The Peruvian Amazon Rubber Company was registered in London on September 6, 1907, as a successor to J.C. Arana y Hermanos, whose assets the new company acquired. The word
rubber was later removed from the Peruvian Amazon Company's name. The old company employed 196 Barbadian men in the Putumayo around 1904, many of whom became employed by the Peruvian Amazon Company. These Barbadians were British subjects and later they were at the center of the British Foreign Office's investigation into allegations of abuse as well as slavery levied against the Peruvian Amazon Company. The testimonies of 30 Barbadian men were transcribed and then examined by Roger Casement in 1910, these depositions became the primary source of evidence for the Foreign Office regarding the atrocities and abuse perpetrated against the Putumayo's Indigenous population. The company prospectus was primarily based on the work of French explorer
Eugene Robuchon with the Peruvian consul-general
Carlos Rey De Castro as its editor. Robuchon was employed by the predecessor company J.C. Arana y Hermanos for scientific work from 1903 until his disappearance in 1906. Rey de Castro's editing process intended to portray this new company as a "civilizing force" and led to the removal of several paragraphs Robuchon wrote from the final publication. The prospectus stated there were more than forty stations delivering rubber to La Chorrera's agency and eighteen stations delivering to El Encanto. In 1910, when Roger Casement investigated the Peruvian Amazon Company books in Manaus, he found Rey de Castro had an outstanding debt of between £4,000 and £5,000 to the Peruvian Amazon Company. Casement wrote: "the English Company is only English in name". In June 1911, 215 arrest warrants were issued against employees of the Peruvian Amazon Company, primarily among La Chorrera's agency. They were implicated "with a multiplicity of murders and tortures of the Indians all through that region".
Rubber stations The Peruvian Amazon Company had dozens of plantations throughout the Putumayo region. Many of these settlements were acquired through exploitative business deals or by force, and were used as centres of control for the company against the Natives. Slave raids to secure an Indigenous workforce, which would have to deliver the rubber to the nearest company station or face torture and possibly death, were carried out from the stations. Plantations usually consisted of a centralized settlement surrounded by cleared forest. Any attack against these stations would have to face open ground with no cover from bullets. In reference to the stations located further inland, Seymour Bell, who was a member of the 1910 investigatory commission, stated stations "were all really 'forts'". Depending on the local station, natives could walk as far as while carrying between of rubber. Often, these couriers were given little or no food on their journey and had to scavenge for food. The children and family of these native rubber tappers would often travel together; if not, it was likely those dependents could starve to death.
La Chorrera La Chorrera was an important settlement along the Igaraparaná River during the rubber boom. It was initially settled by Colombian rubber exporters but had come into the possession of Julio Cesar Arana by the beginning of 1904. Some of the first reports of the Putumayo genocide regarding the killing of 25-40
Ocaina natives originated at La Chorrera in September 1903. Two witnesses gave depositions to
Benjamin Saldaña Rocca about the killings, which they stated were instigated by
Rafael Larrañaga and
Victor Macedo. The natives were flogged for hours, and later shot and burnt. Arana purchased the Larrañaga share of La Chorrera and assumed control over the Igaraparaná River shortly after this incident. A judge who was sent to investigate the region in 1911 later corroborated this report. On April 7, 1911, the judge issued twenty-two arrest warrants against individuals who had participated in the 1903 massacre of Ocaina natives. They were implicated with "the crime of flogging and flaying thirty Ocainas Indians and then burning them alive". Another set of warrants was issued against 215 employees of La Chorrera's agency for their perpetration of crimes against the local natives. Sometime between 1903 and 1906, Macedo became the manager of Arana's company at La Chorrera, which operated as a regional headquarters on the Igaraparaná. In 1906, Macedo was said to have given an order to: kill all mutilated Indians at once for the following reasons: first, because they consumed food although they could not work; and second, because it looked bad to have these mutilated wretches running about. This wise precaution of Macedo's makes it difficult to find any mutilated Indians there, in spite of the number of mutilations; for, obeying this order, the executioners kill all the Indians they mutilate, after they have suffered what they consider a sufficient space of time. By 1907, La Chorrera's agency retained effective control over the land between the Igaraparaná and Caqueta Rivers. The stations of La Sabana, Santa Catalina, Atenas, Entre Rios, Occidente, Abisinia, Matanzas, La China, Urania, and Ultimo Retiro delivered their rubber to La Chorrera. All of these sections were reported to practice flagellation of natives, and on a number of occasions, natives died the wounds caused by the floggings. The
scarification of wounds from flogging were termed the "Mark of Arana". Starvation was also used to punish natives; according to Roger Casement: "[d]eliberate starvation was again and again resorted to, but this not where it was desired merely to frighten, but where the intention was to kill. Men and women were kept prisoners in the station stocks until they died of hunger." Between 1903 and 1910,
