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Some Reflections on Early Anglo-paraguayan Commerce*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 December 2015
Extract
Scholars of the British experience in Latin America have given considerable attention to the adventures of the two Scottish merchants John Parish Robertson and his brother William, who visited Paraguay between 1811 and 1814. The image of the taciturn Dictator José Gaspar de Francia attempting to use the two British subjects to establish commercial links with Europe has appeared in virtually all histories of the period. Francia's failure in this regard, we are frequently told, ushered in a period of self-imposed isolation for Paraguay. Few foreigners, merchants or otherwise, were permitted to breech the barriers set up by the Dictator and Paraguay quickly took on the reputation of an “inland Japan.” That these barriers were not as absolute as the traditional portrayal would suggest has been established only in the last fifteen years. With few exceptions, the historical accounts have assumed that, with the departure of the Robertsons, British merchants lost all interest in Paraguay. In fact, however, a strong desire to “open” the trade of that country characterized the British mercantile community of Buenos Aires throughout the life of the Dictator and, on one occasion at the very end of Dr. Francia's reign, a concerted effort was made by certain Britons to reintroduce British commerce to Paraguay.
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- Copyright © Academy of American Franciscan History 1988
Footnotes
The author would like to thank Jerry W. Cooney for his help with this piece. An earlier version was published in the Anuario del Instituto de Investigaciones Históricas Dr. José Gaspar Rodríguez Francia, año VII, no. VII (Dec. 1985), pp. 66-71.
References
1 Parish, John and Robertson, William Parish, Letters on Paraguay, 3 vols. (London, 1838–1839), II: 281–84.Google Scholar
2 See especially Williams, John Hoyt, “Paraguayan Isolation under Dr. Francia: A Re-evaluation,” Hispanic American Historical Review 52:1 (1972), pp. 102–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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5 William P. Robertson, R. Montgomery and John Watson to Commodore Sir Thomas Hardy, Buenos Aires, 17 Feb. 1823. Public Records Office (London), Foreign Office documents, volume 6, number 4 (hereinafter cited as PRO FO 6:4).
6 Hardy to Robertson, Montgomery and Watson, Buenos Aires, 26 Apr. 1823. PRO FO 6:4.
7 Consul Woodbine Parish to Francía, Buenos Aires, 17 July 1824. ANA Colección Río Branco (hereinafter CRB), 1–30, 7, 33.
8 Parish to Foreign Secretary George Canning, Buenos Aires, 22 Aug. 1824, PRO FO 354.
9 Parish to Canning, Buenos Aires, 19 Feb. 1825, PRO FO 354.
10 Secretary Bernardino Villamayor to Parish, Asunción, 26 Jan. 1825. ANA-CRB 1–30, 7, 38.
11 Parish to Francia, Buenos Aires, 14 Apr. 1825. ANA-CRB 1–30, 7, 38.
12 Webster, C.K., Britain and the Independence of Latin America, 1812–1830 (London, 1938), p. 157.Google Scholar
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14 Regarding the internal development of Paraguay during the Francia years, see White, Richard Alan, Paraguay’s Autonomous Revolution, 1810–1840 (Albuquerque, 1978)Google Scholar, passim.
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18 Hood to Mr. Bidwell, Montevideo, 28 Oct. 1840. PRO FO 51: 17.
19 Prime Minister H.J.T. Palmerston to Hood, London, 31 Oct. 1840. PRO FO 51:16.
20 El Comercio (de Corrientes), 13 Aug. 1855; Page, Thomas J., La Plata, The Argentine Confederation, and Paraguay (New York, 1859), p. 303.Google Scholar
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23 Kieman, V.G. “Britain’s First Contacts with Paraguay,” Atlante 3 (1955), p. 180.Google Scholar
24 He remained interested in outside trade, despite the few opportunities offered Paraguay. For example, he operated a “free port” at the Paraná river town of Itapúa, where he maintained quasi-official trade links with Brazil. White, , Paraguay’s Autonomous Revolution, pp. 129–51.Google Scholar
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