Penal Colony Of Clevelândia
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The penal colony of Clevelândia, located in the current district of
Clevelândia do Norte Clevelândia do Norte is a district of the Brazilian city of Oiapoque, Amapá, by the Oyapock River. History In 1922 an agricultural outpost called the Núcleo Colonial Cleveland was transformed into a political and criminal concentration camp dur ...
,
Amapá Amapá (; ) is one of the 26 federative units of Brazil, states of Brazil. It is in the North Region, Brazil, North Region of Brazil. It is Federative units of Brazil#List, the second-least populous state and the eighteenth-largest state by area ...
, functioned from 1924 to 1926 in the extreme north of Brazil, bordering
French Guiana French Guiana, or Guyane in French, is an Overseas departments and regions of France, overseas department and region of France located on the northern coast of South America in the Guianas and the West Indies. Bordered by Suriname to the west ...
. It was installed in the "Cleveland Colonial Nucleus", an agricultural colony founded in 1922, and received a total of 946 to 1,630 prisoners. They included enemies of president
Artur Bernardes Artur da Silva Bernardes (8 August 1875 – 23 March 1955) was a Brazilian lawyer and politician who served as the 12th president of Brazil from 1922 to 1926. Bernades' presidency was marked by the crisis of the First Brazilian Republic and th ...
'
government A government is the system or group of people governing an organized community, generally a State (polity), state. In the case of its broad associative definition, government normally consists of legislature, executive (government), execu ...
('' tenentist'' rebels, militant workers and
anarchists Anarchism is a political philosophy and movement that seeks to abolish all institutions that perpetuate authority, coercion, or hierarchy, primarily targeting the state and capitalism. Anarchism advocates for the replacement of the state w ...
) and common prisoners (criminals from the "dregs of society" and the homeless, ''capoeiras'', and minors caught on the streets). They came from
Paraná Paraná, Paranã or Parana may refer to: Geology * Paraná Basin, a sedimentary basin in South America Places In Argentina *Paraná, Entre Ríos, a city * Paraná Department, a part of Entre Ríos Province In Brazil *Paraná (state), a state ...
,
São Paulo São Paulo (; ; Portuguese for 'Paul the Apostle, Saint Paul') is the capital of the São Paulo (state), state of São Paulo, as well as the List of cities in Brazil by population, most populous city in Brazil, the List of largest cities in the ...
,
Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro, or simply Rio, is the capital of the Rio de Janeiro (state), state of Rio de Janeiro. It is the List of cities in Brazil by population, second-most-populous city in Brazil (after São Paulo) and the Largest cities in the America ...
, Amazonas and
Pará Pará () is a Federative units of Brazil, state of Brazil, located in northern Brazil and traversed by the lower Amazon River. It borders the Brazilian states of Amapá, Maranhão, Tocantins (state), Tocantins, Mato Grosso, Amazonas (Brazilian st ...
. In addition to these, the colony's population was made up of
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guards, employees, traders and settlers, the last three totaling 204 inhabitants at the end of 1926. At the beginning of 1927, the
Washington Luís Washington Luís Pereira de Sousa (; 26 October 1869 – 4 August 1957) was a Brazilian politician who served as the 13th president of Brazil. Elected governor of São Paulo state in 1920 and president of Brazil in 1926, Washington Luís belonge ...
administration allowed the prisoners to return. The original agricultural colony was already losing its inhabitants to neighboring Martinica (present-day
Oiapoque Oiapoque () is a municipality in the north of the state of Amapá, Brazil. Its population is 27,906 and its area is . Oiapoque is also a major river in the same state, forming the international border with French Guiana. The Oyapock River Bridge, ...
) in 1924, when the Bernardes government needed a remote and isolated prison. In response to the ''tenentist'' military revolts, the government had imposed a
state of emergency A state of emergency is a situation in which a government is empowered to put through policies that it would normally not be permitted to do, for the safety and protection of its citizens. A government can declare such a state before, during, o ...
and overcrowded prisons. Miguel Calmon, then
Minister of Agriculture An agriculture ministry (also called an agriculture department, agriculture board, agriculture council, or agriculture agency, or ministry of rural development) is a ministry charged with agriculture. The ministry is often headed by a minister f ...
, offered the location, as it was the most remote agricultural colony in the country. This has precedents in the governments of
Floriano Peixoto Floriano Vieira Peixoto (; 30 April 1839 – 29 June 1895) was a Brazilian military and politician, a veteran of the Paraguayan War and several other conflicts, and the second president of Brazil. Born in (today a district of the city of ...
, who deported prisoners to the
Amazon Amazon most often refers to: * Amazon River, in South America * Amazon rainforest, a rainforest covering most of the Amazon basin * Amazon (company), an American multinational technology company * Amazons, a tribe of female warriors in Greek myth ...
, and
Rodrigues Alves Francisco de Paula Rodrigues Alves, PC (; 7 July 1848 – 16 January 1919) was a Brazilian politician who first served as president of the Province of São Paulo in 1887, then as Treasury minister in the 1890s. Rodrigues Alves was elected the ...
, in the period after the
Vaccine Revolt The Vaccine Revolt () was a popular riot that took place between 10 and 16 November 1904 in the city of Rio de Janeiro, then the capital of Brazil. Its immediate pretext was a law that made vaccination against smallpox compulsory, but it is also ...
, as well as in other penal colonies around the world. The first ship with prisoners arrived at the mouth of the
Oyapock River The Oyapock or Oiapoque ( ; ; ) is a long river in South America that forms most of the border between the French overseas department of French Guiana and the Brazilian state of Amapá. Course The Oyapock runs through the Guianan moist for ...
on 26 December 1924. The sudden expansion of the colony's population overloaded the agricultural center's infrastructure. Testimonies from prisoners recorded precarious accommodation and usually unpaid labor in hot, humid and unhealthy conditions, as well as threat of violence from guards and some common criminals. The prison's workforce carried wooden logs to the sawmill, weeded the fields, built public facilities and worked in the '' pau-rosa'' mills. Military personnel who swore loyalty to the government performed technical and bureaucratic functions. In June 1925, soldiers from the Public Force of São Paulo, defeated in the battle of Catanduvas during the Paraná Campaign, brought an epidemic of
shigellosis Shigellosis, known historically as dysentery, is an infection of the intestines caused by ''Shigella'' bacteria. Symptoms generally start one to two days after exposure and include diarrhea, fever, abdominal pain, and feeling the need to pass ...
, which killed hundreds of prisoners along with other diseases such as malaria and tuberculosis. According to the official report ''Journey to the Cleveland Colonial Nucleus'', out of 946 prisoners, 491 died and 262 escaped. Press censorship suppressed the matter until the first months of 1927, when the prisoners returned and the penal colony became a front page topic, described as a "green hell" by the opposition and a "very common agricultural colony" by government supporters. Its history was permanently associated with president Artur Bernardes. It was remembered by anarchists and forgotten by historiography, for which it became the subject of its first major study only in 1991. Historians have characterized the penal colony as a forced labor camp or even as a concentration camp.