Andrés O'Donnell managed the station of Entre Rios, which was another important part of La Chorrera's agency. O'Donnell was first incriminated in the Putumayo genocide by Marcial Gorries, who had worked for the Peruvian Amazon Company. In a 1907 letter to
Saldaña Rocca, Marcial wrote: "O'Donnell, who has not killed Indians with his own hands, but who has ordered over five hundred Indians to be killed". The
cepo at Entre Rios had twenty-four holes that could restrict limbs. Natives at this station also suffered from starvation, and the journey to deliver rubber for a
fabrico resulted in many deaths each year. On top of the journey from Entre Rios to La Chorrera, some of the enslaved natives lived away. In 1910, O'Donnell told Casement he only required two
fabricos from his station, and brought in around for each of them but the Barbadian
Frederick Bishop stated this was false, and the real quantity was closer to every collection period. Bishop stated he had often seen men carrying of rubber to
Puerto Peruano, from where it was taken to La Chorrera. According to the Entre Rios staff list, twenty-three employees were stationed there, which was "the local force for controlling the life and limb of every Indian in the district". While
en route to Puerto Peruano, Roger Casement noted: "We passed for fully 2 hours through the once enormous clearings of the Iguarase Indians. Tizon said they had once been very numerous. There must have been hundreds of them – now none at all. All is desolation." Entre Rios was bordered by the neighboring section of Atenas, both of these settlements were acquired by Arana's rubber firm prior to 1903. The workforce dedicated to rubber extraction at Entre Rios and Atenas primarily consisted of Huitoto people.
Elías Martinengui managed Atenas from 1903 to 1909, during this time period he forced the local Indigenous people to constantly work, which left them with little to no time to cultivate their own gardens. Women at Atenas were required to "work" the rubber, which also contributed to the starvation in that area. Regarding the Atenas plantation, Roger Casement wrote: "the whole of the population of this district had been systematically starved to death by Elias Martenengui. Martenengui worked his whole district to death, and gave the Indians no time to plant or find food. They had to work rubber or be killed, and to work and die." In 1910, when Casement visited Atenas, records at La Chorrera documented that there were 790 rubber workers at Atenas, however the manager at the time,
Alfredo Montt, said he had only "about 250" and three other Peruvian Amazon Company employees under him. The oversaw the collection of rubber, and according to Montt, the station brought in 24 tons of rubber annually. In 1911, judge Paredes wrote that Atenas was "peopled by Huitoto
spectres" and that there was "a veritable cemetery of skeletons and human skulls scattered along both banks of the Cahuinari, which flows through this district." The stations at Abisinia and Matanzas appear most frequently in the reports of abuse collected by Walter Ernest Hardenburg. Both stations were established by Arana's enterprise with the help of Barbadian men around 1904. Many of the Barbadians who were employed by the company at these stations were sent on "commissions" or slave raids. Both Matanzas and Abisinia were inland stations, which meant long marches for natives collecting rubber. Roger Casement referred to them in 1910 as "the two worst stations". Matanzas was situated near the Caqueta River and was managed by
Armando Normand from 1906 to 1910. According to a 1907 report by
Charles C. Eberhardt, who was the American consul in Iquitos, there were approximately 5,000 natives at Matanzas, and 1,600 at Abisinia. In 1910, Normand told Casement he had two
fabricos in a year, and his station brought in around for each
fabrico. That year, the collection for Matanzas was done by 120 men "working" rubber who collected a year. The Abisinia station was situated on a tributary of the
Cahuinari River and was managed by
Abelardo Agüero from 1905 to 1910. In 1912, it was reported 170 natives remained at Abisinia. Agüero and Normand were both said to have committed innumerable crimes against enslaved Indigenous people in their district. They were both dismissed from the company in 1910. At the time, Agüero was in debt to the company for around £500 or £600, while the company owed Normand around £2,100. In 1915, Judge Carlos A. Valcárcel implicated Normand with the destruction of the Cadanechajá, Japaja, Cadanache, Coigaro, Rosecomema, Tomecagaro, Aduije, and Tichuina tribes. The
Rodriguez brothers managed the stations at Santa Catalina and La Sabana between 1904 and 1910; Aurelio Rodriguez managed Santa Catalina and his brother Aristides managed La Sabana. According to Juan A. Tizon, these two were responsible for killing "hundreds of natives" and received a 50% commission on the rubber brought into their stations. Barbadian Preston Johnson worked at Santa Catalina for eighteen months, and when asked how many natives he had seen killed there he stated: "a great many". The majority of these killings were carried out because the victim had tried to run away; several others were killed because they were not collecting rubber for the company at the time. Johnson said he knew about natives dying from starvation at La Sabana but he did not know if this was also the case at Santa Catalina. A number of mass killings perpetrated by the Rodriguez brothers were reported in the Hardenburg depositions by
Juan Rosas and
Genaro Caporo. At Santa Catalina, Aurelio had one of his Barbadian subordinates build a special stockade that was referred to as a "double
cepo". One part of this
