No. 229.
Mr. Gibbs to Mr. Fish.

No. 82.]

Sir: I have the honor to inform you that the President, General Don Mariana lgnacio Prado, was inaugurated on the 2d of August, the change of administration being carried out peacefully, with all the dignity due to such an act. On that day Congress met in joint session, D. Manuel Pardo, the outgoing President, reading a short address, of which I inclose copy and translation; when finished, the President took off the bi-colored sash, the insignia of his office, handing it to the president of the senate. The president of the session read an answer to Mr. Pardo’s address, of which I inclose copy and translation.

Immediately General Prado, the elected President, entered the chamber accompanied by a joint committee of senators and deputies, advancing to a table on which were placed a copy of the Holy Evangelists, a crucifix, and two lighted candies. The general knelt on a cushion placed before the table, placing his hand on the scriptures, reading the prescribed oath, swearing to maintain the constitution and the religion of the State. Arising from his kneeling position he subscribed to the oath. The president of the session handed him the sash, which he placed on his shoulders, and he was thus duly installed as constitutional President of the republic for four years to August 2, 1880.

The president of the session read an address directed to General Prado, of which I remit copy and translation. When concluded, the President and Ex-President walked together from the chamber of deputies to the government-house, nearly half a mile distant. On their way it was a continuous ovation by cheers for both from the multitude who lined the streets, while flowers were thrown from the balconies as they passed.

The diplomatic corps occupied a gallery set apart for their use during the foregoing ceremonies, and at the conclusion went in a body to the government-house, and through the dean, Mr. Godoy, minister plenipotentiary from Chili, congratulated the President on his exaltation to his position. His Excellency in a few expressive and well-chosen words gave his thanks, saying, also, that he heartily desired a continuance of the good feelings that so happily existed between Peru and the nations represented. They then proceeded to the house of the Ex-President and awaited there his arrival, and individually spoke a few words of congratulation for the success of his past administration, so peacefully carried out.

I feel pleased to be able to inform you of this very peaceful transmismission of power from one administration to another, as a dread has been freely expressed of some revolutionary movement in the republic, principally in the south, but up to the present, as far as I can learn, the change has been received peacefully and apparently by acclamation of good will in all parts.

I will add a few lines, giving a sketch of the President’s political career. When the Vivanco Pareja treaty was signed, in January, 1865, Colonel Prado was prefect of Arequipo, and organized a revolution against General Pezet. This movement terminated successfully with Prado’s entry into Lima, November, 1865. He was immediately proclaimed dictator, and his first step was to form an alliance with Chili, Bolivia, and Ecuador, and declare war against Spain. He at that time [Page 427] formed one of the best cabinets ever organized in Peru—Galvez, Pacheco, Pardo, Quinpee. Under his direction the fortifications of Oallao were put in order, and, the 2d of May, 1866, the Spanish fleet were driven off. He was afterward proclaimed President by the constitutional Congress. In August, 1867, Arequipo rebelled against him. Leaving the supreme power in the hands of General La Puerta, he took the field against the insurgents, was defeated, and, in December, left and came to Lima, took refuge in this legation, and was secretly conveyed on board the United States steamship Nyack. By that vessel he reached Chili, in great poverty, subscriptions by his friends in this capital being necessary for his support.

The Chilian Congress conferred upon him the rank and pay of general, in view of his services against Spain; later on, in 1870, Peru also gave him the same grade.

Since 1868, greater part of his time has been passed quietly in Chili, farming and banking, the latter pursuit proving disastrous.

In 1874 he returned to Peru to take his seat in Congress as senator from Callao; from there he retired to Chili, and was nominated by the administration party as candidate for President, being elected 17th of October last.

There were three candidates for the first vice-presidency, Elguera, Rivas Aguero, and General Le Puerto. Neither of the candidates having a majority of the electoral college, the election was thrown into the National Congress, and on the 8th General Luis La Puerta was declared elected, and on the 10th was duly inaugurated by the same ceremony as the President.

I am, &c.,

RICHARD GIBBS.
[Inclosure 1 in No. 82.—Translation.]

