Antonio "El Gaucho" Rivero was a gaucho known for his leading role in the Port Louis Murders of 26 August 1833, in which five prominent members of the settlement of Port Louis on the Falkland Islands were murdered.[1] In Argentine revisionist historiography and public consciousness, Rivero is viewed as a patriotic hero who rebelled against British authority.[2] However, academic historians both in Argentina and abroad agree that Rivero's actions were not motivated by patriotism, but by disputes over pay and working conditions with the representatives of Louis Vernet, the former Argentine Political and Military Commander of the islands.[3]
Biography
editRivero's place of birth, like almost all other details of his life outside the events of 1833–1834, is unknown. Argentine historians generally state he was born in today's Entre Ríos Province, then part of Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata, now in Argentina. However, no documentation exists to support this assertion.[4]
Rivero's presence on the islands is first recorded in Emilio Vernet's diary on 18 May 1829.[5] He was taken to the Falkland Islands by Luis Vernet, to work as a gaucho. Conditions of employment caused discontent among Vernet's workers. They were paid with promissory notes which Matthew Brisbane, Vernet's deputy, devalued by 60% following the reduction in Vernet's fortunes.[6] On 26 August 1833, five Indian convicts and three gauchos led by Rivero embarked on a killing spree which resulted in the deaths of Brisbane and the senior leaders of the settlement.[7] Thomas Helsby, a clerk in the employ of Vernet, wrote an account of the murders.[8]
At around ten in the morning, Helsby departed Brisbane's house to buy some oil from William Dickson, whom he found at the house of Antonio Wagner. Other people there included Daniel McKay and Joseph Douglas. On leaving, as he passed the house of Santiago Lopez, Helsby encountered the murderers. The gang was led by Rivero and comprised the gauchos José María Luna, Juan Brasido and the five Charrúa Indians Manuel Gonzales, Luciano Flores, Manuel Godoy, Felipe Salagar and Lattorre. They were armed with "muskets, pistols, swords, dirks and knives".[8]
Alarmed, Helsby ran to Brisbane's house for aid, but he found it locked and could raise no response. He was informed by other residents that Brisbane had been killed, along with Juan Simon (the Capatáz or foreman of the Gauchos). A third man, Don Ventura, had been left for dead, wounded in the throat by a musket, his head split and his hand almost severed by a sword, but he had since escaped by a back window and headed toward the house of Antonina Roxa. Helsby then heard two musket shots from the house of Antonio Wagner: Wagner and Dickson had been killed, witnessed by Joseph Douglas and Daniel McKay.[8]
The gang then returned to Brisbane's house to find Ventura missing. After a brief search they found him. Ventura tried to flee, but was shot down. Helsby witnessed the murder and attempted his own escape, but was soon caught by Felipe Salagar, who was on horseback. Convinced he was about to be killed, he complied with their instructions, and was allowed to live.[8]
I was ordered by them into Captain Brisbane's house, and there first saw his body lying dead upon the floor, he appeared to have been making towards his pistols before he fell, and there was smile of contempt or disdain very strongly marked in his countenance. They dragged his body with a horse to a considerable distance, and plundered the house.[8]
The population of that time, mainly women and children, fled to the nearby Peat island (today Hog Island), until rescued by the sealer Hopeful in October 1833, which then passed information about the murders to the British squadron at Rio de Janeiro.
In January 1834, the British ship HMS Challenger arrived in the islands, bringing Lt. Henry Smith, who set out to capture the murderers, who fled into the interior. The gang was sent for trial in London, but under the British Legal system could not be tried because the Crown Court did not have jurisdiction over the Falkland Islands at the time of the alleged offences. In the British colonial system, colonies had their own, distinct governments, finances, and judicial systems.[9][10] Rivero was not tried and sentenced because the British local government and local judiciary had not yet been installed in 1834; these were created later, by the 1841 British Letters Patent.[11] Subsequently, Rivero has acquired the status of a folk hero in Argentina, where he is portrayed as leading a rebellion against British rule.[11] However, all five of the victims of the massacre were employees of Vernet.[12] They were deported to Rio de Janeiro, and returned later to the zone of the Río de la Plata.
The circumstances of Rivero's death are unknown.