Creation


The agricultural colony

Prisoners' memoirs often confuse Clevelândia with its wider region, Oiapoque, then part of the state of
Pará Pará () is a Federative units of Brazil, state of Brazil, located in northern Brazil and traversed by the lower Amazon River. It borders the Brazilian states of Amapá, Maranhão, Tocantins (state), Tocantins, Mato Grosso, Amazonas (Brazilian st ...
and currently in
Amapá Amapá (; ) is one of the 26 federative units of Brazil, states of Brazil. It is in the North Region, Brazil, North Region of Brazil. It is Federative units of Brazil#List, the second-least populous state and the eighteenth-largest state by area ...
. Oiapoque is located on Brazil's border with French Guiana and was an area of territorial disputes with France until its definitive incorporation into Brazilian territory in 1900. The region was considered an empty space, and its occupation had been studied by Brazilian authorities since the 1890s. In 1919, the
Brazilian Congress The National Congress () is the legislative body of Brazil's federal government. Unlike the state legislative assemblies and municipal chambers, the Congress is bicameral, composed of the Federal Senate (the upper house) and the Chamber of D ...
approved senator Justo Chermont's proposal to found national patronages and colonies along the Oyapock River. Chermont warned the government against smugglers who took advantage of the lack of policing, inspection and military defense in that area. Colonization would eliminate French influence from the region and ensure Brazilian sovereignty. The colony was established on the right bank of the Oyapock River, 15 kilometers from the military post of Santo Antônio, a few kilometers upstream from the village of Martinica. Both were part of the municipality of
Amapá Amapá (; ) is one of the 26 federative units of Brazil, states of Brazil. It is in the North Region, Brazil, North Region of Brazil. It is Federative units of Brazil#List, the second-least populous state and the eighteenth-largest state by area ...
in the district of Demonti, whose total population was more than 1,150 in the 1920 census. The village of Saint-Georges was on the opposite (French) side of the river. The first settlers, refugees from the drought in Northeastern Brazil, arrived in May 1921. According to Rocque Pennafort, the population was made up of two distinct groups, one that accompanied colonel Chico Pennafort and the other of families from
Ceará Ceará (, ) is one of the 26 states of Brazil, located in the Northeast Region, Brazil, northeastern part of the country, on the Atlantic Ocean, Atlantic coast. It is the List of Brazilian states by population, eighth-largest Brazilian State by ...
brought from
Belém Belém (; Portuguese for Bethlehem; initially called Nossa Senhora de Belém do Grão-Pará, in English Our Lady of Bethlehem of Great Pará), often called Belém of Pará, is the capital and largest city of the state of Pará in the north of B ...
by the government. The region was believed to be an " Eldorado" of fertile lands, presented in government propaganda by photographs of a giant cassava root and a long sugar cane stalk. The healthiness of the region was attested to by a report signed in 1922 by the director of the Rural Prophylaxis Service of Pará. On 5 May 1922, the "Cleveland Agricultural Center" was inaugurated, named after
Grover Cleveland Stephen Grover Cleveland (March 18, 1837June 24, 1908) was the 22nd and 24th president of the United States, serving from 1885 to 1889 and from 1893 to 1897. He was the first U.S. president to serve nonconsecutive terms and the first Hist ...
, president of the United States who arbitrated the Palmas border dispute between Argentina and Brazil. The chief engineer, administrator and founder of the village was Gentil Norberto. Clevelândia was mean to be the "model area for a civilizational project". The urban area of the nucleus was planned, an unprecedented feat for towns in the region. Until 1924, a two-story administrative building, a school with two classrooms, a hospital, infirmary, immigrant hostel, telegraph office, sawmill, church, several residences and 28 kilometers of local roads were built. But the initial enthusiasm was lost and settlers who were unsuccessful with agriculture migrated to Martinica, where they found work in the ''pau-rosa'' mills. On 31 December 1926, the population, excluding prisoners and guards, was 204: 127 settlers and 77 employees and traders.


