The
Liberal steamship was built by Murdoch & Murray at yard number 199 in
Port Glasgow in October 1904. It was commissioned by
J.C. Arana y Hermanos, a rubber firm with offices in the cities of
Manaus and
Iquitos, located along the Amazon River.
Liberal first arrived in Iquitos in December 1904. The vessel regularly operated between Iquitos and the Putumayo River, transporting rubber and personnel for Arana's enterprise.
Liberal also transported Peruvian soldiers from Iquitos to the Putumayo on several occasions. According to David Cazes, the British consul-general in Iquitos between 1903 and 1910, Arana's company transported Peruvian military personnel and their supplies from Iquitos to the Putumayo without charge. In return, the Peruvian government did not levy duties on the company's rubber shipments. In 1905,
Liberal completed three voyages between Iquitos and the Putumayo estates, arriving in Iquitos in May, September, and November of that year. Following
Armando Normand's attack on Urbano Gutiérrez in January 1907, eight Colombians were taken captive aboard
Liberal by employees of Arana's company, who intended to send them to prison in Iquitos. However, they were later abandoned in a canoe near Cotuhé to prevent Brazilian officials from discovering them upon arrival at port. On August 5, 1907, Iquitos-based journalist
Benjamín Saldaña Roca published "" ("The Wave of Blood"), detailing an incident aboard
Liberal witnessed by a cook named Juan Vela. According to Vela, upon hearing a commotion, he saw Captain Zubiaur beating an employee of Arana's company, Juan Juárez, with a large piece of firewood. Zubiaur then dragged Juárez below deck, where "six sailors, at Zubiaur's orders, gave him still more blows, mutilating and destroying his whole body." Afterwards, Juárez was thrown onto the riverbank and abandoned, and he reportedly shot himself two days later due to his injuries. On September 23, 1907, Saldaña Roca published another article stating: "The
Liberal, small steamer of the Casa Arana, has brought from the Putumayo 93,000 kilos of elastic rubber. How many whippings, mutilations, tortures, tears, blood, murders and desolations represent such rubber!" According to
Charles C. Eberhardt, the American consul-general in Iquitos in 1907, upon its return to Iquitos on November 15 that year,
Liberal reported that 100 Colombian soldiers were encamped across the river from La Chorrera. In December 1907, Miguel S. Loayza reportedly sent several subordinates to harass David Serrano in an effort to pressure him to abandon his estate. Serrano’s wife, child, and merchandise were loaded onto
Liberal after he was tied to a tree and forced to watch as his wife was assaulted. This incident occurred approximately one month before the assault on Serrano's estate.
Attacks on La Unión and La Reserva Liberal completed a voyage to El Encanto on January 3, 1908, carrying 85 soldiers from the Peruvian garrison at Iquitos. Around this time, Colombian police inspector Jesús Orejuela was waiting at Argelia for a meeting with Loayza; however, Loayza did not arrive, and Orejuela was detained. The raids on La Unión and La Reserva began shortly after Orejuela's imprisonment. He was brought aboard
Liberal at around 9 a.m. on January 13 and confined in what Hardenburg described as a "little cage." In January 1908, armed employees of Arana's company aboard
Liberal, together with the Peruvian warship
Iquitos, which carried approximately 85 Peruvian soldiers, attacked a Colombian rubber station named La Unión. Carlos Zubiaur was captain of
Liberal during the raids on La Unión and La Reserva, which took place on January 12. The armed agents of Arana's enterprise aboard
Liberal were led by
Miguel S. Loayza, Bartolomé Zumaeta, and Miguel Flores. On February 1, 1908,
Benjamín Saldaña Roca published an article in
La Sanción titled "The Crime of Lesa Patria." The article claimed that Loayza had telegraphed company headquarters—"either through being misinformed, or as is more probable, maliciously"—that "a large force of Colombians, well armed and uniformed and under the command of two generals," was assembling to attack El Encanto and La Chorrera. This supposed force was said to consist of 300 to 400 men with a cannon. In response, 85 Peruvian soldiers from the Iquitos garrison were dispatched to the Putumayo after the Peruvian Amazon Company forwarded Loayza's message to the prefect in Iquitos. Bartolomé Zumaeta, accompanied by 14 Peruvian soldiers, travelled along the
Yubineto River aboard the
Callao steamship, capturing several Colombians, including Gabriel Martínez, manager of the Ordoñez y Martínez Rubber Company, because he "had dealings with Indians, whom the Aranas cynically said belonged to them." In retaliation, Colombian authorities imprisoned two agents of Arana's company who had been sent to trade at La Unión. Loayza, accompanied by around 80 armed men employed by Arana’s company, embarked on
Liberal to investigate the incident.