cepo restrained the neck and arms, while the other end of the
cepo confined the ankles. The piece that restricted the ankles was adjustable, so it could fit a variety of individuals, including children. Casement stated: "Small boys were often inserted into this receptacle face downwards, and they, as well as grown-up people, women equally with men, were flogged while extended in this posture". The
Resígaro nation inhabited the area between La Sabana and Santa Catalina and those rubber stations were dependent on labor from the Resígaros, as well as Huitoto and Bora nations. One of the first documented
correrías organized by the Rodriguez brothers occurred prior to March 1 of 1903, the expedition targeted a Resígaro
maloca, this settlement was ambushed and the survivors were imprisoned. Judge Paredes wrote that by the time of his investigation in 1911, the Resígaro population did "not amount to thirty". He was informed through translators that conflicts with neighboring tribes had been a significant factor in their depopulation. According to Paredes the Resígaros had a "deadly hatred" towards the
muchachos de confianza, the Resígaros viewed them to be "[t]heir real enemies", more so than the white colonist. Paredes stated that the
muchachos were the first aggressors to be killed during each
correria into Resígaro territory, while the Resígaro "never assail[ed]" the white colonists that gave orders to the
muchachos. The last female speaker of the Resígaro language, Rosa Andrade, was murdered in 2016, over one hundred years after the nation's first contact with agents of Julio Arana's rubber firm. The station of Ultimo Retiro, one of the last important stations along the Igaraparaná River, was managed by Alfredo Montt, and later Augusto Jimenez Seminario. The
cepo at Ultimo Retiro was said to have nineteen holes, which were very small. After a demonstration of this
cepo, a native told Roger Casement many others had been flogged and starved to death while imprisoned there. Casement later stated this device "was not intended for a place of detention, but for an instrument of torture". In 1910, there was around 25 tons of rubber delivered to La Chorrera from this station. At its height, Ultimo Retiro had 2,000 native workers on its books but by 1912, this workforce had fallen to around 200. Carlos Miranda managed the section of Sur, which was the closest rubber station to La Chorrera. The route between Sur and La Chorrera could be completed by around 2–3 hours of travel on foot however the Indigenous people at Sur travelled "a much greater distance" than this. The judicial commission of 1911 verified the perpetration of many crimes committed at Sur, including several charges levied against Miranda. One notable crime perpetrated by Miranda was reported in a deposition provided to Roger Casement in 1910. Joseph Labadie, the deponent, claimed that Miranda had ordered an Indigenous boy to bring an elderly woman to the station. This woman was brought to Sur with a chain around her neck and she was shot and killed on Miranda's orders. Afterwards, the woman's head was cut off and Miranda presented it to an assembled group of Indigenous people, "compulsory witnesses of this tragedy". She had been accused of giving other Indigenous people "bad advice", which Casement clarified as advising people against extracting rubber. Miranda informed this group of people that the same fate would befall any "bad Indians". Labadie also testified that he had seen "men, women, and children - even little children - flogged at Sur." The end of Labadie's deposition refers to the Indigenous population of Sur and states: "they bring in rubber now because if they do not they get flogged and they are frightened; nothing else - they are flogged only because they don't bring enough rubber to please the 'jefe' of the section."
El Encanto El Encanto was the most important settlement on the Caraparaná River during the rubber boom. Originally, the settlement belonged to a few Colombians who were known as the Calderon brothers. The Calderon brothers lost their property at Encanto to Arana's company and shortly after,
Miguel S. Loayza became the regional manager there. An ex-employee named Carlos Soplín, who swore before a notary, believed the inspector of sections for Encantos "must have flogged over five thousand Indians during the six years he has resided in this region". Soplin also stated in his two-and-a-half months at the Monte Rico section, he witnessed the flagellation of 300 natives, who were flogged between 20 and 200 times if the punishment was intended to kill. According to Soplin, at Esmeraldas, he was witness to the flogging of over 400 natives in three-and-a-half months; these included men, women, children and the elderly, six of whom died from the floggings they received. The plantations of Monte Rico, Argelia, Esperanza, Esmeraldas Indostan, La Florida, and La Sombra delivered their product to El Encanto. Between 1906 and 1907, the population at El Encanto dropped from 2,200, to 1,500 and the explanation provided to the American consul
Charles C. Eberhardt stated
smallpox had killed around 700 people. Walter Ernest Hardenburg went to the Putumayo near the end of 1907, shortly after the Peruvian Amazon Company was registered. A group of gunmen working for Loayza arrested Hardenburg and took him to Encanto, where he witnessed the condition of the natives there. He saw people in various stages of sickness and starvation; according to Hardenburg: "These poor wretches, without remedies, without food, were exposed to the burning rays of the vertical sun and the cold rains and heavy dews of early morning until death released them from their sufferings". Their dead bodies were then carried and dumped into the Caraparaná River.