Transformation into a penal colony

The
federal government A federation (also called a federal state) is an entity characterized by a political union, union of partially federated state, self-governing provinces, states, or other regions under a #Federal governments, federal government (federalism) ...
of president Artur Bernardes (1922–1926) transformed Clevelândia into the largest destination for its political prisoners, in a context of a lasting state of emergency, overcrowded jails, mass arrests and internal exile. ''Tenentists'' defeated in their armed revolts against the government, militant workers (including anarchists), common criminals and "undesirables" removed from the streets of
Rio de Janeiro Rio de Janeiro, or simply Rio, is the capital of the Rio de Janeiro (state), state of Rio de Janeiro. It is the List of cities in Brazil by population, second-most-populous city in Brazil (after São Paulo) and the Largest cities in the America ...
had Clevelândia as their prison from 1924 onwards. By article 80 of the General Provisions of the
Brazilian Constitution of 1891 The Brazilian Constitution of 1891 ( Portuguese: ''Constituição brasileira de 1891''), also known Constitution of the Republic of the United States of Brazil (''Constituição da República dos Estados Unidos do Brasil''), promulgated on Februa ...
, in force at the time, the president could, during a state of emergency, resort to exile to maintain law and order. In the case of Clevelândia, an additional justification was a constitutional provision that gave the federal government control over the border strip necessary for national defense. According to Bernardes, the idea of deporting prisoners to Clevelândia was not his, but that of his Minister of Agriculture, Miguel Calmon, or Gentil Norberto. According to former minister Calmon, "the government only deported to Clevelândia as a last resort and forced by ''
habeas corpus ''Habeas corpus'' (; from Medieval Latin, ) is a legal procedure invoking the jurisdiction of a court to review the unlawful detention or imprisonment of an individual, and request the individual's custodian (usually a prison official) to ...
'' requests to the
Supreme Federal Court The Federal Supreme Court (, , abbreviated STF) is the supreme court (court of last resort) of Brazil, serving primarily as the country's Constitutional Court. It is the highest court of law in Brazil for constitutional issues and its rulings ...
, which did not allow the prisoners to be kept here" n prison ships and islands in Guanabara Bay">Guanabara_Bay.html" ;"title="n prison ships and islands in Guanabara Bay">n prison ships and islands in Guanabara Bay and "those deported to Clevelândia were prisoners who had the worst records and no special title to recommend them". Miguel Calmon offered Bernardes lands under his Ministry of Agriculture's administration with room to receive prisoners: Ilha das Flores, the colonial centers of Paraná and Santa Catarina and the agricultural centers of Paraíba">Santa Catarina (state)">Santa Catarina and the agricultural centers of Paraíba, Piauí, Pará (i.e. Clevelândia) and Amazonas. According to him, Ilha das Flores and Clevelândia would be the only viable ones, as the others were in territories at risk of revolts or the governors of their respective
states State most commonly refers to: * State (polity), a centralized political organization that regulates law and society within a territory **Sovereign state, a sovereign polity in international law, commonly referred to as a country **Nation state, a ...
did not want to host political prisoners. Clevelândia was the most remote agricultural colony in the entire country, guaranteeing the isolation of prisoners and the impossibility of legal defense before courts. The prisoners would be punished for their crimes while also contributing to the occupation of the border region. The measure has precedents in republican Brazil, also in the equatorial jungle, when hundreds or even thousands of individuals were deported to
Tabatinga Tabatinga, originally Forte de São Francisco Xavier de Tabatinga, is a Municipalities of Brazil, municipality in the Tres Fronteras, Três Fronteiras area of Western Amazonas. It is in the Brazilian States of Brazil, state of Amazonas (Brazilia ...
, Xingu, the upper Rio Branco and
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during the government of Floriano Peixoto (1891–1894) and in the post-Vaccine Revolt period (1904). This type of punishment in inhospitable regions can be compared to
Devil's Island The penal colony of Cayenne ( French: ''Bagne de Cayenne''), commonly known as Devil's Island (''Île du Diable''), was a French penal colony that operated for 100 years, from 1852 to 1952, and officially closed in 1953, in the Salvation Islan ...
in French Guiana, the Italian ''domicilio coatto'' (confinement on islands in the Mediterranean), the Argentine prison in
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and the Russian
gulag The Gulag was a system of Labor camp, forced labor camps in the Soviet Union. The word ''Gulag'' originally referred only to the division of the Chronology of Soviet secret police agencies, Soviet secret police that was in charge of runnin ...
. Clevelândia was so isolated there was no direct telegraphic connection to Belém; until the construction of a radiotelegraph station in September 1926, communication passed through French Guiana to
Paris Paris () is the Capital city, capital and List of communes in France with over 20,000 inhabitants, largest city of France. With an estimated population of 2,048,472 residents in January 2025 in an area of more than , Paris is the List of ci ...
and from there to
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and Belém.