Victims
editThis section may primarily relate to a different subject, or place undue weight on a particular aspect rather than the subject as a whole. (February 2021) |
Rivero and his associates were responsible for the deaths of five individuals of various nationalities, all employees of Louis Vernet with close links to the United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata.[13]
Matthew Brisbane
editMatthew Brisbane (born in Perth, Scotland in 1787) was a Scottish merchant Captain, sealer and Antarctic explorer who made several voyages to the South Atlantic in the 1820s. He met Louis Vernet in 1827 when chartering a ship to rescue the survivors of the wreck of the Hope, which had run aground off South Georgia under Brisbane's command.[14][15]
Following another shipwreck in Patagonia in 1830, Brisbane escaped on a makeshift boat to Port Louis in West Falkland, where he became Vernet's director of fisheries and his chief representative in the islands when Vernet was in Buenos Aires. He attempted to enforce Vernet's exclusion of American sealers from Falklands waters, leading to the seizure of two American ships. This action resulted in the 1831 attack on Port Louis by the American naval sloop the USS Lexington, after which Brisbane and six others were arrested on charges of piracy and taken to Montevideo, where they were released. Brisbane returned to the Falklands in 1832 as a pilot for the Argentine naval vessel, the Sarandí, where he was present at the Reassertion of British sovereignty over the Falkland Islands.[16]
He travelled to Buenos Aires in the Sarandí in January 1833, before returning to the Falklands in March to resume his position as Vernet's agent in Port Louis. Upon his return he met Robert Fitzroy and Charles Darwin and is mentioned in the diaries of both men.[17]
Juan Simon
editJuan (or Jean) Simon was a French or South American[18] gaucho, who became foreman of the gauchos employed by Louis Vernet. He was prominent in the suppression of a mutiny by members of the Argentine garrison of the islands in 1832. Upon the expulsion of the Argentine garrison in 1833, Jose Maria Pinedo appointed Simon as the Argentine Political and Military Commander of the islands, but Simon appears not to have attempted to act in any such capacity.[19] He played a role in persuading the gauchos to remain on the islands, and his conflict with Rivero may be linked to the British commander Captain Onslow's broken promise that the gauchos would be paid in silver rather than promissory notes.[20] He left a son, conceived with Carmelita Penny, one of the Afro-Argentine slaves brought to the islands by Vernet.[21]
William Dickson
editWilliam Dickson (born Dublin, 1805) was an Irish shopkeeper who was a leading member of Vernet's colony at Port Louis. He had been living in Buenos Aires prior to his voyage to the islands. When the British expelled the Argentine garrison in 1833, he was entrusted with a Union Jack and instructed to raise it every Sunday and whenever a ship entered the bay.[22] Vernet wrote personally to his family in Dublin to advise them of his murder.[23]
Don Ventura Pasos
editVentura Pasos, or possibly Luciano Ventura Pasos,[3] was an Argentine, sent to the islands by Vernet in March 1833.[3] He was related to Vernet by marriage, Pasos' sister being married to the elder brother of Vernet's wife, María Sáez de Vernet. He was also the nephew of Juan José Paso, an Argentine politician who formed part of the first and second triumvirates that governed the United Provinces of Rio de la Plata during their war of independence.[3]
Antonio Wagner
editAntonio Wagner (or Vehingar) was a trader of German extraction[24] and had spent some time in Buenos Aires.[1]
Legacy
editThe initial British plans for the Falklands were based on the perpetuation of Vernet's settlement, backed by an annual visit by a warship. This was the standard practice of maintaining a settlement with the minimum of expense. Thus, there was no British presence in the islands at the time of the Port Louis murders. A direct result of the murders was the installation of a permanent British Government presence – Lt Henry Smith became the first British resident in January 1834. Subsequently, the permanent presence led to the decision in 1841 to form a permanent colony rather than a minor naval outpost.[25][26]
In popular culture
editArmando S. Fernández wrote in 2008 a historical novel about Rivero, called "El Gaucho Rivero y la conspiración para apoderarse de Malvinas".[27]
In 2011 and 2012, starting at Tierra del Fuego Province, Argentine provinces with shores to the Atlantic Ocean passed a bill that banned ships sailing under the British flag from docking in their ports. These laws were collectively known as Ley Gaucho Rivero, as originally named in Tierra del Fuego, after Antonio Rivero.[28]
In 2015, a new banknote was issued by the Argentine government themed on the Falkland Islands. In the reverse, Antonio Rivero is depicted on a horse flying the flag of Argentina.[29]
References
edit- ^ a b Thomas Helsby. "Thomas Helsby's Account of the Port Louis Murders". Captain Onslow's report of the visit of HMS Clio to Port Louis in January 1833; Narrative by Port Louis settler Thomas Helsby. Wikisource. Retrieved 4 September 2010.
- ^ Lornez, Federico (2014). Todo lo que necesitas saber sobre Malvinas (E-book ed.). Buenos Aires: Paidos. p. 17: El gaucho Rivero¿resistente o asesino?.
