It
started with a lovely Palm Sunday morning for a stroll through Ponce, Puerto
Rico. It ended with 19 dead and over
200 badly injured when the Insular
Police acting on the direct and
explicit orders of the Governor,
General Blanton C. Winship opened fire on a peaceful parade led by Cadets
of the Puerto Rican Nationalist
Party. The police surrounded the
marchers and fired from all sides using machine
guns, Thompson sub-machine guns, rifles,
pistols, and tear gas grenades. They fired not only on marchers, but directly into the bystanders who were
watching the parade. After the initial fusillade, firing continued for 15
minutes as police chased down survivors,
executing some of the wounded as they lay on the ground, beating others.
Puerto
Ricans would ever after remember March 21, 1937 as the Ponce Massacre.
General Nelson A. Miles, the veteran Indian fighter, led a nearly bloodless invasion of Puerto
Rico during the Spanish American War. Because of the press stirred up hoo-haw
in support of Cuban Revolutionaries, that
island had to be granted independence
after the war, albeit with heavy strings
attached. Not so the other fruit plucked from feeble Spain—the Philippines, Guam, and Puerto Rico. Those the United States had every
intention to keep as part of a
new, un-declared empire.
In
the Philippines the Army quickly
turned on its erstwhile allies in a local independence movement and crushed a rebellion by them and then
fought an extended guerilla campaign
against Islamic Moro rebels on the southern islands.
In
Puerto Rico, there was no armed
opposition. But there was resentment as the first American
Governor, Charles Herbert Allen, looted
the island’s treasury, funneled money to American contractors, railroad
operators, and sugar planters
while refusing to build roads, schools, or infrastructure
for the people. American interests
gobbled up agricultural land for sugar plantations, and the population sank deeper into poverty and deprivation
than they ever had under Spanish rule.
After
looting the territory and setting up a network of plantations, Allen resigned
to return to the U.S. where he became fabulously
wealthy as the founder of largest
sugar-refining company in the world,
the American Sugar Refining Company,
now known as Domino Sugar.
By
1914 the nearly powerless Puerto Rican
House of Delegates voted unanimously
for independence from the United
States.
Their action was ignored.
But in 1917 the U.S. Congress acted
unilaterally to make Puerto Ricans U.S.
citizens. Islanders noted that the
first “benefit” of citizenship was the imposition
of draft boards to funnel troops to World War I.
Nationalists first began
organizing in 1917 in protest to the
citizenship move. The earliest meetings
were held in Ponce forming the Asociación Nacionalista de Ponce
(Ponce Nationalist Association) and founding the newspaper El Nacionalista. Other nationalist or pro-independence groups
sprang up elsewhere on the island. By
1924 these merged into the Puerto Rican
Nationalist Party.
Pedro Albizu Campost, leader of the Puerto Rican Nationalist. |
The
Party’s early years were marked by dissention, schism, and other difficulties.
By 1930 Dr. Pedro Albizu Campos, a militant leader, emerged as party President.
The
Great Depression hit Puerto Rico
even harder than the continental United
States. Unemployment soared, but little New Deal relief reached the population and what aid did come was often skimmed by corrupt American administrators and local politicians. Strikes rattled the sugar
industry. The Nationalist Party,
however, was not able to translate
popular discontent to electoral
victories. It remained a minority party in the House of Delegates. Campos suspected
the honesty of elections.
Campos
organized the Cadets, a youth branch
somewhat similar to scouts, and the Hijas de la Libertad (Daughters of Freedom), the women's
branch, both of which played leading rolls in increasing street demonstrations.
By
1934 President Franklin D. Roosevelt,
responding to complaints by
plantation owners and the sugar interests, was alarmed by what they described
as near social anarchy. He appointed a new Governor with vague instructions to get things under control. His choice, General Winship could not have
been more disastrous.
Governor Blanton C. Winship ordered the attack. |
Winship
was a Georgia native born in 1869
when the memories of the Civil War were still raw.