Points of view

The events in Clevelândia did not reach the press as a whole, which was under censorship during the state of emergency declared by the Bernardes government. Public opinion only had a superficial understanding of the events. Opposition deputies in the Chamber denounced many abuses that occurred during the state of emergency, but did not mention Clevelândia. The newcomers did not know what awaited them. The news only started to come out in September 1925, when a letter from Domingos Braz was published in the
Lisbon Lisbon ( ; ) is the capital and largest city of Portugal, with an estimated population of 567,131, as of 2023, within its administrative limits and 3,028,000 within the Lisbon Metropolitan Area, metropolis, as of 2025. Lisbon is mainlan ...
anarcho-syndicalist newspaper ''A Batalha''. In December 1925, another letter was published by the newspapers ''La Antorcha'', from
Buenos Aires Buenos Aires, controlled by the government of the Autonomous City of Buenos Aires, is the Capital city, capital and largest city of Argentina. It is located on the southwest of the Río de la Plata. Buenos Aires is classified as an Alpha− glob ...
, and ''O Syndicalista'', from the Workers' Federation of Rio Grande do Sul. The government denied the accusations. Only at the end of Artur Bernardes' term and the state of emergency did the story resonate with public opinion and the mainstream and alternative press brought testimonies from survivors. Government and opposition newspapers debated what the real conditions of the place were at the beginning of 1927, when the prisoners had already been amnestied. The opposition can be exemplified by the newspapers ''O Combate'' and ''A Nação'', which represented the interests of the Democratic Party of São Paulo, ''tenentists'' and the Workers and Peasants Bloc, as well as '' A Plebe'', representing the anarchists. The defenders of former president Bernardes and his government can be found in the Rio de Janeiro newspaper ''O Paiz''. Justo Chermont's newspaper reported on the beauty and good climate of Clevelândia, and Gentil Norberto would publicly defend the place. The play ''Clevelândia'' (1927), by Euclides de Andrade, criticized the
First Brazilian Republic The First Brazilian Republic, also referred to as the Old Republic (, ), officially the Republic of the United States of Brazil, was the Brazilian state in the period from 1889 to 1930. The Old Republic began with the coup d'état that deposed ...
in a humorous tone from the point of view of a ''
caipira Caipiras ( in Caipira dialect) are the traditional population of the Brazilian state of São Paulo. Later, with the expansion of São Paulo's influence to other regions of the country, other states also had Caipiras in their localities, like Go ...
'' arrested in São Paulo for saluting the revolutionaries in 1924. The play was well received by the public in São Paulo. In ''Mr. Slang e o Brasil'' (1927), writer
Monteiro Lobato José Bento Renato Monteiro Lobato (; 18 April 1882 – 4 July 1948) was one of Brazil's most influential writers, mostly for his children's books set in the fictional Sítio do Picapau Amarelo (Yellow Woodpecker Farm) but he had been previous ...
interpreted Clevelândia as the possible destination of the country's thinking minds. Lobato wrote of doctor Belisário Penna: "He has done so much good for his land and will do so much more that - write what I'm going to say: he will end up in Clevelândia". The opposition denounced the "horrors" and the "Clevelandian hecatomb", "the extermination of prisoners" and "the crimes of the Bernardes government". The contemporary press and historiography associate Clevelândia with exile and demographic emptiness. Expressions such as "green hell", "Brazilian Siberia", "garden of torments", "exile of plague and death", "pestilent jungles" and "inhospitable place" were common in the newspapers. The colony entered anarchist memory as a symbol of oppression, the "Brazilian Bastille". The revelations put pro-government press on the defensive. ''O Paiz'' criticized opposition publications in the article "The demagoguery industry and the Clevelândia bonanza". The newspaper softened the region's image, calling it a "very common agricultural colony" and a "peaceful cassava plantation". Reversing the accusations, it asserted that "those who today cry out with an olive branch in hand, for general peace, were the ones who lit and fueled the fire of rebellion that has been drenching the national territory in blood for so many years", and that "if there had not been a revolution the government would not have been forced to take some severe measures". For historian Carlo Romani, historiography let the history of Cleveland fall into oblivion. Official silence about the region was broken by the Brazilian Army itself when its official library published ''Clevelândia do Norte'', by priest Rogério Alicino, in 1971. Alicino had an affinity with the interests of the State and relied on official documents. His book dedicated only five pages to the penal experience; according to Romani, "the first extensive work on the episode was a chapter in Paulo Sérgio Pinheiro's book", ''Estratégias da ilusão: a revolução mundial e o Brasil (1922-1935)'' (1991). Pinheiro focused on state repression and social struggles. Local historians stick to the official version, seeking to prevent the history of Oiapoque from being tainted by the prison camp's brief existence. Alexandre Samis, author of ''Clevelândia: anarquismo, sindicalismo e repressão política no Brasil'' (2002), had a similar perspective to Pinheiro. He and Romani have an ideological affinity with anarchism or
libertarian socialism Libertarian socialism is an anti-authoritarian and anti-capitalist political current that emphasises self-governance and workers' self-management. It is contrasted from other forms of socialism by its rejection of state ownership and from other ...
. For an additional historian of Clevelândia, Edson Machado de Brito, Pinheiro, Samis and Romani presented, each in their own way, the penal colony as a "milestone of the resistance's defeat". He, on the other hand, emphasizes that dissent survived the exile of part of the militant population in Clevelândia. Samis presents the exiles as citizens imprisoned without trial, while Brito points out the revolutionary threat that these dissidents represented to the State.