- ^ a b c d Peña, Manuel Pedro; Peña, Juan Ángel (2018). Falklands or Malvinas: Myths & facts. Sevilla: Penthian. ISBN 9781524301279. Retrieved 27 July 2020.
- ^ Harman, Angel. "El Gaucho Rivero era entrerriano, aunque se desconoce si era uruguayense, dice Historiador". babeldigital. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
- ^ Diary of Emilio Vernet, AGN VII 141, no separate document number
- ^ "A Brief History of the Falkland Islands, Part 3 – Louis Vernet: The Great Entrepreneur". falklands.info. Archived from the original on 1 April 2010. Retrieved 4 September 2010.
- ^ Mary Cawkell (2001). The History of the Falkland Islands. Anthony Nelson. p. 63. ISBN 978-0-904614-55-8. Retrieved 20 September 2012.
- ^ a b c d e Extract of Thomas Helsby's Account of the Port Louis Murders Falkland Islands Government Archives, Stanley.
- ^ "British colonies". Hutchinson encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 4 December 2008. Retrieved 4 September 2010.
- ^ Karsten, Peter, Between Law and Custom, "High" and "Low" Legal Cultures in the Lands of the British Diaspora – The United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, 1600–1900
- ^ a b Laurio H. Destéfani, The Malvinas, the South Georgias and the South Sandwich Islands, the conflict with Britain, Buenos Aires: Edipress, 1982. pp. 91–92. ISBN 950-01-6904-5
- ^ Cawkell, 2001, p. 63
- ^ Cawkell, Mary (1983). The Falkland Story 1592–1982. Oswestry: Anthony Nelson. p. 39.
- ^ Cawkell, Mary (1983). The Falkland Story 1592–1982. Oswestry: Anthony Nelson. pp. 25–41.
- ^ Gurney, Alan (1 June 2008). "Matthew Brisbane". In David Tatham (ed.). The Dictionary of Falklands Biography (Including South Georgia): From Discovery Up to 1981. D. Tatham. pp. 115–119. ISBN 978-0-9558985-0-1. Retrieved 15 August 2011.
- ^ Gurney, Alan (1 June 2008). "Matthew Brisbane". In David Tatham (ed.). The Dictionary of Falklands Biography (Including South Georgia): From Discovery Up to 1981. D. Tatham. pp. 115–119. ISBN 978-0-9558985-0-1. Retrieved 15 August 2011.
- ^ Gurney, Alan (1 June 2008). "Matthew Brisbane". In David Tatham (ed.). The Dictionary of Falklands Biography (Including South Georgia): From Discovery Up to 1981. D. Tatham. pp. 115–119. ISBN 978-0-9558985-0-1. Retrieved 15 August 2011.
- ^ Ware, David (1984). "The Case of Antonio Rivero and Sovereignty over the Falkland Islands". The Historical Journal. 27 (4): 961–967. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00018197. JSTOR 2639036. S2CID 154003603.
- ^ Lornez, Federico (2014). Todo lo que necesitas saber sobre Malvinas (E-book ed.). Buenos Aires: Paidos. p. 16: Clio mete la cola.
- ^ Cawkell, 1983, p. 39
- ^ Pepper, PJ; Tatham (ed.), David. "Dictionary of Falklands Biography". Self-published. Retrieved 27 July 2020.
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has generic name (help) - ^ Cawkell, 1983, p. 36
- ^ Tatham, David. "Dictionary of Falklands Biography". Self-published. Retrieved 27 July 2020.
- ^ Cawkell, Mary (1983). The Falkland Story 1592–1982. Oswestry: Anthony Nelson. p. 39.
- ^ [1] The reluctant colonization of the Falkland Islands,1833–1851 : a study of British Imperialism in the Southwest Atlantic, Shannon Warnick, Masters Thesis, University of Richmond, December 2008, p.55-58
- ^ The British Reoccupation and Colonization of the Falkland Islands, or Malvinas, 1832–1843 Barry M. GoughAlbion: A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies Vol. 22, No. 2 (Summer, 1990), pp. 261–287, Published by: The North American Conference on British Studies, [2]
- ^ "Publicaciones". La Gazeta Federal. Retrieved 11 July 2015.
- ^ "British ships banned from docking in Buenos Aires". The Telegraph. 3 August 2012. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
- ^ "Malvinas Islands/Gaucho Rivero 50-Peso bill to honor Argentine fallen soldiers". MercoPress. 2 April 2014. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
Further reading
edit- Ware, Richard. "The Case of Antonio Rivero and Sovereignty over the Falkland Islands," The Historical Journal (1984) 27#4 pp. 961–967 in JSTOR