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Home » Article » Food-and-Drink Nicaragua Coffee History
Randy Wilson filed under "Food-and-Drink"
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In Nicaragua coffee cultivation began early but it did not
dominate the economy as in Guatemala and El Salvador. Coffee
cultivation began in the lands in the southern uplands in
earnest in the 1860’s where the transition from other commercial
agricultural endeavors was smooth. But the prime coffee growing
lands in Nicaragua turned out to be in the north central
highlands, where Indians owned most of the land, and a familiar
course of action that was taking place in other growing areas of
the world was about to ensue.
That was the systematic elimination of native populations that
stood between the coffee barons and huge profits from coffee
experts. These coffee wars were often very bloody and lasted for
years. Those that weren’t killed were enslaved to work the
plantations on what was once their own land. In 1881 several
thousand Indians revolted and attacked the government
headquarters in Matagalpa and demanded an end to the forced
labor.
The Nicaragua Army suppressed the revolt killing over a thousand
natives. Nevertheless, the resistance remained strong for many
years and coffee growing in Nicaragua was dangerous business.
Many top growers and government officials were assassinated by
resistance fighters.
The U.S. government even sent troops to Nicaragua to protect
U.S. interests as the U.S. was considering building a canal
there to connect the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. However, after
securing rights for the canal in Panama, the U.S. was not as
eager to provide support and as a result the coffee industry
stagnated compared to other Central American nations.
Most of the political unrest in Nicaragua was centered around
the coffee industry and government corruption that involved
catering to the businessmen that wanted the prime highlands for
growing coffee. The unrest continued well into the twentieth
century and in 1979 the Sandinista resistance fighters led a
revolt against the longtime president Anastasio Somaza Jr. The
entire country rallied behind the Sandinistas and Somaza fled
Nicaragua.
The Sandinistas took over and promised a better life for all
including the coffee growers and Indian laborers. Although they
knew very little about the coffee business they did manage to
turn the country, and the Nicaragua coffee industry around.
© Copyright Randy Wilson, All Rights Reserved.
About the author:
You can find more articles on coffee such as D
epression and Coffee,
Do Coffee Colonics Work? and Starbucks Coffee History.
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