Acquisition of Colombian estates in 1908 At the beginning of 1908, the Peruvian Amazon Company began a series of attacks against the remaining Colombian patrons in the region, primarily around the Caraparaná River. These included the settlements of David Serrano, Ordoñez, and Martínez. Ordoñez owned a station called Remolino, which had a
portage trail between the Caraparaná and Napo Rivers established on it. Serrano was an important rubber collector on the river who owed money to the Peruvian Amazon Company branch at El Encanto. This debt was previously used as an excuse to send a commission of armed men to Serrano's house to rob him and intimidate him to leave the region. Around 120 Peruvian soldiers were sent from Iquitos to help the Peruvian Amazon Company employees fight against the Colombians. According to Victor Macedo, by 1910, eighty of these soldiers had died, mostly around El Encanto. The first of these attacks, conversely dated to either January 11 or 12 of 1908, occurred on the Caraparaná River at "La Union", an estate owned by Antonio Ordoñez and Gabriel Martinez. Around eighty-five soldiers from the Peruvian army participated in this attack, they were embarked on gunboat
Iquitos and joined by steamship
Liberal, which had around eighty armed agents from Arana's company on board. At least 5 Colombians were killed at La Union after a fire fight that lasted half of an hour. There was around 1,000
arrobas of rubber at the estate which was loaded onto the steamships, the settlement's houses were sacked and burned down afterwards. Several of the Colombian women that lived at La Union were also taken as prisoners on board the two steamships. In a letter dated November 29, 1908, Loayza granted the manager of La Florida authority to assume control over the Indigenous workforce that Ordoñez and Martínez had retained. The Peruvians then travelled to another estate on the Caraparana, La Reserva, which belonged to David Serrano. At the time, there were around 170 arrobas of rubber awaiting exportation from the estate and there was also an abundant supply of Hevea trees in the area. Arroba refers to a unit of weight measurement, one arroba is equal to 15 kilos or 30 pounds. Walter Hardenburg claimed that there were forty five Indigenous families dedicated to the extraction of rubber at La Reserva, in January 1908. The Colombian inhabitants of the estate fled from the armed group of Peruvians, later the rubber and other merchandise there was loaded onto the Peruvian steamships, afterwards the settlement was burned down. Serrano and many of his companions, with the exception of two men that were taken prisoner, escaped from the first attack on this estate: however Serrano was later captured along with 28 other Colombians by a different group of Peruvians, led by
Bartolomé Zumaeta and
Miguel Flores in February 1908. Around 23 of those Colombians were employed by the "Gomez & Arana Co" which was recently established in order to exploit the Apaporis River basin. According to three separate depositions collected by Hardenburg, the imprisoned Colombians were tortured by the Peruvians in order to extract information regarding the location of their personal belongings, afterwards the Colombians were killed with bullets and machetes. One of the last Colombian patrons victimized by the Peruvian Amazon Company at the beginning of 1908 was Ildefonso Gonzalez, owner of a small estate named "El Dorado" which had around thirty Indigenous families there extracting rubber. Gonzalez had been active in the rubber industry on the Caraparaná River for around eighteen years by 1908, and like the owners of La Union and La Reserva he refused to sell his property to Arana's Company. Gonzalez was eventually intimidated into abandoned his possession on the Caraparaná River around February 1908. While he was in the process of transferring his workforce to another estate, at the obligation of Arana's Company, Gonzalez was shot killed by
Mariano Olañeta, a chief of section for Arana's company. In exchange for Olañeta's service, Miguel S. Loayza appointed him as the manager of Gonzalez's estate and workforce, a position Olañeta retained until his death around April 1909. The Indigenous people that extracted rubber for the Colombian patrons of La Union, La Reserva and El Dorado were enslaved by the Peruvian Amazon Company after the acquisition of these estates, including a portion of the Yabuyano nation. ==Involvement of the Peruvian government and military==