Operation


Demographics

The exact number of prisoners and deaths in Clevelândia was a constant concern in the press and historiography. The lowest number used by Pinheiro and Samis is 946, provided by the report ''Journey to the Cleveland Colonial Nucleus'', presented by Oldemar Murtinho, director of the Secretariat of State Section to the Minister of Agriculture in 1926. The report identified 262 escapes and 491 deaths. Romani quantified around 1,200 exiles, based on the "classification drawn up by the police in the sending lists", and noted that there are many known cases of prisoners missing from the lists. The highest estimate was 1,630 men, according to Manoelzinho dos Santos. Security was provided by a detachment of the 26th Battalion of ''
Caçadores The Caçadores (hunters) were the elite light infantry troops of the Portuguese Army, in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Units of ''Caçadores'' – with features somewhat different from the original ones – continued to exist in the P ...
'', initially comprising 26 soldiers and later reinforced by another 120 when escapes became frequent. The prisoners arrived in three large waves and smaller contingents on monthly boats on the Oiapoque-Belém line. The first 419, according to Murtinho, or 250, according to Alicino, arrived at the mouth of the Oyapock river on 26 December 1924. According to Romani, this first group included 250 military personnel and another 150 people arrested in Rio de Janeiro and
São Paulo São Paulo (; ; Portuguese for 'Paul the Apostle, Saint Paul') is the capital of the São Paulo (state), state of São Paulo, as well as the List of cities in Brazil by population, most populous city in Brazil, the List of largest cities in the ...
since the revolt on 5 July to early December. The soldiers of this group had served mainly on
Brazilian Navy The Brazilian Navy () is the navy, naval service branch of the Brazilian Armed Forces, responsible for conducting naval warfare, naval operations. The navy was involved in War of Independence of Brazil#Naval action, Brazil's war of independence ...
battleships and submarines in the capital, where, in October and November, the authorities had dismantled a coup planned by captain Protógenes Guimarães and overcome a revolt on the battleship ''
São Paulo São Paulo (; ; Portuguese for 'Paul the Apostle, Saint Paul') is the capital of the São Paulo (state), state of São Paulo, as well as the List of cities in Brazil by population, most populous city in Brazil, the List of largest cities in the ...
''. A second wave of 119 army and navy soldiers, involved in revolts in Amazonas and Pará, arrived on 6 January 1925. In July 1924, these states had been the stage of two ''tenentist'' movements, the Commune of Manaus and the revolt of the 26th Battalion of ''Caçadores''. A third wave of soldiers (418, according to Murtinho, or 577, according to Alicino) arrived between 8 and 12 June 1925. According to Romani, there were around 400 soldiers from
Catanduvas, Paraná Catanduvas, Paraná is a municipality in the state of Paraná in the Southern Region of Brazil. See also *List of municipalities in Paraná This is a list of the municipalities in the state of Paraná (PR), located in the South Region of Bra ...
, 23 conspirators from Rio de Janeiro and 130 thieves imprisoned by the
4th Auxiliary Police Bureau The 4th Auxiliary Police Bureau of the Civil Police of Rio de Janeiro State, Civil Police of the Federal District was a Brazilian Secret police, political and investigative police division that operated in Rio de Janeiro from 1922 to 1933. It was ...
. The Paraná Campaign veterans were soldiers from the army and Public Force of São Paulo, coming from the São Paulo Revolt in July of the previous year, and had fought for months until their surrender on 30 March 1925. There were officers in the colony, but the military exiles were mainly of lower ranks. The government intended to disqualify their hierarchical position, while anarchists wanted to identify them as "sons of the people" to incorporate them into the revolution. The civilians were opposition activists, workers (mainly in the printing and construction sectors), trade unionists (including leaders held on the ''Campos'' prison ship), workers' newspaper writers and common criminals. Many were foreigners. Some of the civilians were arrested as suspects and had neither a connection with political dissent nor the position of common criminals. What the police called "undesirables" included both common criminals (thieves, murderers, scoundrels and swindlers, the "dregs of society") as well as beggars, ''capoeiras'' and minors removed from the streets as a policy of "social prophylaxis". Letters to the press identified at least 20 anarchists in Clevelândia. Many prisoners classified simply as workers or vagrants may also have been activists or sympathizers. The anarchists had no direct relationship with the ''tenentist'' revolts, but were arrested to dismantle their movement within the working class and intimidate other militants. In Clevelândia, the anarchists noticed an absence of their rivals in the working-class environment, the communists, and even assumed that they were allied with the Bernardes government. From a communist point of view, the newspaper ''A Nação'' countered what it called the "slanders" of anarchists and stated that many of "our comrades suffered in Clevelândia". Alexandre Samis could not find the name of any communist sent to the colony. Romani believes official repression to have been the main cause of the decline of anarchism in the 1920s.


Transport

The first prisoners came from Rio de Janeiro aboard the packet ''Commandante Vasconcellos''. After a stop in Belém, the ship stopped at the mouth of the Oyapock river, where its draft prevented navigation upstream, so the prisoners continued on a river steamer, the ''gaiola'' ("cage"), to the port of Santo Antônio, and from there in smaller boats or on foot along the telegraph line trail to the prison depot in Clevelândia. Newly arrived prisoners were given a wide-brimmed straw hat, jacket and blue denim pants and assigned their activity. Inmates from Catanduvas were already weakened before the journey. In the trenches of Paraná, those soldiers fought malnourished, sick and, for the most part, barefoot and half-naked. After surrendering, they walked in line and watched by armed guards for more than 100 kilometers to the Irati railway station. General
Cândido Rondon Marshal Cândido Mariano da Silva Rondon (5 May 1865 – 19 January 1958) was a Brazilian military officer most famous for his telegraph commission and exploration of Mato Grosso and the western Amazon basin, as well as his lifelong support for ...
, commander of the loyalist forces in the Paraná Campaign, promised humane treatment. There is no evidence that he was responsible for what was done to the prisoners when they left his jurisdiction, but he did not protest their treatment either, and the ''tenentist'' leaders never forgave Rondon for what happened. In early June 1925, the prisoners embarked at the
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into the unventilated holds of the freighter ''Cuiabá''. The trip to Oiapoque lasted 21 days, with a stop in Rio de Janeiro to supply water, coal and new prisoners, among them anarchists from prison ships on the state's coast. According to Atílio Lebre, a Portuguese prisoner embarked in Rio de Janeiro, the food on the ship consisted of a little
mate Mate may refer to: Science * Mate, one of a pair of animals involved in: ** Mate choice, intersexual selection *** Mate choice in humans ** Mating * Multi-antimicrobial extrusion protein, or MATE, an efflux transporter family of proteins Pers ...
and a biscuit, in the morning, and "a dish with black-eyed peas and one hundred grams of poorly cooked green meat", for the main meals. The food went down through the same opening through which the two wooden barrels in which the prisoners urinated and defecated went up. Water was rationed and prisoners spent days thirsty.