He was practicing law when the Spanish American War broke out and immediately enlisted in a Georgia Volunteer regiment. He liked his taste
of military life and joined the Regular
Army serving in the Judge Advocate
General’s Corps as a lawyer. But the
sound of trumpets lured him from his
law books. He served on active field duty with General John J. Pershing in the campaign against Poncho Villa in Mexico and
then in France with the American Expeditionary Force (AEF). There he commanded troops under fire and was
awarded the Distinguished Service Cross
and the Silver Star.
In
peace time he served as Calvin
Coolidge’s military aid and then capped off his career as Judge Advocate General from 1931 to his
retirement in 1933.
Despite
what must have looked like an impressive
resume, Winship was a poor choice
for the delicate assignment handed
him on several counts. He was by nature
a martinet and autocrat. He had, for a
lawyer, contempt for civilian leadership. And as a Southerner
he disdained the brown skinned, Catholic
people he was sent to govern. He
considered them little better than
savages and incapable of self
government.
Winship
arrived in Puerto Rico with Colonel
Francis Riggs to act as his chief of
police, a tip off to the repression to come. Riggs had already been an advisor to Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza. He went about organizing the Insular Police, a militia under the Governor’s direct command and control as a heavily armed paramilitary force. He armed them with new weapons including sub machine guns and both .30 caliber and .50 caliber machine guns in addition to Army issue 1903 Springfield rifles and Colt .45 automatic pistols. Then they were turned loose to harass
strikers and street demonstrators.
Things
rapidly came to a head in 1935 when Insular Police shot and killed four
Nationalist Party students and a bystander at the University of Puerto Rico in Río
Piedras. Reports were that some of
the victims were executed by shots to the head at close range. The incident became known as the Río Piedras Massacre.
For
Campos, it was the last straw. He declared that his party would no longer compete in “U.S. controlled elections” and called for armed struggle to expel the Americans.
In
retaliation for the killings on
February 23, 1936 two members of the Cadets, Hiram Rosado and Elías Beauchamp, assassinated Col.
Riggs in San Juan as he returned home from church. Both were quickly apprehended and executed without trial at police
headquarters.
Gov.
Winship ordered the leadership of the Nationalist Party rounded up. Campos and
several others were charged with sedition
and conspiracy to overthrow the
government. They were taken to Boston, the Federal District Court with jurisdiction over Puerto Rico and tried
before a jury empanelled on the
island. The trial ended in a hung jury as little evidence was presented linking Campos and the others to the
assassination. A second jury, consisting
only of Anglo residents of Puerto Rico, convicted
all but one defendant and sentenced
the rest to ten years in prison.
Back
on the island, Winship ordered the
suppression of any protests to the sentences.
Despite
this the Cadets who planned the Palm Sunday March in 1937 had reason to be
hopeful of a peaceful protest. Ponce was
generally friendly to the Nationalists.
They requested, and were quickly granted a parade permit by Mayor José Tormos Diego. The request was considered a courtesy
since a 1927 court decision had
ruled that streets and plazas were open and free to political and social gatherings.
When
Winship heard that the permit had been issued, he exploded. He called in his
new Chief of Police, Colonel Enrique de
Orbeta, and gave him orders to proceed
at once to Ponce with a strong force
to prevent any demonstration, “by all means necessary.” Oberta considered those orders a carte
blanch to use overwhelming lethal force. Oberta arrived in town with heavily armed
police units drawn from around the island.
He would not trust local officers with this duty.
The
Cadets and their followers, as well as a crown of bystanders, assembled with no
knowledge that their permit had been rescinded.
The police chief of the
municipality, Juan Diaz, was
positioned in front of the assembling marchers with 14 men, another local chief
and a sergeant led nine men with
Thompson sub machine guns at the rear. Chief
of Police Antonio Bernardi, heading 11 policemen armed with machine guns, stood
on the east and another group of 12 police, armed with rifles, was placed to
the west. Scores of additional police,
perhaps totally 200, were in reserve.
