16th century Puerto Rico was considered the "Key to the Caribbean" by the Spanish because of its location as a way station and port for Spanish vessels. In 1540, with revenue from Mexican mines, the Spanish settlers began the construction of
Fort San Felipe del Morro ("the promontory") in San Juan. With the completion of the initial phase of the construction in 1589
El Morro became the island's main military fortification, guarded by professional soldiers. The rest of Puerto Rico, which had been reorganized in 1580 as the
Captaincy General of Puerto Rico, had to rely on only a handful of soldiers and the local volunteer militia to defend the island against militant and pirate attacks. The main enemies of Spain at the time were the English and the Dutch. They, however were not the only enemies that Spain faced in the Caribbean during this period. On October 11, 1528, the French sacked and burned the settlement of
San Germán during an attempt to capture the island, destroying many of the island's first settlements—including Guánica, Sotomayor, Daguao and Loiza—before the local militia forced them to retreat. The only settlement that remained was San Juan. landed in Santurce and captured Puerto Rico, holding it for 157 days. He was forced to abandon the island upon an outbreak of bacillary
dysentery among his troops, losing 700 men to the outbreak. On December 26, 1598, Alonso de Mercado, a military man was named to the Captaincy General of Puerto Rico by Spain and asked to punish anyone who had allowed the takeover, through negligence, malice or cowardice.
17th century The
Dutch Republic was a world military and commercial power by 1625, competing in the Caribbean with the Spanish. The Dutch wanted to establish a military stronghold in the area, and dispatched Captain
Boudewijn Hendricksz (also known as Boudoyno Henrico or Balduino Enrico) to capture Puerto Rico. On September 24, 1625, Enrico arrived at the coast of San Juan with 17 ships and 2,000 men. Enrico sent a message to the governor of Puerto Rico, Juan de Haro, ordering him to surrender the island. De Haro refused; he was an experienced military man and expected an attack in the section known as Boqueron. He therefore had that area fortified. However, the Dutch took another route and landed in La Puntilla. The Dutch ships at sea were boarded by Puerto Ricans, who defeated those aboard. After a long battle, the Spanish soldiers and volunteers of the city's militia were able to defend the city from the attack and save the island from an invasion. On October 21, Hendricksz set La Fortaleza and the city ablaze. Captains Amézqueta and Andrés Botello decided to put a stop to the destruction and led 200 men in an attack against the enemy's front and rear guard. They drove Hendricksz and his men from their trenches and into the ocean in haste to reach their ships. Hendricksz upon his retreat left behind him one of his largest ships, stranded, and over 400 dead. While Spain and England were in a power struggle in the New World, Puerto Rican
privateering of English ships was encouraged by the Spanish Crown. Captain
Miguel Enríquez and Captain
Roberto Cofresí (in the 19th century) were two of the most famous Puerto Rican privateers. In the first half of the 18th century, Enríquez, a shoemaker by occupation, decided to try his luck as a privateer. He showed great valor in intercepting English merchant ships and other ships dedicated to
contraband that were infesting the seas of Puerto Rico and the Atlantic Ocean in general. Enríquez organized an expeditionary force which captured a nascent British colonial settlement in the island of
Vieques. He was received as a national hero when he returned the island of Vieques to the Spanish Empire and to the governorship of Puerto Rico. In recognition of his service, the Spanish Crown awarded Enríquez the
Medalla de Oro de la Real Efigie ("The Gold Medal of the Royal Effigy"), named him "Captain of the Seas and War", and gave him a
letter of marque and reprisal, thus granting him the privileges of privateer.
18th century Armed conflicts with the British The English continued their attacks against Spanish colonies in the Caribbean, taking minor islands including
Vieques east of Puerto Rico. On August 5, 1702,
Arecibo, on Puerto Rico's northern coast, was attacked by two
Royal Navy warships under the command of
William Whetstone. 30 local militiamen, led by Captain
Antonio de los Reyes Correa, ambushed the English, who had sent two boats of marines and sailors to capture Arecibo. Correa's troops defeated the attackers, who lost 22 men on land and 8 at sea. Correa was declared a
national hero and was awarded the
Medalla de Oro de la Real Efigie ("Gold Medal of the Royal Image") and the title of "Captain of Infantry" by
King Philip V. Native-born Puerto Rican (
criollos) had petitioned the Spanish Crown to serve in the regular Spanish army, resulting in the 1741 organization of the Regimiento Fijo de Puerto Rico. The Fijo served in the defense of Puerto Rico and other Spanish overseas possessions, performing in battles in Santo Domingo, other islands in the Caribbean, and South America, most notably in
Venezuela. However, Puerto Rican complaints that the Fijo was being used to suppress the
revolution in Venezuela caused the Crown to bring the Fijo home and in 1815 it was mustered out of service. In 1765, the Spanish Crown sent Field-Marshal
Alejandro O'Reilly to Puerto Rico to form an organized militia. O'Reilly, known as the "Father of the Puerto Rican Militia", oversaw training to bring fame and glory to the militia in future military engagements, nicknaming the civilian militia the "Disciplined Militia." O'Reilly was later appointed governor of colonial
Louisiana in 1769 and became known as "Bloody O'Reilly."