Accommodation and social organization

The penal colony operated under a semi-open regime, in which prisoners were free to move around, with the Oyapock River and the jungle itself as its walls. The original settlers were forced to bear the consequences, including the lack of accommodation, caused by the sudden growth of the population. The administration neglected them as it was focused on the prisoners. The settlers' initial reaction was fear, but many of the prisoners ended up being accepted into their midst, some even starting families. The deportees were housed in sheds and, when these were not enough to cover the population, the excess population slept under trees or the floors of houses until they built small shelters in their free time. A warehouse next to the river served as an inn for immigrants. Plots abandoned by settlers who emigrated to Martinica were given to prisoners. While the prisoners had not finished building their huts and sheds, they were welcomed by some families (mostly in the case of more senior military personnel) or occupied the homes of families who temporarily moved to the Administration and neighboring buildings. According to Domingos Braz, the "unfortunate deportees sleep in groups of one hundred or more individuals. Filthy and disgusting sheds covered with boards or straw on top and sides, these are the accommodations". The prisoners were initially segregated into groups according to their origins, which meant that anarchists, ''tenentists'' and other factions were unable to help each other. Soldiers and officers who swore loyalty to the government, abandoning their revolutionary convictions, were given the best jobs, closer relations with the small local elite and greater freedom. Others remained within the hierarchy of the revolutionary army. Although at a lower level of the penal hierarchy, they lived close to the center and could count on the protection of their officers. These stayed in private houses provided by the Administration or temporary sheds near the center. Civilian political prisoners, including anarchists, remained in collective sheds or huts further away, distributed among lots 10 to 14, on the banks of the Siparani stream. Libertarians were the most cohesive group in the colony. Anarchists found time for lectures, songs, and study during their idle moments, and some wrote poems during this period. The
May Day May Day is a European festival of ancient origins marking the beginning of summer, usually celebrated on 1 May, around halfway between the Northern Hemisphere's March equinox, spring equinox and midsummer June solstice, solstice. Festivities ma ...
of 1925 was celebrated by some anarchists and colonists by singing
the Internationale "The Internationale" is an international anthem that has been adopted as the anthem of various anarchist, communist, socialist, democratic socialist, and social democratic movements. It has been a standard of the socialist movement since ...
. José Alves do Nascimento, a construction worker, taught the children of the farmers he lived with to read and write. Ordinary prisoners received the most distant lots, on the banks of the Porantani River, and the worst treatment.


Work

There was now "plenty of manpower" after the arrival of large numbers of prisoners, according to Rogério Alicino's official narrative. For historians like Romani and Brito, Clevelândia was a
forced labor camp A labor camp (or labour camp, see spelling differences) or work camp is a detention facility where inmates are forced to engage in penal labor as a form of punishment. Labor camps have many common aspects with slavery and with prisons (especi ...
. Gentil Norberto, in his defense of the colony, stated that only common criminals had been forced to work, and for only four and a half hours a day, cleaning the headquarters and other services, and received cigarettes and small wages. Writer Domingos Meirelles mentioned a nine-hour workday, in most cases without pay. A former soldier of the Public Force of São Paulo, in a statement to ''O Combate'', described more than twelve hours of heavy duty a day. According to Alicino, "in order to take advantage of all the labor ..a plant was built near the place called Siberia to extract the ''pau-rosa'' essence". The prisoners also built the Our Lady of Nazareth chapel, the Dulphe Machado School, the Artur Bernardes Bridge, a warehouse, additional houses and a radio station, in addition to expanding the Simão Lopes Hospital and carrying out maintenance services.
Everardo Dias Everardo Dias (Pontevedra, 1883 - São Paulo, 1966) was a journalist and important activist in the Brazilian workers' movement in the early decades of the 20th century. He participated in the 1917 Brazil strike and the 1918 anarchist insurrect ...
cited the construction of the warehouse as an atrocity, during which prisoners suffering from malaria had to dive with bags of concrete. The most privileged prisoners worked as bureaucrats in the Administration and the Hospital, mechanics, electricians, cooks and foremen in the ''pau-rosa'' mills. These services were rewarded with annual bonuses of ten to 200 thousand
réis The first official currency of Brazil was the real (pronounced ; pl. ''réis''), with the symbol Rs$. As the currency of the Portuguese empire, it was in use in Brazil from the earliest days of the colonial period, and remained in use until 1942 ...
. The heaviest labor weeding the fields and carrying logs from the river to the sawmill; these tasks were initially reserved for common criminals and later shared with Catanduvas veterans. Particularly heavy duty was rewarded with cigarettes. Burial work was initially exclusive to common Rio de Janeiro prisoners, such as the pickpocket "Moleque Cinco".


