Juan Rafael Mora Porras, Presidente de Costa Rica

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Juan Rafael Mora Porras, Presidente de Costa Rica

Also Known As: "Pres. Juan Rafael "Don Juanito" Mora Porras"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: San José, San Jose, Costa Rica
Death: September 30, 1860 (46)
Puntarenas, Costa Rica
Place of Burial: San Jose, San Jose, Costa Rica
Immediate Family:

Son of José Camilo de Mora y Alvarado; Jose Camilo Mora y Alvarado and Ana Benita Porras Ulloa
Husband of Inés Antonia Aguilar Cueto and Primera dama de la República de Costa Rica. Ines Antonia de Jesús Aguilar Cueto y García
Father of Vicenta Elena Mercedes de Jesús Mora Aguilar; Maria Teresa de Jesús Mora Aguilar; Juan Alberto Mora Aguilar; Inés Amelia Mora Aguilar; Manuel Francisco Mora Aguilar and 14 others
Brother of Mercedes de Jesus de Jesús Mora Porras; Jose Dionisio Mora Porras; José Miguel Gerónimo Mora Porras, Presidente de Costa Rica; General y Jefe de las fuerzas Centroamericanas. Jose Joaquín Joaquín Mora Porras; Ana María Guadalupe Mora Porras and 12 others

Occupation: Presidente de Costa Rica
Managed by: Eugenia del Barco Garron
Last Updated:

About Juan Rafael Mora Porras, Presidente de Costa Rica

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_Rafael_Mora_Porras

Juan Rafael Mora Porras (8 February 1814, San José, Costa Rica – 30 September 1860) was President of Costa Rica from 1849 to 1859.

Life and career

He first assumed the presidency following the resignation of his younger brother, Miguel Mora Porras, and was subsequently reelected in 1853 and 1859.

His administration modified the constitution, increasing the requirements to hold citizenship. A high yearly income was required to be a citizen; this left the majority of the population without the right to vote or run for office. The previous electoral system required citizens to be male, to be born in the country, and to be of age to have electoral rights. This dramatic change coincided with the privatization of the commons; the landless peasants who depended on the commons were left helpless since they had no political representation and no means of achieving it given the changes in the new constitution.

Mora performed a series of military reforms that not only increased the size of the army to 9000 able men, but also sought to professionalize it. To this end he hired Polish and French military advisers and purchased state-of-the-art equipment from Great Britain.

In 1856 he led his country's forces in Central America's war against William Walker and his filibuster regime in Nicaragua.

For Costa Rican historiography the war is divided into three parts: The First Campaign (March–April 1856), The Second Campaign or Transit Campaign (October 1856–May 1857), and The Third Campaign (August–December 1857)

Mora, along with Bishop Anselmo Llorente had previously given a series of speeches to arouse the people preparing for the upcoming war. The speeches emphasized the threat posed by the Protestant filibusters to the country's Catholic identity.

The president gave his brother José Joaquín Mora Porras the supreme command of the army. Three battles were fought during the First Campaign: Santa Rosa, Sardinal and Rivas; these series of battles managed to stop Walker's invasion to Guanacaste—at the time known as "Moracia" in the president's honour.

During the Rivas Battle Cholera spread out on both filibuster and Costa Rican forces. Costa Ricans under the impression that cholera was acquired on "ill-aired" locations fled from Rivas taking the water-borne disease into the country causing the death of 10% of the population.

For Costa Ricans the war was postponed until October 1856, the starting point for The Second Campaign. The emphasis of the Second Campaign was to cut off Walker's supply route which used the San Juan River and the steamboats taken by the filibusters from the Accessory Transit Company. There is no knowledge of the Third Campaign.

There is still discussion on the intellectual authorship of the capture of the Rio San Juan. Some Costa Ricans, like historian Rafael Obregón Loría, claim it was Mora who planned the capture. However, Mora met on November 1856 with Silvanius Spencer, Cornelius Vanderbilt's agent, who offered his help on the capture of the San Juan river. In spite of earning acclaim as a national hero for his efforts in that endeavor, he was overthrown in a coup d'état orchestrated by his opponent Jose Maria Montealegre in August 1859. He fled to El Salvador, where his supporters convinced him to launch an attack on Costa Rica and recoup the presidency. After initial victories, in which he succeeded in seizing the port of Puntarenas, he was defeated, captured, and, on 30 September 1860, brought before a firing squad.

His nephew, whom he helped raise, was the writer Manuel Argüello Mora. His great-great-great-niece is actress Madeleine Stowe.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan_Rafael_Mora_Porras

Juan Rafael Mora Porras (8 February 1814, San José, Costa Rica – 30 September 1860) was President of Costa Rica from 1849 to 1859

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Juan Rafael Mora Porras, Presidente de Costa Rica's Timeline

1814
February 8, 1814
San José, San Jose, Costa Rica
1850
April 11, 1850
San José, San José Province, Costa Rica
April 11, 1850
San José, San José Province, Costa Rica
1851
April 2, 1851
San José, San José Province, Costa Rica
December 28, 1851
San José, San José Province, Costa Rica
December 28, 1851
San José, San José Province, Costa Rica
1855
February 20, 1855
San José, San Jose, Costa Rica
February 20, 1855
San José, Costa Rica
August 15, 1855
San José, San José Province, Costa Rica
1856
October 3, 1856
San José, San José Province, Costa Rica