Liberal was joined by
Iquitos, which carried Peruvian soldiers and artillery. The Peruvians reportedly used six cannons and two machine guns during the attack. At La Unión, Colombian colonel
Gustavo Prieto reportedly unfurled the Colombian flag in response to repeated Peruvian demands to land, which, according to Hardenburg and Saldaña Roca, triggered the conflict between the two groups. After resisting for about half an hour, the Colombians ran out of ammunition and fled into the jungle. The Peruvians seized roughly one thousand arrobas of rubber and took several Colombian women captive. Five Colombians were killed at La Unión, and more than 27 were reported killed between La Unión and La Reserva. The dwellings at La Unión were set on fire, and cattle, machinery, and other valuable goods were sent to Iquitos. According to
Liberal pilot Simón Pisango, gunfire was first opened from
Liberal, and Loayza was on board at the time. Former Arana Company employee Julio Montero gave a sworn deposition in Iquitos in 1909, stating that 29 Colombians were taken prisoner during the raid on La Reserva, including prominent patrons David Serrano and Ildefonso González. According to Montero's account, the captives "who had already been robbed and were then in chains, were taken out of the house and not far off were shot to death and cut to pieces with machetes." This information was corroborated by Colombian eyewitness Carlos Murgaitio, who published his own account in the
Jornal de Comércio of Manaus. Hardenburg reported seeing both
Liberal and
Iquitos travelling toward La Unión and later returning with prisoners, though he did not witness the attack itself. While those aboard
Liberal ignored his canoe, men on
Iquitos fired upon his group and captured them. Hardenburg later wrote that Montero's deposition had described the same events he had heard about from others. Several hours after the raids on La Unión and La Reserva,
Iquitos and
Liberal reached Argelia, where they stayed overnight. Hardenburg was transferred from
Iquitos to
Liberal at this point and reunited with his companion Walter Perkins, who was already imprisoned. Hardenburg and Orejuela learned that the raid on La Reserva had resulted in the looting of 170 arrobas of rubber, which were loaded onto
Liberal, while the settlement was "destroyed [after] everything they could not steal." On January 13,
Liberal and
Iquitos continued down the Caraparana River toward El Encanto, reaching a Colombian rubber station named El Dorado around 9:30 a.m. Hardenburg wrote that Loayza threatened the Colombians with death if they did not abandon their estate and surrender their firearms. Loayza's men seized the weapons and returned to the steamships before proceeding toward El Encanto. El Dorado was owned by Colombian Ildefonso González, who was later killed by Arana's manager Mariano Olañete while relocating his workforce. Hardenburg persuaded Loayza that the disappearance of either himself or Perkins would draw the attention of the United States government. Loayza later agreed to grant them passage on
Liberal to Iquitos; however, Captain Zubiaur demanded a payment of £17 for their transport. The steamship
Cosmopolita stopped at Chorrera while
Liberal was engaged in the expedition against Colombian settlements. On January 19, 1908,
Cosmopolita travelled to the port of Santa Julia, where it met
Liberal. On January 20, both vessels joined
Iquitos at a settlement named Arica, near the confluence of the Igaraparana tributary with the Putumayo River. The three ships travelled together toward the Peruvian border with Brazil, with
Iquitos escorting the others until reaching the confluence of the
Cotuhé and the Putumayo.
Cosmopolita and
Liberal then continued to Iquitos, while
Iquitos remained at Cotuhé.
Liberal arrived at Iquitos on either January 31 or February 1, according to Hardenburg, carrying 35,000 kilos of rubber and seven Colombian prisoners "suffering heavily" from imprisonment conditions. The rubber was collected from El Encanto and from Colombian settlements raided by the Peruvian Amazon Company.