American Revolutionary War During the
American Revolutionary War, Spain lent the
American Patriots the use of its ports in Puerto Rico, through which flowed financial aid and arms for their cause. An incident occurred in the coast of Mayagüez, in 1777, between the
Continental Navy ships
Eudawook and
Henry and a Royal Navy warship .
Eudawook and
Henry were chased by the larger and more powerful
Glasgow close to the coast of
Mayagüez; members of the Puerto Rican militia of that town, realizing that something was wrong, signaled for both ships to dock at the town's bay. After the ships docked, the crews of both ships disembarked and some Mayagüezanos boarded and raised the Spanish flag on both ships. The commander of
Glasgow became aware of the situation and asked the island's governor, Jose Dufresne to turn over the ships. Dufresne refused and ordered
Glasgow out of the Puerto Rican dock, to which its commander complied. The governor of Louisiana,
Bernardo de Gálvez, was named field marshal of the Spanish colonial army in North America. In 1779, Galvez and his troops, composed of Puerto Ricans and people from other Spanish colonies, captured
Pensacola, the capital of the British colony of
West Florida along with the settlements of
Baton Rouge,
St. Louis and
Mobile. Puerto Rican troops, under the leadership of Brigadier-General Ramón de Castro, participated in this campaign under the ultimate command of Gálvez. Galvez and his army also provided the
Continental Army with guns, cloth, gunpowder and medicine shipped from
Cuba up the
Mississippi River. General Ramón de Castro, who was Galvez's Aide-de-camp in the Mobile and Pensacola campaigns, became the appointed governor of Puerto Rico in 1795.
1797 invasion of Puerto Rico On February 17, 1797, the governor of Puerto Rico, Brigadier-General Ramón de Castro, received news that
Great Britain had
captured the colony of Trinidad. Believing that Puerto Rico would be the next British objective, he decided to put the local militia on alert and to prepare the island's forts against any invasions. On April 17, 1797, a British expeditionary force under the command of Sir
Ralph Abercromby approached the coastal town of
Loíza, to the east of San Juan. On April 18, British and
Hessian troops landed on Loíza's beach. Abercromby's ships were shot at by artillery under the command of de Castro from both El Morro and the San Gerónimo fortresses but were beyond reach. After the invaders disembarked practically all fighting was land based with many skirmishes, field artillery and mortar fire exchanges between the San Gerónimo and San Antonio Bridge fortress and British emplacements in Condado to the East and El Olimpo hill in Miramar to the South. The British tried to take the San Antonio, a key passage to the San Juan islet, and repeatedly bombarded the nearby San Gerónimo almost demolishing it. At the Martín Peña Bridge, they were met by the likes of Sergeants
José and Francisco Díaz and Colonel
Rafael Conti who together with Lieutenant Lucas de Fuentes attacked the enemy with two cannons. After fierce fighting by the Spanish forces and local militia, all attempts by the attackers to advance into San Juan ended in failure. The invasion failed because Puerto Rican volunteers and Spanish troops fought back and defended the island in a manner described by a British lieutenant as of "astonishing bravery". The defense of San Juan served as the base for the legend of "La Rogativa". According to the popular Puerto Rican legend, on the night of April 30, 1797, the townswomen, led by a bishop, formed a
rogativa (prayer procession) and marched throughout the streets of the city singing hymns and carrying torches while at the same time praying for the deliverance of the city. Outside the walls, the invaders mistook the torch-lit movement for the arrival of Spanish reinforcements. When morning came, the enemy was gone from the island and the city was saved from a possible occupation. Four statues, sculptured by
Lindsay Daen in the
Plazuela de la Rogativa (Rogativa Plaza) in
Old San Juan, pay tribute to the bishop and townswomen who participated in
La Rogativa. During the invasion, British forces also attempted to capture
Aguadilla and Punta Salinas. They were defeated by Colonel Conti and the members of the militia in Aguadilla, who captured several of the attackers. The British retreated on April 30 to their ships and on May 2 set sail northward. Because of their role in fending off the invasion, de Castro petitioned Spanish King
Charles IV for recognition for the victors; he was promoted to field marshal and several others were promoted and given pay raises. The British continued to launch probing attacks on Puerto Rico after Abercromby's defeat, with unsuccessful skirmishes on the coastal towns of Aguadilla (December 1797), Ponce, Cabo Rojo, and Mayagüez. This continued to occur until 1802 when the
Treaty of Amiens ended the
War of the Second Coalition between European powers and Revolutionary France.