Cadet
leader Tomás López de Victoria could
see the line of police ahead of
him. It is unclear if he was aware of
the more heavily armed police to his flanks and rear. At the appointed hour he determined to step
off following the singing of the patriotic song La Borinqueña following
the flag bearer. They had hardly taken a step when police
open fire with a murderous volley. The flag
bearer was killed instantly. Seventeen
year old Carmen Fernández took up the banner and was shot and gravely injured.
Police turned their fire on bystanders stitching the facades of the buildings with bullet holes from Thompson sub-machine guns and rifle fire. |
Police continued to pour fire into the crowd from
all sides as people scrambled for their lives.
They also turned automatic fire directly into the bystanders along the building walls of the street, riddling the facades with bullet
holes and leaving victims in heaps
in front of them. After the sustained
vollies, firing became sporadic as police chased down those trying to flee or
executed some of the scores of wounded littering the ground in the confined
area. It took nearly a quarter of an
hour before the last shot was fired.
150 uninjured or lightly injured demonstrators and
bystanders were arrested, but ultimately released on bail.
In the wild
cross fire it was no surprise that two police were killed and several
injured. These deaths and injuries would
be used in Winship’s report to his superiors at the Department of the Interior to claim that they were victims of shots fired by marchers
precipitating the gunfight. This story
was quickly picked up by the American press
which painted the Governor as a hero for suppressing a “bloody insurrection.”
But that story began to unravel almost immediately. No weapons were found on or near any of
the victims. All had been unarmed. Many had been shot in the back. Survivors and witnesses from nearby buildings who were not involved quickly
discounted the official version.
The local District
Attorney opened an investigation into the killings but came under intense direct pressure from Winship
who ordered the prosecutor’s office to charge more Nationalists and Cadets and
issued a direct order that no police officer be charged. The prosecutor resigned in protest.
An official Puerto
Rican government investigation was launched, but naturally under the
control of Winship made no conclusions.
Puerto
Rican Senator Luis Muñoz Marin, a
leading political figure and Nationalist opponent, went to Ponce to personally
investigate the shootings. There he was
shown unpublished photographs taken
by journalist Carlos Torres Morales
of El Imparcill from the window of a building overlooking
the scene which clearly showed police firing directly into the crowds of by
standers. These two photographs had not
been seen by either of the two previous investigations.
Those photos helped convince the United States Commission on Civil Rights to
launch its own investigation spearheaded by Arthur Garfield Hayes of the American
Civil Liberties Union assisted by a panel
of distinguished Puerto Ricans. The
Hayes commission concluded
the police had behaved as a mob and committed a massacre.
The
report created an uproar in Congress
which began its own investigation. There
were cries for the police on the scene, Chief Orbeta, and Winship to be
indicted. But Winship also had friends
in Congress. Before any charges could be
brought against him, new legislation was
passed exempting government officials from prosecution for crimes committed in the line of their
official duties.
In
the end neither Winship nor any police were ever charged.
On
July 25, 1938 Winship decided to mark the 40th anniversary of the American
landings in Puerto Rico not, as was customary, with low key observations in the
capital of San Juan, but in Ponce to show that he had smashed the Nationalists and
now “owned the town.” Shots were fired
at the reviewing stand from which he
was watching the parade. The governor
survived the assassination attempt
but in the wild shoot out that followed two people, including a police officer,
were killed and 36 others wounded.
The
following year, responding to complaints of dictatorial rule from islanders and
increasing pressure from Congress, President Roosevelt summarily removed Winship from his post.
It
was not, however, the end of his career.
When World War II broke out
Winship returned to active duty in the Army and was placed in charge of
prosecution of suspected Nazi saboteurs
on the Home Front. In 1944 at the age of 72 and the oldest
active duty soldier in the Army, he retired as a Major General.
