By 1848, President
Pedro Santana was facing repudiation from the population, who were protesting the economic crisis suffered by the Dominican Republic. The economic crisis and the parliamentary opposition caused a depression in Santana and therefore in February 1848 he retired to his estate in El Seibo and left the Executive Branch in the hands of a Council of Secretaries of State. However, the retirement created a situation in which opposition to his regime grew and in Congress there were demonstrations of rejection of his economic policy. In mid-1848, Santana did not even have military support, which was evidenced when he tried, together with General
Felipe Benicio Alfau, to dismiss Colonel Tomás Troncoso, accusing him of indecorum, but he did not find soldiers to reinforce his accusations. For this reason, the War Council that tried the soldier declared him innocent. The incident allowed Santana and General Alfau to verify that they did not enjoy sympathy even in the Army. This finally led to Pedro Santana to officially resign from his position on August 4, 1848, before a Council of Secretaries, which assumed the Government until September 8, 1848, when Jimenes, who was the minister of War and Navy. Following the Santana's resignation, Jiménes was the second constitutional president of the Dominican Republic, on September 8, 1848. Historian Rufino Martínez, from Puerto Plata, says the following: “He persecuted the members of Congress, and placed Santana under accusation so that he would be judged as a conspirator and traitor to the country.” Jimenes, still a representative of the Trinitarios, did not agree with crime or with any action that disturbed public order. His politics were liberal and his government administration was honest.
Policies One of the first things Jiménez did after assuming the presidency was to issue a decree of pardon (on September 26, 1848) of all the exiled revolutionaries who had been previously declared traitors to the homeland, including Duarte. Duarte, however, ignored the pardon. However, in applying the measure, Jimenes acted selectively, because some exiles were denied return to the country. That attitude created difficulties among his followers. President Jiménez also ordered the disintegration of the Army Infantry corps so that his men could go to work in the fields and promote agriculture. The political situation began to deteriorate with the culmination of the efforts of a Dominican diplomatic mission in Europe for France to admit the new republic into the international community. France recognized the Dominican Republic as a free and independent State through the provisional signing of a
treaty of peace, friendship, commerce, and navigation.
Haitian invasion of 1849 , caused the disruption of France's recognition of Dominican independence. While the treaty was still in transit, the Haitians took the opportunity to launch another attack. On March 9, 1849, the invasion of the Haitian President
Faustin Soulouque took place, who crossed the border with an army of 15,000 men, accompanied by the most important military leaders of that country. They managed to take over all the border towns and arrived in
San Juan de la Maguana on March 20, where they set up their headquarters. The Dominican guerrillas could do little to stop them. Jiménes left power in the hands of the council of secretaries of state, and personally headed to the southern region to lead the military campaign against the Haitian invaders. The order was also given for the Dominican warships commanded by General
Juan Bautista Cambiaso to reach the waters of the neighboring country with the aim of causing damage to the enemy. When the Dominican Army was defeated in San Juan de la Maguana,
Azua and El Numero, the legislative body called on General Santana on April 2 to take supreme command of the fight, and he was the one with an army of about six thousand Dominican combatants achieved the defeat of the Haitians in the
Battle of Las Carreras, in Azua, which lasted three days, from April 19 to 21. This put an end to the third campaign. In the retreat, Soulouque destroyed all the towns he found in his path, and any civilians encountered were massacred along the way.
Civil war Jimenes tried to rule Santana out of control of the Army, accusing him of being a traitor to the country and ordered him to hand over command of the Southern Army to General
Antonio Duvergé, but Santana did not recognize his authority, receiving the support of generals Merced Marcano, Juan Esteban Aybar, and Bernardino Pérez. Santana ordered his forces not to lay down their arms until a Government was established that respected the Constitution and the laws, which meant declaring rebellion against Jimenes, who responded by dismissing him, but Congress disavowed him and supported Santana's march towards the capital in order to overthrow him. On May 17, the city of Santo Domingo was declared under a state of siege. The two sides faced each other in a short but violent civil war during which the town of San Carlos, founded by
Canarian emigrants in the 17th century, was burned. The consuls of France,
England and the
United States mediated the conflict and Jiménes capitulated on May 29 to General Santana in the Güibia camp, resigning as President of the Dominican Republic. He left for
Puerto Rico, then to
Venezuela, then to
Curaçao, and then finally, he moved to Haiti. ==Personal life==