Jorge Montt

Jorge Montt
12th President of Chile
In office
December 26, 1891 – September 18, 1896
Preceded byHimself
(as President of the Government Junta)
José Manuel Balmaceda
(as President)
Succeeded byFederico Errázuriz Echaurren
President of Government Junta of Chile
In office
August 31, 1891 – December 26, 1891
Preceded byManuel Baquedano
(as Accidental Chief)
Succeeded byHimself
(as president)
Personal details
Born(1845-04-26)April 26, 1845
Casablanca, Chile
Died(1922-10-08)October 8, 1922 (aged 77)
Santiago, Chile
Partynone
SpouseLeonor Frederick Ledesma
Signature

Jorge Montt Álvarez (Latin American Spanish: [ˈxoɾxe ˈmont]; April 26, 1845 – October 8, 1922) was a vice admiral in the Chilean Navy and president of Chile from 1891 to 1896.[1]

Early life

Born in Casablanca, Chile, he was a nephew of former Chilean president Manuel Montt, and a cousin of future president Pedro Montt. After graduating from the naval academy in 1861, he served in the Chincha Islands War (1864-1866) and the War of the Pacific (1879-1883). He led the 1891 Chilean Civil War against President José Manuel Balmaceda to become provisional leader and eventually president in 1891.

Presidency

The close of the revolution against Balmaceda left the government of Chile in the hands of the junta under whose guidance the military and naval operations had been organized. Admiral Jorge Montt had been the head of this revolutionary committee, and he acted as president of the provisional government when the administration of the country changed hands after the victory of the Congressional party. An election was then immediately ordered to elect the president of the republic as well as representatives in the senate and chamber of deputies. Admiral Montt, as head of the executive power, staunchly refused to allow official influence to be brought to bear in any way in the presidential campaign. The great majority of the voters, however, required no pressure to decide who was in their opinion the man most fit to administer the affairs of the republic.

An election was held, and Admiral Montt was duly chosen by a nearly unanimous vote to be chief magistrate for the remaining time of the constitutional term of five years, till September 18, 1896. The senate and chamber of deputies were formally constituted in due course, and the government of the republic resumed normal conditions of existence. The new president showed admirable tact in dealing with the difficult problem he was called upon to face. Party feeling still ran high between the partisans of the two sides of the recent conflict. Admiral Montt took the view that it was politic and just to let bygones be bygones, and he acted conscientiously by this principle in all administrative measures in connection with the supporters of the late President Balmaceda. Early in 1892, amnesty was granted to the officers of the Balmaceda regime, and they were freely permitted to return to Chile without any attempts made against them. The first political act of national importance of the new government was the granting of control to the municipalities, which hitherto had possessed little power to direct local affairs and were not even permitted to make spending decisions of the municipal revenues to any important amount without first obtaining the consent of the central government. Almost absolute power was now given these corporations to manage their own concerns, and the organization of the police was placed in their hands; at a later period, however, it was found necessary to modify this latter condition.

President Montt next turned his attention towards the question of how to best repair the damage caused to the country by eight months of civil warfare. The plan of public works authorized in 1887 was reconsidered, and the construction of portions of the various undertakings recommenced. The army and navy were reorganized. Additional instructors were brought from Germany, and all arms of the military service were placed on a thoroughly efficient footing in matters of drill and discipline. Several new and powerful cruisers were added to the navy, and the internal economy of this branch of the national defence was thoroughly inspected; many defects were remedied.

President Montt then took in hand the question of a reform of the currency, the abolition of nonconvertible paper money, and the re-establishment of a gold monetary standard for the republic. This reform of the currency became the keynote of the president's policy during the remainder of his term of office. Great opposition was raised by the representatives of the debtor class in congress to the suppression of the nonconvertible paper money, but in the end President Montt carried the day, and on February 11, 1895 a measure finally became law establishing a gold currency as the only tender in Chile. In July 1896, the Conversion Act was put in force, a dollar of 18d. being the monetary unit adopted.

In 1895, relations with the neighbouring republic of Argentina began to become somewhat strained in regard to the interpretation of the treaty concerning the boundary between the two countries. The treaties of 1881, 1893 and 1895 left doubts in the minds of both Chileans and Argentines as to the position of the frontier line. In May of the same year, he founded the Military Museum of Chile, the predecessor of the current Chilean Historical and Military Museum.[2] On April 17, 1896, another protocol was drawn up, by which the contending parties agreed to submit any differences to the arbitration of Great Britain, at the instance of one or both governments. President Montt had now fulfilled his term of office, and on September 18, 1896 he handed over the presidential power to his successor, Federico Errázuriz Echaurren, who had been duly elected in the month of June previously.

