Atlas of Hispanic-American History

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executive council, serving below a Spanish
governor whose authority had been great-
ly reduced. Muñoz’s tenure proved short-
lived. On July 25, 1898, U.S. forces landed
in Puerto Rico. By August the island was
under U.S. control, and the Treaty of
Paris in December formally made the
island an American possession. Muñoz
tried to continue serving as head of the
cabinet under an American military gover-
nor but found his position so weakened
that he resigned early in 1899.
Muñoz and most other Puerto Rican
leaders did not at first seek immediate
independence. They hoped for an end to
U.S. military government, U.S. citizen-
ship for Puerto Ricans, status for Puerto
Rico as an organized territory, and even-
tual statehood. Instead, the Foraker Act

of 1900 established a civil government
but did not make Puerto Ricans U.S. cit-
izens or offer substantial self-govern-
ment. The U.S. Congress, in which
Puerto Ricans had no voice or vote, kept
control of Puerto Rican affairs.
Meanwhile, unemployment and
poverty were on the rise in Puerto Rico.
American sugar companies were buying
large plots of land from Puerto Rican
landowners, converting much of the
island’s farm land to sugar production.
Farmers who had grown their own food
now labored at growing sugar, with their
livelihoods dependent on the chronical-
ly unstable price of that commodity.
Poverty was aggravated by a population
explosion, the result of U.S.-introduced
health and sanitation measures that

124 ATLAS OF HISPANIC-AMERICAN HISTORY


1859 Luis Muñoz Rivera is born in Barranquitas, Puerto Rico.
1887 Muñoz Rivera cofounds the Autonomist Party of Puerto Rico. The party’s main goal
is independence from Spain.
1890 Muñoz Rivera founds La Democracía (The Democracy), a newspaper dedicated to
Autonomist ideas.
1893 In order to learn more about political systems, Muñoz Rivera travels to Spain to
study its government. When he returns home, he assists in drafting the Plan de
Ponce, an outline for Puerto Rico’s administrative autonomy and political freedom.
1895 Muñoz Rivera becomes part of a four-member commission, which meets with the
leader of the Liberalist Party of Spain, Práxedes Mateo Sagasta. Together, the
Liberalist parties of Spain and Puerto Rico agree that if the Spanish Liberalists come
to power, Puerto Rico will have an autonomous government.
1897 Sagasta approves the Autonomist Charter and appoints Muñoz Rivera secretary of
state and chief of the cabinet in Puerto Rico’s Spanish colonial government.
1898 The United States invades Puerto Rico and ignores the Autonomist Charter.
1899 Muñoz Rivera founds the newspaper El Territoria (The Territory), providing a place
for Puerto Ricans to express the ill-effects of the U.S. trade blockade. That same
year, Muñoz Rivera unsuccessfully tries to negotiate a free-trade agreement
between Puerto Rico and the United States; he moves to New York.
1901 In New York, Muñoz Rivera founds the Puerto Rico Herald, a bilingual newspaper
focusing on Puerto Rico’s relations with the United States.
1904 Muñoz Rivera returns to Puerto Rico and founds the Unionist Party upon his arrival.
1906 Muñoz Rivera is elected to the Puerto Rican House of Delegates as a Unionist and
is reelected twice, serving until 1910.
1910 Muñoz Rivera is elected resident commissioner to the U.S. House of
Representatives. He learns English in order to fight for a revision of the Foraker Act.
In response, U.S. president Woodrow Wilson says the Unionist Party must end its
fight for independence before the United States will amend the act.
1916 The U.S. House of Representatives passes the Jones Act and sends it to the Senate
for approval. Muñoz Rivera returns to Puerto Rico. He dies soon thereafter.
1917 The U.S. Congress passes the Jones Act, which grants Puerto Ricans U.S. citizen-
ship and sets up a two-chamber legislative assembly with a 19-member Senate and
a 39-member House of Delegates, both of which are elected by the people.

A CHRONOLOGY OF THE LIFE OF


LUIS MUÑOZ RIVERA


“If the U.S. flag in Puerto


Rico covers an American


territory, we Puerto Ricans,


by natural rights, are perfect


U.S. citizens. U.S. citizenship


should not be imposed on a


Puerto Rican if he does not


want it, but if there is a law


making all Puerto Ricans


ipsofacto U.S. citizens, then


the ideals of the people of


Puerto Rico would be


achieved.”


—Jose de Diego, April 9, 1910,
U.S. House of Representatives

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