Life conditions

The customs, landscapes and climate of Oiapoque were strange to the prisoners, many of whom were urban people from
southern Brazil The South Region of Brazil ( ) is one of the five regions of Brazil. It includes the states of Paraná, Rio Grande do Sul, and Santa Catarina, and covers , being the smallest region of the country, occupying only about 6.76% of the territory of ...
. The humidity and heat were intense and diseases proliferated. The Agricultural Center sought an image of a civilized public office, but the services it offered were designed for a few hundred volunteers and were overwhelmed by the arrival of a much larger number of prisoners. According to Alicino, "the arrival, within a short period of time, of more than a thousand people, created serious problems in the life of the colony", and "the prisoners, on their part, did not fail to hinder life in the colony". Miguel Calmon assured that the colony was "perfectly installed, with sufficient resources to distribute abundant food and equipped with an excellent hospital. Nothing was lacking in terms of food and medical assistance". Official inquiries in 1925 and 1926 concluded that food, housing and physical integrity of prisoners were guaranteed. ''O Paiz'' presented a document signed by more than twenty ex-convicts with thanks to Gentil Norberto and other employees, thanking "the good treatment given to us there, in addition to clothes, footwear, cigarettes, hats, medical and hospital assistance, good and abundant food and clothing in the inns built for this purpose". But the accusations echoed much more. According to many returned prisoners, they were forced, upon passing through Belém, to sign a document declaring that they had never suffered violence or deprivation. And according to the newspaper ''O Combate'', Gentil Norberto lived in Belém and never spent more than 24 hours in the colony. According to the chief engineer, one of his first initiatives after the arrival of the deportees was the strict prohibition of corporal punishment. Any abuse occurred "never with the support or concurrence of management". The contemporary press and historians record torture, ill-treatment and widespread violence against prisoners. Prisoners were punished with the "ox navel" (a type of whip), the
paddle A paddle is a handheld tool with an elongated handle and a flat, widened end (the ''blade'') used as a lever to apply force onto the bladed end. It most commonly describes a completely handheld tool used to propel a human-powered watercraft by p ...
and the "hot refrigerator" or "cafua", a space with zinc roof tiles in which only one person could fit, who suffocated in the heat. Armed guards simulated firing squads. Some criminals, such as "Colonel Bahia", "Za-la-mort", "Rio Grande" and "Padeirinho", were allowed free passage through the village, which they traveled with the guards to physically discipline other prisoners. In an episode narrated by the anarchist Domingos Passos, "Colonel Bahia" slapped an old bricklayer, nicknamed "Constructor", for his delay in arriving at the meal, resulting in a hemorrhage. Another prisoner, Antônio Salgado, was "put in irons" for protesting against what happened. Augusto da Silva Ramalho reported to ''O Combate'' that he was arrested for no reason and he and his companions "received orders to work, always watched by the colony's military garrison, who mistreated them at the first speech". Manoel dos Santos, a former sailor, mentioned the "chills when he remembered the torture to which he was subjected". Mateus Felix de Moura, a former sergeant in the Public Force of São Paulo, described a diet based on "hard beans, with large pieces of rotten and tasteless meat". According to Lauro Nicácio, an army junior, the quality and quantity of food decreased after Deocleciano Coelho de Souza took over management of the colony in July 1925. Everardo Dias described the survivors as "weak, thin, yellowish, without courage, without spirit and without vitality", in whose "scarred, wax-colored faces only the eyes stood out... they looked like mummies". Oldemar Murtinho's report, which aimed at a positive presentation of the colony, described the prisoners as "ragged and sad" men, who walked like "those condemned to death who are heading to the gallows, slowing their pace", "giving the impression that malaria made them useless for the rest of their lives".


Mortality

According to Bruno de Almeida Magalhães, a biographer of Artur Bernardes, "despite the salubrity of the place, there was an epidemic of typhoid fever, in which some prisoners perished", but "the entire legend about Clevelândia was unanswerably refuted by senator Miguel Calmon, the Minister of Agriculture during Bernardes' government, during the sessions of 29 and 30 October 1927, without suffering the slightest challenge
y anyone Y, or y, is the twenty-fifth and penultimate letter of the Latin alphabet, used in the modern English alphabet, the alphabets of other western European languages and others worldwide. According to some authorities, it is the sixth (or seven ...
. These allegations are contradicted by the high mortality of prisoners demonstrated in the specialized bibliography about the Clevelândia. Based on Murtinho's report, Samis and Pinheiro quantified 491 dead prisoners, out of the original population of 946. According to the same report, the first record book was lost and with it, data on 88 deaths were lost. Romani estimated that more than half of his estimate of 1,200 prisoners died. On 7 January, ''A Nação'' announced a complete list of 325 dead in Clevelândia. On 4 February, a former navy sergeant, in charge of the local cemetery, told the newspaper that 650 prisoners died, not counting those who died while escaping. Others returned from the colony so weakened that they died days later, according to Everardo Dias. A spokesman for the Bernardes government stated in 1928 that mortality was approximately 43%. Mortality came through diseases, the most common of which were
bacillary dysentery Bacillary dysentery is a type of dysentery, and is a severe form of shigellosis. It is associated with species of bacteria from the family Enterobacteriaceae. The term is usually restricted to ''Shigella'' infections. Shigellosis is caused by one ...
, malaria and tuberculosis. According to Lauro Nicácio, a third of the prisoners had already died when the third wave arrived, in June 1925. On the other hand, according to prisoner Alberto Saldanha, until June 1925 only 35 prisoners were buried in the cemetery. This batch was the one that arrived in the worst condition; in the trenches of Catanduvas, soldiers were already suffering from
scabies Scabies (; also sometimes known as the seven-year itch) is a contagious human skin infestation by the tiny (0.2–0.45 mm) mite ''Sarcoptes scabiei'', variety ''hominis''. The word is from . The most common symptoms are severe itchiness a ...
, dysentery and
tungiasis Tungiasis is an inflammatory skin disease caused by infection with the female ectoparasitic ''Tunga penetrans'', a flea also known as the chigoe, chigo, chigoe flea, chigo flea, jigger, nigua, sand flea, or burrowing flea (and not to be confused ...
. After their landing, an epidemic of bacillary dysentery spread among the prisoners and colonists. For this reason, Miguel Calmon highlighted in his defense of the government that bacillary dysentery killed many more prisoners than malaria, an endemic disease in the region. ''O Paiz'' argued that the epidemics were occasional, brought from the South, and ravaged several places, not just Clevelândia. A former Public Force soldier reported how in the morning prisoners were forced to gather the bodies of their comrades who died during the night. The number of deaths was five per day and reached twelve at its peak, according to Lauro Nicácio, and the "cemetery group" went to the hospital at dawn to check the number of deaths. He attributed the illnesses to the lack of a balanced diet. Carlo Romani highlighted the unsanitary conditions and the insufficiency of medicine and medical staff. Treatments at the Simão Lopes Hospital were limited to
quinine Quinine is a medication used to treat malaria and babesiosis. This includes the treatment of malaria due to ''Plasmodium falciparum'' that is resistant to chloroquine when artesunate is not available. While sometimes used for nocturnal leg ...
tablets or injections. The hospital administered 120 injections per day with just two needles, which became blunt with intensive use, causing ulcers and edema in the patients' skin. The one hundred beds in the hospital and 88 in the infirmary, nicknamed the "death ward", were not enough, and many patients waited outside for a place. Some died in their shelters. According to Domingos Braz, "Oiapoque is a place without medical resources", where "hygienic and sanitary precepts themselves are unknown". For the newspaper ''
A Noite ''A Noite'' (English: The Night) was a Brazilian newspaper based in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It was published daily from 18 July 1911 to 27 December 1957 when it stopped publication. Its headquarters, which is located at Praça Mauá in the Centra ...
'', "Bernardes had found a legal way of extermination, without the need to resort to the guillotine and rifle". Carlo Romani characterized the place as a concentration camp, to which prisoners were deliberately sent to die. Paulo Sérgio Pinheiro used this nomenclature, unofficially, and Alexandre Samis avoided it, preferring the term "penal colony". The Artur Bernardes Archive itself uses "concentration camp"; however, before the advent of Nazism, the term "concentration camp" did not have the connotation of a planned
extermination camp Nazi Germany used six extermination camps (), also called death camps (), or killing centers (), in Central Europe, primarily in occupied Poland, during World War II to systematically murder over 2.7 million peoplemostly Jewsin the Holocau ...
. The story of a prisoner, sentenced to death, who was allegedly amnestied after singing on the edge of a grave, remained in local popular memory:


