Draft:Benito Monción

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Benito Monción Duran (March 29, 1826 – February 11, 1898) was a Dominican revolutionary and a prominent leader in the Dominican Restoration War.

Benito Monción
Monción c. 1860s–1870s
BornMarch 29, 1826
La Vega, Dominican Republic
DiedFebruary 11, 1898 (aged 71)
Guayubín, Dominican Republic
Buried
Allegiance Dominican Republic
Service / branch Dominican Army
  • Liberation Army
  • Restoration Army
Years of service1844–1898
RankGeneral
Battles / warsDominican War of Independence
Dominican Restoration War
Six Years' War
AwardsNational hero

At an early age, he moved with his mother to the border community of La Visite, Dajabón. Despite his limited education, he was characterized by possessing a natural intelligence. He worked as a day laborer for the merchant Santiago Rodríguez Masago. Because he lived near the border, he was one of the first Dominicans to face the Haitian invasions. In 1845, he received the rank of Sergeant of Grenadiers for his courage and will in the Battle of Beler and was later promoted to second lieutenant in the battalion in Dajabón.

When the annexation was declared (1861), Monción had the rank of lieutenant in the reserves and took part in the Guayubín insurrection movement (1863) that was secretly organized in Sabaneta by General Santiago Rodríguez. However, the uprising was defeated, forcing Monción to cross the Dominican-Haitian border. Monción and other scattered soldiers continued to harass the Spanish troops to keep the spirit of rebellion alive. With the start of the war against Spain on August 16, 1863, Benito Monción reappeared in Guayubín fighting the Spanish troops and together with other revolutionaries began the definitive offensive in Loma de Capotillo that marked the beginning of the Restoration War.

For decades, he was the regional head of the Northwest Line and defender of the interests of this region, where he managed to impose authority, nuanced with politicking, and showing his status as a leader. In 1879, Monción was appointed governor of Monte Cristi, where he established a private fiefdom and assumed princely airs. Following the failure of Casimiro de Moya's revolution against the dictator Ulises Heureaux, Benito Monción was arrested and expelled from the country. He went into exile in the Bahamas and did not return to the country until 1886 after being granted amnesty. Seriously ill, Benito Monción died in Guayubín on February 11, 1898, at the age of 71.

Early life

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He was born on March 29, 1826, in La Vega, but he grew up in Dajabón because his mother moved to live there when Benito was little. A social product of poorest strata of the peasantry, Monción resided in Sabaneta. He was a farm laborer service of the rich hatero and merchant Santiago Rodríguez Masagó and achieved the fame and prestige that accompanied his name, whom due to his outstanding conditions, among them, his Spartan courage, his natural intelligence and his irreducible will to fight, all this demonstrated first in such important events like the Battle of Sabana Larga against the invading Haitian forces on January 24, 1856, and then, during the war against Spain.[1][2]

Dominican Restoration War

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When Spain invaded the country in 1861, he was an Army Lieutenant Colonel, for services rendered during the struggle for independence from Haiti. He was enrolled in the Reserves at the service of the annexation authorities, but he was one of the most industrious fighters to expel the Spanish occupiers. Monción was among the organizers and protagonists of the February 21 uprising in Guayubín. When it became impossible to keep that town under control, Lucas de Peña ordered it to be abandoned, Monción retreated and tried to become strong at the Mangá post, where he fought until the superiority of the physical force of the Spaniards prevailed.[2][3]

Chief Lucas de Peña and other patriotic officers accepted the peace proposal made by the Spanish through a commission of Dominicans, but Monción flatly rejected it and remained rebellious in the Line fields. He was sentenced to death in default. Together with Santiago Rodríguez and Pedro Antonio Pimentel, he led the preparations for the restart of the armed struggle. He settled in Haiti from where he sometimes raided the enemy, in coordination with the guerrillas of the Colonel José Cabrera. He was present in Capotillo on the August 16, 1863 and from there the combat continued with his comrades in arms. After the clashes in La Patilla and Macabón, he participated in the persecution of Brigadier Buceta and on August 17, he was about to die in the town of Cayucal, when he overtook his companions and, with a machete in hand, pounced on Buceta, whom he pursued closely. At that moment Monción's horse rolled on the ground and while trying to get up he was wounded by a sword blow to the head and another to the left arm by a Spanish dragon. The bold and heroic intervention of Pimentel and several other officers prevented them from finishing off the patriot, who was taken to the house of a Guayacanes resident named Francisco Cruz.[2][4]

