fist for the subsequent decade and a half was, in fact, an extremely complicated personality. Born and raised under modest circumstances in Guayaquil, he studied in Quito, where he married into the local aristocracy, then traveled to Europe in the aftermath of the 1848 revolutionary uprisings and studied under the eminent Catholic theologians of the day.

Republic of Ecuador
República del Ecuador
1859–1895
Motto: "Dios, patria y libertad"
Anthem: Salve, Oh Patria
Ecuador in 1860
CapitalQuito
GovernmentConservative presidential republic under a military dictatorship
President 
 1859–1865
Gabriel García Moreno
 1865–1867
Jerónimo Carrión
 1868–1869
Javier Espinosa
 1869–1875
Gabriel García Moreno
 1875–1876
Antonio Borrero
 1876–1883
Ignacio de Veintemilla
 1883–1888
José Plácido Caamaño
 1888–1892
Antonio Flores Jijón
 1892–1895
Luis Cordero Crespo
LegislatureNational Congress
History 
 Established
4 September 1859
22 September 1860
1 July 1869
 Disestablished
5 June 1895
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Ecuador
Ecuador
Today part ofEcuador

Shortly after the onset of his third presidential term in 1875, García Moreno was hacked to death with a machete on the steps of the presidential palace. The exact motives of the assassin, a Colombian, remain unknown, but the dictator's most outstanding critic, the liberal journalist Juan Montalvo, exclaimed, "My pen killed him!"

Between 1852 and 1890, Ecuador's exports grew in value from slightly more than US$1 million to nearly US$10 million. Production of cacao, the most important export product in the late 19th century, grew from 6.5 million kilograms to 18 million kilograms during the same period. The agricultural export interests, centered in the coastal region near Guayaquil, became closely associated with the Liberals, whose political power also grew steadily during the interval. After the death of García Moreno, it took the Liberals twenty years to consolidate their strength sufficiently to assume control of the government in Quito.

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