Rex Tugwell, one of FDR’s right hand men in the New Deal, was appointed as Governor in
an attempt to restore good relations
between the people and the U.S. Tugwell
issued several pardons to long time
nationalist leaders. In cooperation with
Luis Muñoz Marin, who had founded a new, pro-US political party, the Partido Popular Democratico (Popular Democratic Party of Puerto Rico),
he pursued a policy of reform and
during World War II instituted many New Deal-like social programs and infrastructure
improvements.
Marin
and his PPD became the dominant political party in Puerto
Rico.
The
Nationalists did not fare so well. They
really had been crippled by Winship’s repression and by the rising popularity
of Marin’s party. After the war,
however, Nationalists, still committed to Campos’s call for armed struggle for
independence, stepped up their activity.
In 1948 as Senate leader Marin ushered in the draconian Law 53 or Ley de la Mordaza (gag law.)
Under this law it became a crime “to
own or display a Puerto Rican flag
anywhere, even in one’s own home; to speak
against the U.S. government; to speak
in favor of Puerto Rican independence; to print, publish, sell or exhibit any material intended to paralyze or destroy the insular government; or to organize any society, group or assembly of people with a similar destructive intent.” Those
accused of violations could be sentenced to ten years in prison, a fine of
$10,000, or both.
Marin
and his party would use this law ruthlessly not only against armed Nationalist militants, but sympathizers, dissidents of any kind, and even those who did not vote for the PPD.
Meanwhile
Marin had wrung from Congress a law
allowing the direct election of the next governor by the people. Marin knew that he would be elected. And he was.
He officially took office on January 2, 1949 and served sixteen years—four
terms as Governor.
In
1950 Nationalists at Campo’s order initiated an armed uprising beginning with an attack on the Governor’s Palace
on October 30. Attacks occurred across
the island, but Marin quickly suppressed the uprising. Campos and the Nationalist leadership were
soon rounded up, but under Law 53 so were thousands who were peripherally sympathetic.
Would-be Truman assassin Oscar Collazo lies dead at the steps to Blair House in Washington in 1950. |
As
part of the uprising On November 1, 1950, Griselio
Torresola and Óscar Collazo unsuccessfully attempted to assassinate
President Harry S. Truman, who was
staying at the Blair House in Washington, D.C.
In
1952 Puerto Rican voters overwhelmingly approved a new status the Estado Libre Associado (Free
State Association), commonly called Commonwealth
Status, with a high degree of self
rule while remaining in association with the U.S. and the people retaining
U.S. citizenship.
In 1954 four nationalists opened fire on Congress while in session, wounding six, one critically. It was one of the last major hurrahs of the old Nationalist party. The party split in 1955 with a majority faction rejecting armed struggle.
Most pro-independence advocates
now belong to other groups, not the mere shadow of the Nationalist Party.
For his part Campos spent most of the rest of his
life in prison, his health deteriorating.
He may have been among the Puerto
Rican prison hospital inmates who were subjected to massive overdoses of radiation in a secret research project in the ‘50’s and ‘60’s. On November 15,
1964, on the brink of death, Campos
was pardoned by Governor Marin. He died
on April 21, 1965 in San Juan. Hundreds of thousands
attended his funeral.
Ideological
followers of Campos continued activity and were blamed for a
rash of pipe bombings in Chicago and elsewhere into the 1970’s.
Today, support for independence has dwindled. Recent elections have brought to power a
party that, in theory at least, supports
statehood. In a 2012 referendum voters rejected the
continuance of commonwealth status overwhelmingly and a majority favored
statehood. Legislation was signed by President Obama in 2014 for a final,
binding referendum on a future status.
Most observers believe that would be statehood, not independence.
Plans have been complicated by Puerto Rico’s debt crisis which threatens to bankrupt the island unless some sort of aid and permission
for debt restructuring passes a hostile
Republican led Congress.
In the US the Republican
Party was long an advocate for Puerto Rican statehood. But the realization
that statehood would probably result
in the election of two Senators and
several Representatives who would caucus
and vote with the Democrats has cooled their ardor.
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