(Redirected from Juan Santamaria)'Juan Santamaría' (
August 29,
1831 -
April 11,
1856), is officially recognized as the national
hero of the Republic of
Costa Rica. A national holiday in Costa Rica, 'Juan Santamaría Day,' is held every
April 11 to commemorate his death.
Santamaría was born in the city of
Alajuela. When
U.S. filibuster William Walker overthrew the government of
Nicaragua and attempted to conquer the other nations in
Central America, including Costa Rica, in order to form a private
slave-holding empire, Costa Rican
president Juan Rafael Mora Porras called upon the general population to take up arms and march north to Nicaragua to fight against the foreign invader. Santamaría, a poor laborer and the
illegitimate son of a
single mother, joined the army as a
drummer boy. The troops nicknamed him ''el erizo'' ("the hedgehog") on account of his spiked hair.
After routing a small contingent of Walker's soldiers at
Santa Rosa,
Guanacaste, the Costa Rican troops continued marching north and reached the city of
Rivas, Nicaragua, on
April 8,
1856. Combat was fierce and the Costa Ricans were not able to drive Walker's men out of a hostel near the town center from which they commanded an advantageous firing position.
According to the traditional account, on
April 11, Costa Rican General
José María Cañas suggested that one of the soldiers advance towards the hostel with a
torch and set it on fire. Some soldiers tried and failed, but finally Santamaría volunteered on the condition that, in the event of his death, some other soldier would look after his mother. He then advanced and was mortally wounded by enemy fire. Before expiring he succeeded, however, in setting fire to the hostel, thus contributing decisively to the Costa Rican victory at Rivas.
This account is apparently supported by a petition for a state pension filed on November
1857 by Santamaría's mother, as well as by government documents showing that the pension was granted. Various historians, however, have questioned whether the account is accurate, and if Santamaria died or not during that battle or another one. At any rate, towards the end of the
19th century, Costa Rican intellectuals and politicians seized on the war against Walker and on the figure of Juan Santamaría for
nationalist purposes.
Juan Santamaría is honored by a statue in the central square of Alajuela, and by a small museum in the same city. It has been suggested that the statue's uniform and body don't match his description because the statue of Santamaría was mistakenly shipped to
Haiti while the statue intended for Haiti, representing a
French soldier, was sent to Alajuela.
The main
international airport in Costa Rica is named after him.
External links
★
Museo Histórico Juan Santamaría