Cosmopolita transported 120,000 kilos of rubber on the same voyage. Many of the Peruvian Amazon Company employees involved in the attacks on La Unión were later arrested, with the notable exception of Bartolomé Zumaeta. They were taken to La Chorrera in chains and imprisoned for about two months before the prefect of Iquitos, along with Julio César Arana and Peruvian consul-general Carlos Rey de Castro, arrived. Roger Casement remarked that "[t]his journey of Señor Arana in company with these two Peruvian officers of high rank is really the key to the whole subsequent situation." The prefect, Carlos Zapata, ordered the group's release. Casement, David Cazes, and other sources alleged that Arana bribed Zapata with between £5,000 and £8,000 to secure their freedom. During Casement's 1910 investigation of the Peruvian Amazon Company, he discovered that Rey de Castro was indebted to Arana's firm in Manaus for between £4,000 and £5,000.
1909–1911 In 1910, British consul-general
Roger Casement was sent to investigate the treatment and involvement of Barbadian employees working for
Julio César Arana's rubber enterprise. Casement travelled to the
Putumayo River estates aboard the
Liberal.
Elías Martinengui, who managed a Peruvian Amazon Company station, later departed the Putumayo aboard the same vessel, accompanied by four of his Indigenous concubines from
Atenas. Martinengui left on the
Liberal following Casement's journey from Iquitos to the Putumayo. The Indigenous labourers subjugated by Arana's company were required to transport rubber from local stations to La Chorrera and El Encanto, from where it was shipped down the Putumayo River towards Iquitos via the Igaraparana and Caraparana tributaries. Describing the transportation of rubber from Entre Ríos to La Chorrera, Casement wrote: On August 26, 1910, Casement was informed by the Brazilian customs post at Javari that the
Liberal had cleared the Javari River carrying 45 tons of rubber and "many sick men", mostly Peruvian soldiers. He estimated the shipment's value at approximately £45,000. On September 1, the
Liberal arrived at Iquitos with 23 ill soldiers and its cargo of rubber. Casement interviewed Stanley Lewis aboard the
Liberal on September 20, and James Clark on September 22. Lewis, employed as a steward, provided details of abuse, while Clark, who worked aboard other company vessels, did not report witnessing any mistreatment. The
Liberal arrived at La Chorrera on September 23 with Casement and the commercial commission. The Boras men seen unloading its cargo were later sent to El Encanto with Miguel Flores, under whose authority they worked. Frederick Bishop informed Casement that Captain Zubiaur had once confined a Peruvian man in the ship's hold, where he died from suffocation. Casement wrote that "nothing was done to Zubiaur," adding that "anyone would die from even half an hour down the hold of a tiny launch like this." Casement also recorded that Captain Reigada had employed the same punishment against crew members who became intoxicated on the
Liberal. By November 12, 1910, Casement recorded rubber deliveries for the
fabrico season as follows: • Sur Section: 8 tons • Occidente: • Atenas: • Entre Ríos: 14 tons • Andokes: 8 tons • Oriente: not specified He noted that the stations of Último Retiro and Santa Catalina were expected to deliver rubber prior to the
Liberal's departure, while Sabana and Abisinia were expected to do so in December. On November 12, Casement observed around 40–50 Indigenous labourers from the Sur station loading rubber onto the
Liberal, along with several from Entre Ríos. During repairs to the vessel's screw shaft, a worker from Sur was assaulted by an employee from Entre Ríos named Borborini, who was subsequently dismissed. Borborini planned to depart on the next voyage of the
Liberal, but instead travelled to retrieve his wives from Entre Ríos and was expected to rejoin the ship later. Casement and several Barbadian workers boarded the
Liberal on November 16, 1910, departing La Chorrera for Iquitos. The ship carried "sixty-odd tons of rubber." On November 21, 15 Barbadians disembarked at a Brazilian port. The
Liberal's chief engineer told Casement that annual operating costs for the vessel were between £6,000 and £7,000. Casement later noted an article in
El Oriente of Iquitos reporting frequent abductions of Indigenous children, implicating Captains Reigada and Zubiaur—both former captains of the
Liberal—in the practice. On December 14, 1910,
Pablo Zumaeta travelled to the Putumayo aboard the
Liberal "to replace incapable employees," accompanied by Benjamin Dublé. In February 1911,
Víctor Macedo,
Andrés O'Donnell, and the Commercial Commission travelled aboard the
Liberal away from the Putumayo. Judge Rómulo Paredes reported that the arrival of Casement and later of himself in the region prompted several company employees implicated in atrocities to flee. He stated that the
Liberal's crew confirmed that two managers, Abelardo Agüero and
Augusto Jiménez Seminario, had recently departed the area aboard the vessel to avoid discovery. In 1911, the
Liberal was mortgaged to
Eleanora Zumaeta de Arana along with other assets of the Peruvian Amazon Company, amounting to £60,000. The mortgage was dated May 5, 1911, and signed by Pablo Zumaeta, director of the company. The
Liberal continued transporting rubber from Arana's Putumayo estates under the firm of Cecilio Hernández. The
Liberal arrived in Iquitos on November 27, 1911, with 25 tons of rubber consigned by agents of Hernández's firm on behalf of Eleanora Zumaeta. Casement was informed by Siefert Greenidge that Donald Francis had been aboard during its return voyage and was assisted by Captain Ubaldo Lores to disembark in Brazil, avoiding Peruvian authorities. On August 29, 1912, Colombian consul-general
José Torralbo described the
Liberal as "a veritable phantom ship, the whistle of which raises terror in the inhabitants of the forests," and alleged that "[Bartolomé] Zumaeta and many of his companions have committed acts of veritable piracy" aboard it. In 1912, U.S. consul
Stuart J. Fuller and British consul
George Mitchell travelled aboard the
Liberal to investigate conditions in the Putumayo.