Honorable Representatives: I have now to perform my last duty as President by delivering to you the supreme authority of the nation; and in doing so I have yet another to perform, and to thank the nation for the assistance it has given me in the performance of a difficult task; to thank you for the honorable proof you have given me of your confidence in me, and all classes for their decided and friendly co-operation. I trust that these common efforts may prove as beneficial to the republic as the motives have been patriotic which have sustained us, and that when posterity gives its decision on our conduct, it will concede that we have fulfilled our duty to our mother country.

[Inclosure 2 in No. 82.—Translation.]

The speaker of Congress answered Ex-President Pardo as follows:

Honorable Citizen: In publicly returning the insignia of the high office with which you were honored four years ago you have loyally fulfilled your duty. The decided and self-sacrificing support you have received from the country; the confidence reposed in you by Congress; the hearty manner in which the populace has supported you in the arduous work you have so patriotically undertaken and performed, have all arisen from the common interest which exists between the governed and the governors in the orderly and peaceable life of the republic. The judgment of posterity upon contemporaneous events will form one of the brightest pages in our history, since, in rendering justice to truth, it will have at least to say that your government has been a loyal and submissive one, which has accepted the responsibility of its actions, and has submitted itself to the double tribunal of the state authorities and public opinion. You may well, sir, await the judgment of the future in the full confidence that you have done your duty to your country.

[Page 428]
[Inclosure 3 in No. 82.—Translation.]

Citizen President: Under a solemn promise given with sincerity on the faith of the Holy Evangelists before the representatives of the nation, you have assumed the serious responsibility to comply faithfully with the high duties that patriotism and the law imposes on the magistracy which the free and voluntary vote of the country have honored you with.

Happily for Peru the time has passed with many other things, vain desires, want of knowledge, that supplanting of the popular will; at times by astuteness, others by the subversion of the army carried out with success imposing on the republic a tutelage more or less somber, more or less durable those usurpations.

The moral and intellectual progress of the country, the evident improvement of its tone and social state, and, in consequence of those dearly-acquired qualities, the predominance of sensible opinions in the aspiration and advance of parties, in the originating and solving of political acts, have obstructed the fountains of those abuses and restored to public power the true titles of legitimacy.

Although popular spirit was over-excited in 1868 by a severe recent intestine strife, they founded under the shadow of the law a government of peace, and the desire of the majority in 1872 realized another succession equally constitutional; this same sovereign will ratifies to-day a firm decision to maintain in all its integrity obedience to the law, having established and consecrated by an election, free as peaceful, the new administration inaugurated on this solemn day.

Notwithstanding all the convulsions which have commoved the entire country in those eight years past, placing the stability of the government more than once in danger, public opinion has been powerful enough, under all circumstances, to confine the fearful ills of anarchy, and we congratulate ourselves with the assurance that your administration will not be less zealous in defending the conquests of peace, and will be equally fortunate in meriting the confidence and assistance of the nation.

The voluntary free indication with which the people have again named you to control their destinies is doubly honorable to you, citizen President. It signifies that the country have not forgotten, on the contrary, desires to correspond to, the eminent services due to you in the liberal reform, of patriotic institutions, honest policy, and administrative probity, strengthening your past government by the true democratic spirit which will animate you, and by the high examples of integrity and abnegation; it also signifies that the Peruvian nation, loving its glories, does not wish to see tarnished with the ingratitude of factions the brilliancy of the laurels that crown the brow of the fortunate victor of the second of May.

Exceptionally critical are the circumstances and the epoch, citizen President, in which you assume the administration of our country. Re-established the regenerating movement which political reaction would strangle in the narrowness of its views, the nation has a second time entered with an invincible resolution, and full of confidence of its national destiny in the path of prudent reforms, useful advances of positive improvements, and the sound solutions of liberty. If the previous administration has had the honor and satisfaction of having fixed the basis of our reorganization, and communicated the first impulse to the propagation of all the strength created, of all the vital elements, of all the legitimate and useful inspiration to be seen by an inquiring mind, you, sir, are called to a mission as grand and noble, but more laborious and patient; that is, to utilize and make effective for the republic the new institutions which have been given, using them with intelligence and perseverance, assisting with judgment their consolidation and perfection.

Laboring in this manner, under the inspiration of the patriotic faith that animates you, doing justice to the spirit of your government, and making the law and public wishes the principle of your administration, you will realize, sir, the national prosperity which is the desire of all hearts, and will add another mark of honor to your glorious antecedents.