'Domingo Faustino Sarmiento AlbarracÃn' (
February 15 1811 –
September 11 1888) was an
Argentine statesman, educator, and author. He was
president of Argentina from 1868 to 1874.
Sarmiento was born in
San Juan, Argentina.
During the
1830s and
1840s, he lived in exile in
Chile, where he wrote his best known work ''
Facundo'' (1845), where he shows his point of view about ''
caudillismo'' and personalism in politics. He became very interested in the Chilean
public school system, and traveled to places such as the
United States and
Europe to improve his teaching ability. Sarmiento met the American educator
Horace Mann and then maintained a prolonged letter exchange with his widow Mary Mann.
His university degree was an honorary one from the
University of Michigan, where a bust of him still stands in the Modern Languages Building.
In Chile, he entered into an intense debate with the neoclassicist theorist Andrés Bello over the nature of literature, Sarmiento coming down firmly on the side of Romanticism. His ''
Facundo'' is considered the first important Latin American essay, and regarded by some as an important precursor to the novel, which got off to a late start in his part of the world. ''Facundo'' is important for many reasons: narrative style, political philosophy, and the codification of heterogeneous cultures — gauchos, blacks, and indigenous peoples.

Sarmiento at Mitre Library, by the sculptor
Erminio Blotta, Rosario, Argentina
In 1868, Sarmiento was elected to become the new president in place of the liberal
Bartolomé Mitre. During Sarmiento's presidency, student enrollment doubled, and about a hundred public libraries were built. Sarmiento was also able to increase the amount of immigration from Europe with an extensive international campaign.
Besides the considerable build-up of the Argentine education system, Sarmiento's presidency was also characterized by an economic policy that - unlike that of his liberal-conservative predecessors (and successors) - rejected British-backed
free trade ideas and supported the national industry with
protectionist policies, tariffs and a rise of import tax rates.
His presidency also witnessed the end of the
War of the Triple Alliance against
Paraguay, and the 3 de Febrero Project, which led to the creation of the
Buenos Aires Zoo.
In a letter to Mitre, Sarmiento wrote ''"Fertilizing the soil with their blood is the only thing gauchos are good for"''. Historian
José MarÃa Rosa interprets this as proof of Sarmiento's harshness towards the lower non-educated classes in Argentina, especially the
Gauchos.
He died in
Asunción, (
Paraguay) and was buried in
La Recoleta Cemetery in
Buenos Aires.
Latin American Teacher's Day was established in Sarmiento's honor at the
1943 Interamerican Conference on Education, which was held in
Panama.
There is a statue in honor of Sarmiento in
Boston on the
Commonwealth Avenue Mall, between Gloucester and Hereford streets, erected in 1973.
A bust of Sarmiento stands outside of the Nettie Lee Benson Latin American Collection and the Lozano Long Institute of Latin American Studies at the
University of Texas at Austin in
Austin, Texas.
Selected works
★ ''Mi defensa''
★ ''
Facundo - Civilización y Barbarie - Vida de Juan Facundo Quiroga''
★ ''Viajes, Argirópolis''
★ ''Recuerdos de Provincia'' (translated into English by Elizabeth Garrels and Asa Zatz as ''Recollections of a Provincial Past'', Library of Latin America, Oxford University Press, 2005; ISBN 0-19-511369-1)
★ ''Campaña del Ejército Grande''
★ ''Conflicto y armonÃas de las razas en América''
★ ''De la educación popular''
★ ''Travels in the United States in 1847'' (edited and translated into English by Michael Aaron Rockland)
Sources
★ "''My dear sir: Mary Mann's letters to Sarmiento, 1865–1881''", by Mary Tyler Peabody Mann, ISBN 987-98659-0-1, 2001, Publisher: Instituto Cultural Argentino Norteamericano.
★ ''Historia Argentina'' by
José MarÃa Rosa