Julio César Arana, photographer
Silvino Santos, and
Carlos Rey de Castro boarded before its arrival at La Chorrera and accompanied the consuls throughout their visit. The
Liberal transported this group to La Chorrera, El Encanto, Argelia, Unión, and La Florida. The Peruvian Amazon Company later published an album featuring Santos's photographs from this journey.
Ubaldo Lores was captain during the consular commission. The Indigenous concubine of Andrés O'Donnell was also transported back to the Putumayo aboard the vessel during this expedition.
1913–1933 Gaspar de Pinell boarded the
Liberal on October 9, 1918, with permission from the vessel's commander, Captain Celso Prieto of the Peruvian Navy. Prieto agreed to transport Pinell to El Encanto because he held a letter of recommendation from Arana. Pinell referred to Casa Arana y [Cecilio] Hernández as the sole authorities on the Igaraparana and Caraparana rivers at the time. According to Huitoto professor Aurelio Rojas, approximately 1,000 soldiers arrived in the Putumayo aboard
Liberal in 1917, and these troops were used to suppress an indigenous rebellion against Arana's enterprise. Pinell also stated that an indigenous uprising occurred in 1917 against Arana's company and that it was suppressed by the Peruvian military, which deployed a machine gun during the conflict. However, Pinell did not specify whether the soldiers were transported to the Putumayo rubber estates aboard
Liberal. According to an oral history provided by
Florentina Piña de Miveco,
Liberal transported members of the Aguaje Bora nation from their native lands in the Putumayo region to Remanso following the rebellion. Years later, Arana's enterprise, together with Miguel S. Loayza, organized another migration of Putumayo natives in order to maintain a labour force during the transition of the Peruvian–Colombian border under the
Salomón–Lozano Treaty. Piña de Miveco stated that during this period,
Liberal transported various groups to the Algodón tributary, from where migrants continued on foot for several days until reaching the
Yahuasyacu River.
Liberal also transported Peruvian soldiers during the
1921 insurrection of Loreto. Lieutenant Colonel Teobaldo González, aboard the steamship
Beatriz, joined forces with
Liberal at the confluence of the Huallaga and Marañón rivers. González commanded 140 soldiers on
Beatriz, while Lieutenant Azcaraté commanded 120 soldiers and two officers aboard
Liberal. The combined force advanced toward Puerto Meléndez, and
Liberal was later sent to search for a detachment of missing soldiers. During this time, government troops arrived at Puerto Meléndez aboard the steamship
Hamburgo and attacked González's group, many of whom fled into the jungle. Government forces on
Hamburgo subsequently persuaded the soldiers aboard
Liberal to surrender unconditionally.
Liberal later formed part of a flotilla that travelled to the Prefecture of Iquitos, alongside the gunboat
América and the steamships
Adolfo,
Luz II,
San Pablo, and
Cahuapanas. During the
Colombia–Peru War,
Liberal was commanded by Lieutenant Commander
Manuel R. Nieto and Lieutenant
José Mosto. The two officers were ordered to travel towards
Leticia with the steamship. They organized defensive measures consisting of mines and torpedoes, with the objective of impeding the advance of enemy reinforcements along the river. ==Notes==