The brothers
Alfredo Volio and
Jorge Volio and the intellectual
Rogelio Fernández Güell attempted armed insurrections against Tinoco in the south of the country that were defeated. Fernández Güell was killed along with Carlos Sanchos, Jeremías Garbanzo, Ricardo Rivera, Salvador Jiménez and Joaquín Porras in
Buenos Aires by the esbirros. Salvadoran teacher Marcelino García Flamenco witnessed the crimes and fled to
Panama where he reported the facts to the press. García Flamenco returned to the country with other young people to attempt an insurrection that failed in the so-called Battle of the Arriete on July 19, 1919, and was macheted, dragged still alive by a horse and sprayed with kerosene before being burned alive by the Tinoquists. His heroic death is still commemorated both in
El Salvador and Costa Rica, especially in
La Cruz Canton. The first battle was fought in the Jobo with the rebels at a huge numerical disadvantage, about 800 against the Tinoquist forces that mobilized around 5000 men. The rebels were defeated and the prisoners (mostly young boys) were killed after torture, including Salvadoran Marcelino García Flamenco. After the death due to natural causes of Volio, Julio Acosta organized future incursions, which, together with the popular and student protests, led to the collapse of the regime. Julio Acosta assumed leadership.
Civic student movement The 1919 student civic movement was a series of protests and civic struggles that took place in San José, Costa Rica, in June 1919, led by teachers, professors and high school students from the Liceo de Costa Rica, the Colegio Superior de Señoritas and the Colegio Seminario, and supported by the people of San José, against the dictatorship. The civic student movement culminated in the burning of the government-supporting newspapers
La Prensa Libre and
La Información, which led to a severe repression by the regime and in turn, accelerated the fall of the last military government in the history of Costa Rica. In memory of this civic day, San José's 9th Street, located in front of the square of the La Soledad Church, is named
Paseo de los Estudiantes. In 2016, a monument by the Costa Rican sculptor Édgar Zúñiga was inaugurated to commemorate the events of 1919. ==Fall==