Costa Rica is unique in many ways and the reasons for this have
much to do with its location right in the middle of the northern
and southern American continents.
With respect to the abundance of flora and fauna few places on
earth can match it. Costa Rica for example has more butterfly
species than the entire continent of Africa and more bird species
than all of North América, all this due to its location
as a land bridge between continents. For this reason also, culturally
there was a great variety of natives here prior to the arrival
of the Europeans. Some have come down from the area of México
(Mesoamérica), Guatemala and Honduras and others who came
up from the Andes and other parts of South America. According
to archeological the northern part of Costa Rica was populated
by the Chorotegas who derived their name from an ancient place
in the valley of México called Cholula. These people has
fled that area in order to avoid being dominated by the Olmecs
and brought with them an elevated degree of social organization
and cultural development. They used the leather of deer to create
books written in red ink and known as codices. At the other end
in the south, we have a people who had come up from the south
and maintained strong ties to the Chibchas in the area of what
is today Colombia. They were excellent gold artisans and today
you can still see their works of art in the Gold museum in San
José. Currently the native population represents less than
2% of the total population of Costa Rica and is mostly found in
Indian reservations. There is a great need fo improvement in their
conditions of living and health as well as for the protection
of their rights and the recognition of their cultural and artistic
contribution to the Costa Rica of today. The first European presence
came about when Cristobal Colon “discovered” Costa
Rica on the 18th of September in the year of our Lord 1502 while
on his fourth voyage to America. Of course Costa Rica had been
already inhabited for 10,000 years previous to this discovery!
Columbus had sailed into the Bay of Cariari which is known today
as Limon in order to make repairs to his ships which has been
damaged by a storm. A later explorer coined the name Costa Rica
(Rich Coast) and he was absolutely right but for all the wrong
reasons. He came up with the name after seeing many natives wearing
gold and thought that there must be an abundance of gold in the
area. For a couple of centuries Costa Rica remained isolated from
all the activities of conquest and domination taking place to
the north and to the south. The lack of gold as well as the small
numbers of natives (most had been decimated by desease or had
run off to the highlands) made it unattractive to the Spanish
conquerors who wanted to find great riches in gold and silver
or to be given land grants which included many native slaves to
work the land. As a result the Europeans here became a hardly
lot, independent, self-sufficient and mostly poor to the extent
that even the governor had to work his land in order to eat. Costa
Rica lived isolated from the mother country of Spain and in fact
it wasn’t until October of 1821 (a full month later) that
Costa Rica found out Spain had granted independence to its colonies
in América on September 15 th. It was at this time that
coffee growing became the main export business providing income
for poor and rich alike. Schools and roads were built and land
grants given to any who would grow cofee. A road was built to
trasport cofee from the central plateau area to Puntarenas, a
port on the Pacific Ocean, many an oxcart traveled down this road
full of coffee. The coffee growers became wealthy and the elite
and sent their children to study in Europe. They also used their
influence to elect one of their own for president, Juan Rafael
Mora. He would later become a national hero by leading a rag tag
army of Costa Ricas to defend the border when William Walker,
a five foot three inch dictator who had conquered Nicaragua and
declared himself President traveled south with his troops bent
on adding Costa Rica to his empire. Walker had the backing of
the James Buchanan, President of the United Estates who wanted
control of a canal passage through Nicaragua and also had the
finacial backing of the Knights of The Golden Circle, a group
whose goal was to spread slavery to Central América. In
two battles, one at the Hacienda de Santa Rosa near Liberia in
the north of Costa Rica in the Nicaragua’s southern border,
Walker was soundly defeated by the Costa Rican forces which suffered
many casualties as a result of being poorly equipped farmers who
had answered their sovereignty. It was during these battles that
Costa Rica gained a national hero when a humble soldier from the
province of Alajuela, Juan Santa María, volunteered to
set fire to an ancient home that was being used by Walker and
his men as a fortress. He was brought down by a shower of bullets
from Walker’s army but managed with his last effort to set
fire to the building on April 11th, 1856. His only request prior
to setting off on this suicidal mission was hat his mother be
looked after. His bravery turned to tide of the battle and spelled
the begining of the end for Walker’s conquest efforts. Walker
would be later shot by a firing squad in Honduras. Coffee the
“golden grain” continued to be the leading export
and the wealth it brought to the coffee growers “cafetaleros”
allowed them to dominate politics. In 1870, General Tomas Guardia
seized power and established a viable central government and put
in check the cafetaleros and their military allies. He also used
the taxes from coffee sales to fund civic works and promoted the
construction of the railroad from San José to the Atlantic
Coast. An effort that would cost over 4,000 lives. It was completed
in 1890 and by 1889 Costa Rica was the world’s leading banana
producer. Minor Keith, an American was responsible for the completation
of the railroad. In the process he obtained juicy concessions
of land all along the railroad route where he planted bananas
and made a fortune for himself. His company would later evolve
into the United Fruit Company which would control the economies
of Central America for decades. In the 1940’s Rafael Angel
Calderon Guardia came to the Presidency and instituted many reform
including a social security system, progressive taxation and a
Labor Code to protect worker’s rights. Unfortunately, this
massive spending and a slugish economy combined to produce high
inflation and bring abourt a demise in his popularity with the
masses. In 1944 he formed an alliance with the Catholic Church
and the Communist and formed an aliance with the catholic church
and the communist and formed the PUSC (the Social Christian Unity
Party), thus his hand picked candidate won the election. When
Calderon ran again for election in 1948, he was unexpectedly defeated
by a candidate from a third party, Otilio Ulate. Calderon claimed
a fraud had occurred and that same night the building where the
ballots were, was set on fire. The election literally went up
in smoke and as a result civil war broke out on March 10, 1948.
This set the stage for José María Figueres a revolutionary
who had been exiled 6 years before to México. “Don
Pepe” as he was affectionately known had founded the National
Liberation Armed Forces wich trained on his mountain farm. This
election fiasco was everything he could have ever hoped for and
his army quickly swept down from the mountains and took the towns
of Cartago and Limón. The war raged on for 4 days leaving
over 2,000 casualities as the poorly trained goverment troops
of Calderon armed by Nicaragua's dictator Somoza and Figueres
and his army prepared to attack San José (the capital)
the goverment army surrendered. Calderón was exiled and
many of his followers met the firing squad. Communism was banned
and new social reforms were set in place as well as drawing up
a new constitution. Apartheid laws were abolished, women received
the right to vote, and all banks and insurance companies were
nationalized. Presidential term limits were established and an
electoral tribunal was set up to guarantee that future elections
would be fair, declared neutrality, then handed over power to
the rightful elected candidate, Otilio Ulate and stepped down.
Don Pepe became a national hero and would later go on to win two
separate elections for President in 1953 and in 1970 as the leader
of the party he founded in 1951, the PLN (National Liberation
Party) Interestingly enough, these two parties, the PUSC and the
PLN have basically exchanged power at each election and in fact,
both the sons of Calderon and Figueres have been elected to the
Presidency. Calderon in 1990 and Figueres in 1994. Unfortunately,
this back and forth exchange of power has also led to stagnation.
Nepotism and corruption but on the good side has maintained political
stability and also brought peace to Central America through the
efforts of President Arias the Nobel Peace Prize winner. The past
election did show 3 parties with good possibilities and led to
a runoff election. Currently, tourism and high tech have replaced
the old foreign income generator of coffee and bananas as the
main income earners for the country. While far from perfect there
is no place I would rather be than Costa Rica and once you have
lived here, I believe you too will agree.