On August 30, Monción learned that General Gaspar Polanco had moved into the field of restaurateurs and was already in Quinigua and was preparing to attack Santiago. Without recovering, far from it, as if he asked permission to the pain of the injuries to reintegrate into fighting, Monción left for that point, and took charge of an artillery unit with which he systematically attacked the San Luis Fortress defended by the Spanish forces. When they were forced to retreat towards Puerto Plata, they had in Monción one of their most obstinate and effective pursuers. Then, on November 1, 1863, on the recommendation of General Polanco, Monción was designated Commander of Arms of the strategic Plaza de Monte Cristi. Then he was the boss of the entire Northwest.[2][5]

It was up to Benito Monción, who had already achieved the rank of general, to carry out the difficult task of resisting the massive attack of April 17, 1864 directed by Marshal José de la Gándara against the national forces in Monte Cristi. De la Gándara, who had replaced Carlos de Vargas as Captain General on March 31, 1864, had a well-earned reputation for cruelty and was at the same time cunning and aggressive. Enterprising, tenacious, virtuous master of intrigue. He believed that, with the ports of Samaná and Puerto Plata in Spanish hands, the conquest of Monte Cristi assured him control of all the ports of the North, and all possibility of maritime communication with the outside world would be closed to the national government. Once this objective was achieved, it was a matter of recovering the entire Line, then embarking on the conquest of Santiago, taking possession of the central areas of the country and uniting the capital and the North again, under the reestablished rule of the Spanish. For the execution of this plan, only from Cuba, and without mentioning tion of reinforcements arrived from Puerto Rico, received De la Gándara, by the bay of Manzanillo, 14 ships that transported about six thousand men and the corresponding war material. Added to this force was the one that could be formed with the forced recruitment of Dominican citizens between 15 and 60 years of age. With the weight of that powerful military body, he launched himself to take Monte Cristi, the initial step of the triumphant march that the Spanish had planned.[2][6]

With barely five hundred poorly armed men, generals Monción, Juan Antonio Polanco, Federico de Jesús García and Pedro Antonio Pimentel, led the resistance that, although it could not prevent the landing and conquest of the city, was so energetic and effective that it made pay a high price in deaths and injuries to the invaders. One of the wounded were on that occasion Field Marshal cousin of Rivera, who had to be retired in a state of gravity on the battlefield.[7]

Despite the blow they intended to strike with the taking of Monte Cristi, and the pronouncements triumph lists of De la Gándara, the military situation of the Spanish did not change substantially. The oatriots deployed in mobile guerrillas in all areas of the city and the invaders found themselves condemned to paralysis, trapped in the intricate complexities of the area that they had just conquered. The simple and elemental task of giving drink to the cavalry, became in a daily military operation, full of difficulties and dangers. Taking the horses to the river, an elemental but indispensable, meaning he wanted to expose himself to gunshots and guerrilla ambushes. They remained lurking a short distance from the city center.[8]

When he wanted to occupy other populations of the Northwest, the tactic of the restorers was abandon the towns and villages, after setting them on fire so that the new occupants will find nothing in them. And when they took them, then created the problem of supplying the troops, through convoys and caravans that with dangerous frequency they fell into hands of the patriots. To depart from the royal roads and the towns and try to penetrate the thick and thorny mountains of the Line, was to expose oneself to walking along unknown paths, to feeling watched by a thousand ignored eyes and venture to march guided many times by practical infiltrators who abandoned and left them disoriented in the middle of the mountains full of unfathomable mysteries for strangers, populated by cacti and shrimps, of guards and bayahondas; plagued with poisonous insects, all of which added to the harsh ravages of the climate, to which the Spanish succumbed and saw the number of casualties increase. This is how De la Gándara's expeditionary force was left stranded in Monte Cristi, and an important part of the glories that originate in these episodes of the War of Restoration, without a doubt some, are the highlights of General Monción.[9]

On October 8, 1864, Benito Monción received what he deserved promotion from general to general division. Days later he supported the coup led by Gaspar Polanco against José Antonio Salcedo; and in January 1865, he was one of the leaders of the uprising that culminated in the fall of Polanco and Pimentel's rise to power.[2][10]

Later years and death

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Statue of Monción at the Parque Independencia in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic

