Background
José Santos Zelaya was born on Oct. 31, 1853, in Managua to a wealthy coffee planter, José Maria Zelaya, and his mistress Juana López. His father José María was married to Rosario Fernández.
José Santos Zelaya was born on Oct. 31, 1853, in Managua to a wealthy coffee planter, José Maria Zelaya, and his mistress Juana López. His father José María was married to Rosario Fernández.
After attending school in Granada, Nicaragua, young José and his brother went to France for advanced study.
In 1907, after he had encouraged an unsuccessful revolutionary attack on the Honduran government, Nicaraguan troops defeated the Honduran army, along with a force from EI Salvador, and occupied Tegucigalpa. A general Central American war threatened, for which the United States State Department blamed Zelaya. Mexico and the United States through the Central American Conference in Washington (1907) supported treaties which aimed at stabilizing Central America.
Despite the treaties, Zelaya's meddling continued. In October 1909 a revolution against Zelaya broke out on Nicaragua's east coast. After two Americans aiding the revolutionists were captured and executed on Zelaya's orders, the United States broke relations with Nicaragua.
Facing insurmountable odds, Zelaya resigned on December 16, 1909, and went into exile in Mexico. Zelaya eventually went to Spain and in 1913 came to the United States. When charges were brought against him for murdering two Americans many years earlier, he spent 8 days in jail. After charges were dropped, he went back to Spain but returned to New York in 1916, where he died on May 17, 1919.
Returning home in 1876, Zelaya participated in many conspiracies against the Conservative administrations of the "Thirty Years" (1863 - 1893) and once was exiled for such activity. When the Conservative regime of Roberto Sacasa was ousted because of division within his party, there followed political confusion from which Zelaya, heading a Liberal group, emerged as president in July 1893.
On the contrary, Zelaya was a Liberal member of the military, as well as an educated leader, a regular Freemason, and an anti-imperialist fighter. He had the support of other Liberal leaders of Central America (Guatemala and Costa Rica had a Liberal Revolution in 1870, El Salvador as well).
While some of Zelaya's policies were progressive, others were repressive. He and his associates used their positions for enrichment by selling concessions and demanding tribute from persons doing business in Nicaragua. Zelaya often exiled or imprisoned enemies and confiscated their property. Desirous of dominating Central America, Zelaya supported a Central American union under his leadership and frequently interfered in neighboring countries.