Escapes

The contingent of guards was too small for the colony's vast perimeter, which was easy to escape. The jungle itself was the biggest obstacle. According to Domingos Braz, most escapes occurred through group planning. The first to flee was worker Pedro Carneiro, on 17 February 1925, but he did so on his own. Carneiro arrived in Belém and from there went to Rio de Janeiro, where he raised 300 thousand réis for his comrades in Clevelândia. Crossing the jungle exhausted many prisoners, and some of those who arrived at Saint George, in French Guiana, died due to lack of medicine. By June 1925, the previous escapes had made the administration more alert. According to Lauro Nicácio, any suspicion of an escape plan led to beatings, and several fishermen were arrested and had their boats confiscated. The last escape of militants occurred in the early hours of 11 to 12 December 1925. Domingos Braz's letter followed the fate of a group of anarchist leaders until September 1925: six were alive under arrest, four had died and another four had escaped. The number of fugitives, including Domingos himself, would still grow. They had difficulty finding jobs and several died on French territory. Domingos and others managed to reach Belém, Biófilo Panclastro managed to reach Cayenne and leave by canoe for Colombia and the bricklayer José Batista da Silva, from the Union of Workers in Civil Construction, delved into the jungle, a trip considered impossible by the local population, and reappeared in Belém.


Deactivation

The Washington Luís administration, which had succeeded Artur Bernardes, ordered the release of the prisoners in 1927. On 14 January, ''O Combate'' reported a new wave of deportees to Clevelândia aboard the steamship ''Vasconcellos'', but on 25 January it published that the prisoners had been amnestied. The last disembarkation of Clevelândia prisoners in Rio de Janeiro, according to the newspaper, was on 22 February 1927, aboard the steamship ''Macapá''. According to the testimony of these prisoners, others remained in Clevelândia due to their health condition. The topic occupied the front page of newspapers for the first three months of 1927. The communist Octávio Brandão, a witness to the prisoners' arrival, saw yellowish, thin and weak survivors, with diseased livers and swollen feet. Artur Bernardes earned the nickname "Clevelândia President" and remained associated with the penal colony. At his funeral, in 1955, a wreath was left with the words: "The survivors of Clevelândia ask for forgiveness for having risen up against such an honest government and such a worthy president", a possible irony on the part of his detractors. Some of the prisoners integrated into the local community and have descendants in the current population of Clevelândia. The town of Martinica expanded continuously, was renamed Oiapoque and in 1945 became the seat of a new independent municipality. The Cleveland Colonial Center was extinguished in 1936 and its assets were transferred to the
Ministry of War Ministry of War may refer to: * Ministry of War (imperial China) ( 600–1912) * Chinese Republic Ministry of War (1912–1946) * Ministry of War (Kingdom of Bavaria) (1808–1919) * Ministry of War (Brazil) (1815–1999) * Ministry of War (Esto ...
, which transformed Clevelândia into a military colony in 1940. The location currently hosts the Special Border Company of the 34th Jungle Infantry Battalion. There is no visible material legacy of the penal colony, apart from possible burials in the São Carlos cemetery. The Army's closed archive in Clevelândia holds documents from various periods, including those from the penal colony.


See also

*
Amapá Question The Amapá Question, known in France as the Franco-Brazilian Dispute ( French: ''Contesté franco-brésilien'') was a 1895 border dispute involving France and Brazil. The French intrusion into Amapá resulted in skirmishes between the two sides. ...


References


Citations


Bibliography

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * {{coord missing, Brazil 1924 establishments in Brazil Prisons in Brazil History of Amapá Anarchism in Brazil Tenentism Former penal colonies