After the reconquest of sovereignty, Monción exhausted a zigzagging political career, typical of someone who lacks concepts, doctrines and defined objectives; career in which the swings alternated between Baecista militancy and the fight against Báez. He was in exile in the Turks and Caicos Islands and there, in March 1887, he had the commendable gesture of telling the intellectual Mariano Antonio Cestero his version of the events recorded at the beginning of the war. Cestero collected the narrative that was published in 1902, in a pamphlet titled De Capotillo a Santiago.[11][12]

Over the next twelve years, the oppressive tyranny of General Ulises Hearauex had reigned. Monción was included in the dangerous list of suspects and by order of the tyrant, he was confined in Santiago, subject to high police surveillance. At one point, he even had to go into exile in the Bahamas. He became seriously ill, asked to be allowed to die at his home in Guayubín and this last wish was granted. On February 11, 1898, Monción died at the age of 71. An impressive funeral was prepared for him and it is said that from his deathbed, the dying general, in full lucidity, was able to listen to the rehearsals that a band of music of the funeral march he would have to go to the grave.[13]

Transfer of remains

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On August 16, 1944, dictator Rafael Leonidas Trujillo arranged for his remains to rest in the Chapel of the Heroes of the Holy Metropolitan Cathedral. His remains were later transferred to the National Pantheon.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Mejía, Rafael Chaljub (2007). Diccionario Biográfico de los Restauradores de la República [Biographical Dictionary of the Restorers of the Republic] (in Spanish). Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. p. 204. ISBN 9789945859126.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ a b c d e f Martínez, Rufino (1997). Diccionario biográfico-histórico dominicano, (1821–1930) (in Spanish). Santo Domingo: Editora de la Universidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo. p. 323.
  3. ^ Mejía, Rafael Chaljub (2007). Diccionario Biográfico de los Restauradores de la República [Biographical Dictionary of the Restorers of the Republic] (in Spanish). Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. pp. 204–205. ISBN 9789945859126.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ Mejía, Rafael Chaljub (2007). Diccionario Biográfico de los Restauradores de la República [Biographical Dictionary of the Restorers of the Republic] (in Spanish). Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. p. 205. ISBN 9789945859126.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. ^ Mejía, Rafael Chaljub (2007). Diccionario Biográfico de los Restauradores de la República [Biographical Dictionary of the Restorers of the Republic] (in Spanish). Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. pp. 205–206. ISBN 9789945859126.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  6. ^ Mejía, Rafael Chaljub (2007). Diccionario Biográfico de los Restauradores de la República [Biographical Dictionary of the Restorers of the Republic] (in Spanish). Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. p. 206. ISBN 9789945859126.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  7. ^ Mejía, Rafael Chaljub (2007). Diccionario Biográfico de los Restauradores de la República [Biographical Dictionary of the Restorers of the Republic] (in Spanish). Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. pp. 206–207. ISBN 9789945859126.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  8. ^ Mejía, Rafael Chaljub (2007). Diccionario Biográfico de los Restauradores de la República [Biographical Dictionary of the Restorers of the Republic] (in Spanish). Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. p. 207. ISBN 9789945859126.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  9. ^ Mejía, Rafael Chaljub (2007). Diccionario Biográfico de los Restauradores de la República [Biographical Dictionary of the Restorers of the Republic] (in Spanish). Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. p. 207. ISBN 9789945859126.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  10. ^ Mejía, Rafael Chaljub (2007). Diccionario Biográfico de los Restauradores de la República [Biographical Dictionary of the Restorers of the Republic] (in Spanish). Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. pp. 207–208. ISBN 9789945859126.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  11. ^ Mejía, Rafael Chaljub (2007). Diccionario Biográfico de los Restauradores de la República [Biographical Dictionary of the Restorers of the Republic] (in Spanish). Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. p. 208. ISBN 9789945859126.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  12. ^ Martínez, Rufino (1997). Diccionario biográfico-histórico dominicano, (1821–1930) (in Spanish). Santo Domingo: Editora de la Universidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo. pp. 323–324.
  13. ^ Mejía, Rafael Chaljub (2007). Diccionario Biográfico de los Restauradores de la República [Biographical Dictionary of the Restorers of the Republic] (in Spanish). Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. p. 208. ISBN 9789945859126.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

Category:1826 births Category:1898 deaths Category:Dominican Republic independence activists Category:Dominican Republic revolutionaries Category:Blue Party (Dominican Republic) politicians Category:Red Party (Dominican Republic) politicians Category:Dominican Republic military personnel Category:People of the Dominican War of Independence Category:People of the Dominican Restoration War Category:People of the Six Years' War