19th century France had threatened to invade the Spanish colony of
Santo Domingo. In 1808, the Spanish Crown sent their Navy, under the command of Puerto Rican Captain
Ramón Power y Giralt, to prevent the invasion of Santo Domingo by the French by enforcing a
blockade. Col. Rafael Conti organized a military expedition with the intention of defending the Dominican Republic. They were successful and were proclaimed as heroes by the Spanish Government. San Juan native
Demetrio O'Daly was a Sergeant Major in the Spanish Army when he participated in the 1809
Peninsular War, also known as the Spanish War of Independence, after the Napoleonic Invasion of 1808 and the kidnapping of both King Charles IV and Prince Ferdinand (later King
Ferdinand VII). When King Ferdinand returned from exile and kidnapping, he repealed the Constitution of 1812, which as the rest of European monarchs, he felt was a Napoleonic maneuver to weaken the countries. But O'Daly was a defender of the
Spanish Constitution of 1812 and was considered a rebel and exiled from Spain by
King Fernando VII in 1814. In 1820 O'Daly, a liberal constitutionalist, together with fellow rebel Col. Rafael Riego organized and led the Revolt of the Colonels. It was not a revolt against the king, but a revolt to force him reinstate the constitution which was successful. This was called the Trienio Liberal/Liberal Three years (1820–23). During this process O'Daly was promoted to field marshal and awarded the
Cruz Laureada de San Fernando (Laureate Cross of Saint Ferdinand), the highest military decoration awarded by the Spanish government.
American Civil War During the 1800s, commerce existed between the ports of the eastern coast of the United States and Puerto Rico. Ship records show that many Puerto Ricans traveled on ships that sailed to and from the U.S. and Puerto Rico. Many of them settled in places such as New York, Connecticut and Massachusetts. Upon the outbreak of the
American Civil War, many Puerto Ricans joined the ranks of the United States military armed forces, however since Puerto Ricans were Spanish subjects they were inscribed as Spaniards. The 1860 census of New Haven, Connecticut, shows there were 10 Puerto Ricans living there. Among them was
Augusto Rodriguez who joined the 15th Connecticut Regiment (a.k.a. Lyon Regiment) in 1862. During the Civil War, Rodriguez, who reached the rank of lieutenant, served in the defenses of Washington, D.C. He also led his men in the Battles of
Fredericksburg and
Wyse Fork. The regiment was mustered out on June 27, 1865, and he was discharged in New Haven on July 12, 1865. In Puerto Rico, there were many minor slave revolts in which the slaves clashed with the military establishment. In July 1821,
Marcos Xiorro, a bozal slave, planned and organized a conspiracy against the slave masters and the colonial government of Puerto Rico. According to his plot, which was to be carried out on July 27, during the festival celebrations for Santiago (
St. James), several slaves were to escape from various plantations in Bayamón, which included the haciendas of Angus McBean, C. Kortnight, Miguel Andino and
Fernando Fernández. They were then to proceed to the sugarcane fields of Miguel Figueres, and retrieve
cutlasses and swords which were hidden in those fields. Xiorro, together with a slave from the McBean plantation named Mario and another slave named Narciso, would lead the slaves of Bayamón and
Toa Baja and capture the city of Bayamón. They would then burn the city and kill those who were not
black. After this, they would all unite with slaves from the adjoining towns of
Río Piedras,
Guaynabo and Palo Seco. With this
critical mass of slaves, all armed and emboldened from a series of quick victories, they would then invade the capital city of
San Juan, where they would declare Xiorro as their king. Unfortunately for the slave conspirators, the plot was divulged by a fellow slave to the authorities. In response, the mayor of Bayamón mobilized 500 soldiers. The ringleaders and followers of the conspiracy were captured immediately. A total of 61 slaves were imprisoned in Bayamón and San Juan. The ringleaders were executed and the fate of Xiorro remains a mystery. There were other minor revolts up until the abolition of slavery in the island became official. == Revolt against Spain ==