The formal ceremony and pledge of independence was set for the first anniversary of the
Battle of Chacabuco: 12 February 1818. , 1945). On 9 February,
Luis de la Cruz published the
program of the ceremonies and celebration to be held in Santiago. These activities commenced on 11 February in the afternoon with the firing of cannons from
Cerro Santa Lucía. At nine o'clock on 12 February, all the authorities and people of the
Palacio Directorial de Santiago mounted a stage in front of the
Plaza de Armas in Santiago. The ceremony was opened by
José Gregorio Argomedo, prosecutor of the
Chilean Court of Appeals, who gave a speech representing the government, after which the minister Miguel Zañartu read the Act of Independence de la Cruz then requested the oath from
José Ignacio Cienfuegos, administrator of the
Santiago Diocese, who had earlier added the phrasing "
Y así juro porque creo en mi conciencia que ésta es la voluntad del Eterno" ("And so I swear on my conscience that this is the will of the Eternal"). Following this, Cruz heard the oath from
José de San Martín, the General in Chief of the Chilean Army. Minister Zañartu also took the oath along with several other authorities and public officials. Finally, the Mayor of Santiago,
Francisco de Borja Fontecilla, swore the oath to the people. On 13 February, a
Te Deum was sung at the
Santiago Cathedral, and, the next day, the cathedral celebrated a
Mass of thanksgiving. After this,
Tomás Guido gave a speech congratulating the Chilean people on behalf of the
Buenos Aires government. The public celebration of independence in Santiago lasted until 16 February. The declaration itself was widely distributed to the populace. Another document, which covered the motives behind the revolution and declaration of independence, written by Bernardo Vera, was also distributed to the public to a lesser extent. and in
Copiapó the ceremony took place between March 27 and 28. On 15 June 1820,
Valdivia was sworn into the new nation, after
Thomas Cochrane led a successful attempt to
capture Valdivia from the
royalists. Later, on 22 January 1826, the pledge of independence would be made in San Carlos, Chiloé, after the Spanish signed the
Treaty of Tantauco, which gave the
Chiloé Archipelago to Chile. == See also ==