José María Guerrero De Arcos
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José María de la Cruz Guerrero de Arcos y Molina (1799 – 1853) was a Nicaraguan lawyer and politician, member of the short lived centrist Republican Party, who served in the 1839 Honduran Council of Ministers and as the 5th Supreme Director of
Nicaragua Nicaragua (; ), officially the Republic of Nicaragua (), is the largest country in Central America, bordered by Honduras to the north, the Caribbean to the east, Costa Rica to the south, and the Pacific Ocean to the west. Managua is the countr ...
from 6 April 1847 to 1 January 1849.


Family

José María Guerrero de Arcos y Molina, son of Pastor Guerrero y Arcos Ángulo and Dionicia Molina y Poveda, married with Juana Casco who procreated: José Leocadio, Paula y Manuela del Carmen Guerrero de Arcos y Casco; in second married with Esmeralda Guerrero de Arcos, daughter of Maximino Guerrero de Arcos and Joaquina Guerrero, who procreated: Máximino, Esmeralda, Valeria, José de la Luz, José Valentín, Miguel Gerónimo Guerrero de Arcos.


As Counselor of Honduras


Battle of Espíritu Santo

In early 1839, due to ideological differences, Nicaragua and Honduras invaded El Salvador, still part of the
Federal Republic of Central America The Federal Republic of Central America ( es, República Federal de Centroamérica), originally named the United Provinces of Central America ( es, Provincias Unidas del Centro de América), and sometimes simply called Central America, in it ...
. On 5 April, the invading troops were defeated by General
Francisco Morazán José Francisco Morazán Quesada (; born October 3, 1792 – September 15, 1842) was a Central American politician who served as president of the Federal Republic of Central America from 1830 to 1839. Before he was president of Central America h ...
, and immediately afterwards, he advanced into Honduras in an attempt to overthrow the government of
Juan Francisco de Molina Juan Francisco de Molina (1779–1878) was the First President of Honduras from January 10 to April 13, 1839. Childhood Juan Francisco de Molina was born in 1779 in the city of Tegucigalpa, Honduras. His father was Juan Francisco Molina Esquivel ...
. Molina, seeing that the troops were nearing Comayagua, resigned, and on 13 April 1839 minister Felipe Neri Medina formed a council of ministers and assumed leadership. Medina would very quickly resign due to the immense pressure caused by Morazán's counter invasion, and so did the minister after him, Juan José Alvarado, and so Guerrero would take leadership on 27 April of the same year.


Peace Treaty

Due to the planned insurgency, the lawyer Justo José de Herrera was appointed to appear as the diplomatic representative of Honduras, before the Salvadoran government lead by Antonio José Cañas and thus hold talks to avoid an imminent war that would end with disastrous losses for both governments. The "Peace Treaty" would be signed on 5 June 1839, by the representatives of both states, minister José Miguel Montoya of El Salvador and Justo José de Herrera of Honduras. Among the agreements were the commitment to pay compensation and attend the Central American Diet of Santa Ana, in order to strengthen peace on 15 August of the same year. On 10 August Guerrero had handed over power to minister Mariano Garrigó and had returned to Nicaragua.


As Supreme Director of Nicaragua

When José León Sandoval stepped down as Supreme Director, Guerrero ran as the new Supreme Director. He did not succeed in getting the 2/3 majority required by the constitution in the parliament, and so the parliament appointed Miguel Ramón Morales as acting head of state. However, on 6 April of the same year, he would be unanimously appointed as Supreme Director by the Legislative Assembly.


English Invasion

In November, already in the administration of the state, Guerrero, asked the United States of America to mediate between the Nicaragua-England conflict; Subsequently, on 20 January 1848, English ships disembarked troops in the San Juan River and advanced on Lake Nicaragua, with the purpose of controlling the entirety of Nicaragua. Given this, Guerrero and the Legislative Assembly maneuvered with political skill and approved the ratification of an Anglo-Nicaraguan Agreement in Cuba preserving Nicaraguan sovereignty over the Great Lake of Nicaragua.


Resegnation

On 1 January 1849 Guerrero was forced to resign due to health problems, and he appointed Senator
Toribio Terán Bernardo Toribio Terán Prado ( León, Nicaragua, 1785 – 1850s) was a conservative Nicaraguan politician who served as acting Supreme Director of Nicaragua from January 1 to March 8, 1849. References {{s-end Presidents of Nicaragua ...
as Supreme Director. On 8 March parliament appointed
Benito Rosales José Benito Rosales y Sandoval (1795 Granada – 1850) was a conservative Nicaraguan politician and lawyer who served as acting Supreme Director of Nicaragua between March 8 and April 1, 1849. Rosales was born in 1795 in Granada. He studied l ...
as the new Supreme Director, who would oversee the 1849 elections, which were won by
Norberto Ramírez Norberto Ramírez Áreas (15 April 1802, León, Nicaragua – 11 July 1856, León, Nicaragua) was a Nicaraguan lawyer and politician who served as acting Supreme Chief of El Salvador (20 September 1840 – 7 January 1841), still technically ...
, who took office on 1 April of the same year. Ramírez would be the only Supreme Director to serve out their full term.''La Prensa'', 20. November 200
Historia de las elecciones
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References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Guerrero, Jose Maria Presidents of Nicaragua Presidents of Honduras 1799 births 1853 deaths 19th-century Nicaraguan people