Julio Acosta García

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Template:Short description Template:Family name hatnote Template:Infobox officeholder Julio Acosta García (23 May 1872 – 6 July 1954) served as 24th President of Costa Rica from 1920 to 1924.<ref>El Tribunal Supremo de Elecciones: Presidentes de la República de Costa Rica</ref>

Early life

Rafael Julio del Rosario Acosta García was born on 23 May 1872 in San Ramón, Alajuela, Costa Rica to Jesús de la Rosa García Zumbado and Juan Vicente Acosta Chaves. His family was of Spanish heritage, and he had eight brothers: Aquiles, Máximo, Emilio, Raúl, Ulises, Luis, Ricardo and Horacio.Template:Sfn By the time Acosta was born, his family had relocated from San José to San Ramón, where his father and three of his uncles operated the Three Brothers Mine (Template:Langx) and operated a farm.Template:Sfn His mother, known as Jesusita, was from a family of clergymen.Template:Sfn

Acosta began his education in San José and started his secondary education at the University Institute of San José, a preparatory school run by Juan Fernández Ferraz. He completed his secondary schooling at the Colegio de San Luis Gonzaga in Cartago.Template:Sfn He was fascinated by politics from a young age and became involved in several youth political movements in his twenties in which several radicals were arrested.Template:Sfn Returning to Alajuela, he took a job at a banana plantation and served on the school board, before entering politics.Template:Sfn

Early career

Between 1902 and 1906 Acosta served as an elected deputy for the Alajuela Province to the Constitutional Congress.Template:Sfn In 1907, he was sent to El Salvador to serve as Consul-General. In April 1910, he married María Natalia Elena Gallegos Rosales in San Salvador and within two years had been appointed as the resident minister in El Salvador.Template:Sfn In mid-1915, Acosta was recalled to Costa Rica and appointed to serve in the office of Secretary of State for the Office of Foreign Relations, Justice, Grace, and Worship.Template:Sfn<ref name=IntWW>The International Who's Who 1943–44. 8th edition. George Allen & Unwin, London, 1943, p. 4.</ref>

One of the issues which concerned Acosta was a border dispute with Panama, which had long been pending.Template:Sfn The dispute had arisen in 1910, when after Panama was separated from Gran Colombia the boundary with Costa Rica required clarification. The two parties entered into an agreement that arbiters would decide the boundary. On the Atlantic Coast, the French arbiter had given territory from Costa Rica to Panama and both sides accepted the ruling. On the Pacific Coast, the arbiter required Panama to cede territory to Costa Rica. Panama protested the ruling and the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States Edward Douglass White issued the "White Ruling" in 1914, which reaffirmed the territory on the Pacific was to be ceded to Costa Rica.Template:Sfn Still unresolved, Acosta proposed in 1916 that the United States occupy the disputed territory to allow engineers from each country to survey the boundary and develop a resolution.Template:Sfn During his tenure as foreign minister, Acosta traveled frequently.Template:Sfn He was the first Minister to make official visits to all the countries of Central America.Template:Sfn

On 27 January 1917, Acosta lost his post as minister when the brothers Federico Tinoco and Joaquín Tinoco led a coup d'état to overthrow the government.Template:Sfn He and his family fled to his wife's parents farm, La Esperanza, where Acosta worked as a farm manager.Template:Sfn He also soon found work in the editorial office of the Diario del Salvador newspaper, writing about the unrest in Costa Rica.Template:Sfn After Tinoco was forced to resign in 1919 and the temporary president Juan Bautista Quirós Segura ceded power to interim president Francisco Aguilar Barquero, Acosta was invited to return to Costa Rica.Template:Sfn He became a candidate for president on 8 September 1919, when the Constitutional Party selected him as their representative. Elected with 89% of the vote on 7 December, he took office officially on 8 May 1920 as the 24th President of Costa Rica.Template:Sfn

Presidency

Acosta was a Progressive president and set about almost immediately to roll back the repressive anticlerical and dictatorial policies of Tinoco, making promises to reform electoral processes, reform border disputes and operate a government without the corruption or squandering the public trust.Template:Sfn He favored giving women the vote,Template:Sfn established a pension program for veterans,Template:Sfn proposed renegotiation of debts to stabilize the currency,Template:Sfn and normalized the relationship of the state with Pope Benedict XV.Template:Sfn During his administration, the Costa Rican Academy of Language, the Central Bank of Costa Rica, and an international cablegram service were established.Template:Sfn Legislation was also introduced to protect minors, regulate gaming, reform insurance,Template:Sfn create the Police Corps,Template:Sfn establish pedagogical training, develop school inspection and teacher pension programs, and establish free and compulsory education for all children aged 8 to 15.Template:Sfn Creating the Public Health Board, Acosta's administration also expanded the Medical Board to include regulations for homeopathy and osteopathy, as well as public assistance for the medical needs of the poor.Template:Sfn

Acosta requested membership in the League of Nations to improve the country's international diplomacy, which was granted on 20 January 1921.Template:Sfn Regionally, he proposed a pact that would create the Federal Republic of Central America. Because of on-going disputes with Nicaragua and Panama, the members of the proposed union were to be Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala and Honduras. Though the legislatures of the other three countries approved a federation, the Costa Rican congress rejected the proposal.Template:Sfn

In February 1921 the border dispute with Panama reemerged, when rumors of Panamanian expansion into the disputed territory caused Acosta to send an expeditionary force to evaluate what was going on.Template:Sfn Panama's response to the entrance of troops into the disputed territory resulted in their request for protection from the United States.Template:Sfn The celebrations for the centennial of Panama's liberation from Spain sparked nationalist feeling in Panama, and, fueled by the press, the border dispute quickly moved from a diplomatic conflict to a military one.Template:Sfn The Template:Ill lasted from 21 February to 5 March 1921, with Costa Rica invading Panamanian territory in the Almirante and Bocas del Toro Districts and Panama's forces invading the Puntarenas Province of Costa Rica. The United States sent warships enroute and the League of Nations urged peaceful solutions.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Diplomatic discussion followed, but delays on the Panamanian side forced the American arbiter to demand a withdrawal of Panama from the Coto Region on 23 August, ending the matter.Template:Sfn

Later career

Acosta's last message to Congress was made on 1 May 1924.Template:Sfn He and his family moved to Paris for three years where he worked for the International Committee of the Red Cross. Returning to Costa Rica in 1927, he continued to work with the Red CrossTemplate:Sfn until 1929, when he was appointed as a member to the Mortgage Credit Board. In 1932, he was elected as a deputy for San José for the Constitutional Congress, serving from 1932 to 1936. Appointed to the Board of the National Bank of Costa Rica, he served until 1938, when he was again elected as a deputy for Congress.Template:Sfn When his term ended in 1942, Acosta became the manager of the Social Security Fund and the following February assumed the presidency of the National Civil Defense Board.Template:Sfn In 1944, he was reappointed to the post of Foreign Minister for the Office of the Secretary of State. During that time, he served as Costa Rica's signatory in the 1945 convention in San Francisco for the signing of the United Nations Charter.Template:Sfn In May 1947, Acosta suffered a stroke and had to withdraw from his office.Template:Sfn

Death and legacy

Acosta died on 6 July 1954 in San José and was buried in the General Cemetery after an official funeral. In addition to the numerous honors he received during his life, there are several schools named in his honor in Costa Rica. A monument was erected in his memory in Parque Morazán in San José.Template:Sfn

References

Citations

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Bibliography

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