Cabinet

Portfolio Minister Took office Left office Party
Government Junta
Minister of the Interior8 September 189131 December 1891 Conservative
Minister of Foreign Affairs12 September 189131 December 1891 Radical
Minister of Justice and Public Instruction
Isidoro Errázuriz
8 September 189131 December 1891 Liberal
Minister of War and Navy8 September 189131 December 1891 Liberal
Minister of Finance
Joaquín Walker Martínez
8 September 189131 December 1891 Conservative
Minister of Industry and Public Works15 September 189131 December 1891 National
Barros-Pereira Ministry
Minister of the Interior31 December 189114 March 1892 Liberal
Minister of Foreign Affairs
Luis Pereira Cotapos
31 December 189114 March 1892 Conservative
Minister of Justice and Public Instruction31 December 189114 March 1892 Radical
Minister of War and Navy
Ventura Blanco Viel
31 December 189114 March 1892 Conservative
Minister of Finance31 December 189114 March 1892 Liberal
Minister of Industry and Public Works31 December 189114 March 1892 National
Matte-Castellón Ministry
Minister of the Interior14 March 18929 June 1892 Liberal
Minister of Foreign Affairs14 March 189211 June 1892 Radical
Minister of Justice and Public Instruction
Gaspar Toro Hurtado
14 March 189211 June 1892 Liberal
Minister of War and Navy14 March 189211 June 1892 Liberal
Minister of Finance14 March 189211 June 1892 National
Minister of Industry and Public Works
Jorge Riesco Errázuriz
14 March 189211 June 1892 Liberal
Barros-Errázuriz Ministry
Minister of the Interior9 June 189222 April 1893 Liberal
Minister of Foreign Affairs
Isidoro Errázuriz
11 June 189222 April 1893 Liberal
Minister of Justice and Public Instruction
Máximo Del Campo Yávar
11 June 189222 April 1893 National
Minister of War and Navy
Luis Arteaga Ramírez
11 June 189222 September 1893 Liberal
Francisco Antonio Pinto Cruz
4 October 189222 April 1893 Liberal
Minister of Finance11 June 189222 April 1893 Radical
Minister of Industry and Public Works
Vicente Dávila Larraín
11 June 189222 April 1893 Liberal
Montt-Blanco Ministry
Minister of the Interior22 April 189326 April 1894 National
Minister of Foreign Affairs
Ventura Blanco Viel
22 April 189326 April 1894 Conservative
Minister of Justice and Public Instruction
Joaquín Rodríguez Rozas
22 April 18936 October 1893 Radical
Francisco Antonio Pinto Cruz
6 October 189326 April 1894 Liberal
Minister of War and Navy
Isidoro Errázuriz
22 April 18937 August 1893 Liberal
Manuel Villamil Blanco
7 August 18936 October 1893 National
Juan Antonio Orrego
6 October 189326 April 1894 Liberal
Minister of Finance
Alejandro Vial
22 April 189326 April 1894 Conservative
Minister of Industry and Public Works
Vicente Dávila Larraín
22 April 189326 April 1894 Liberal
Mac Iver-Sánchez Ministry
Minister of the Interior26 April 18947 December 1894 Radical
Minister of Foreign Affairs
Mariano Sánchez Fontecilla
26 April 18947 December 1894 Liberal
Minister of Justice and Public Instruction26 April 189429 October 1894 Liberal
Minister of War and Navy
Santiago Aldunate Bascuñán
26 April 18947 December 1894 Liberal
Minister of Finance
Carlos Riesco Errázuriz
26 April 18947 December 1894 Liberal
Minister of Industry and Public Works
Manuel Antonio Prieto
26 April 18947 December 1894 Radical
Barros-Barros Ministry
Minister of the Interior7 December 18941 August 1895 Liberal
Minister of Foreign Affairs7 December 18941 August 1895 Liberal
Minister of Justice and Public Instruction
Osvaldo Rengifo
18 December 18941 August 1895 Liberal
Minister of War and Navy
Carlos Rivera Jofré
7 December 18941 August 1895 Liberal
Minister of Finance
Manuel Fernández Pradel
7 December 18941 August 1895 Liberal
Minister of Industry and Public Works7 December 18941 August 1895 National
Recabarren-Matte Ministry
Minister of the Interior1 August 189524 November 1895 Radical
Minister of Foreign Affairs
Claudio Matte
1 August 189524 November 1895 Liberal
Minister of Justice and Public Instruction
Mariano Sánchez Fontecilla
1 August 189524 November 1895 Liberal
Minister of War and Navy
Ismael Valdés Valdés
1 August 189524 November 1895 Liberal
Minister of Finance1 August 189524 November 1895 Radical
Minister of Industry and Public Works
Juan Miguel Dávila Baeza
1 August 189524 November 1895 Liberal
Rengifo-Guerrero Ministry
Minister of the Interior
Osvaldo Rengifo
24 November 189518 September 1896 Liberal
Minister of Foreign Affairs
Adolfo Guerrero Vergara
16 January 189618 September 1896 Liberal
Minister of Justice and Public Instruction
Gaspar Toro Hurtado
24 November 189518 September 1896 Liberal
Minister of War and Navy24 November 189518 September 1896 Liberal
Minister of Finance24 November 189518 September 1896 Liberal
Minister of Industry and Public Works24 November 189518 September 1896 National

Post-presidency

Montt served as commander of the Chilean Navy from 1897 until his retirement in 1913. He then served as mayor of Valparaíso from 1915 to 1918. He died in Santiago in 1922.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ L.S. Rowe, "Passing of a Great Figure in Chilean History." Bulletin Pan American Union 55 (1922): 481+.
  2. ^ Bilbao Cárcamo, Javiera (2018). "Museos y objetos: la vida de los objetos en las colecciones del Museo Militar de Chile (1894-1911)" (in Spanish). University de Chile. Retrieved 15 September 2025.

Further reading

  • Moore, John Bassett. "The Late Chilian Controversy." Political Science Quarterly 8.3 (1893): 467-494. online