Francisco Robles GarcÃÂa (Juan Francisco de Robles y GarcÃÂa; 5 May 1811 â March 1893) was an Ecuadorian military officer and politician who served as the sixth President of Ecuador from 16 October 1856 to 31 August 1859. He was the first Ecuadorian president chosen in a relatively competitive constitutional election of the Marcist period and governed during one of the deepest crises of the nineteenth-century republic.
RoblesâÂÂs administration expanded schools and backed liberal reforms associated with the post-1845 Marcist order, including the abolition of the Indigenous tribute inherited from the colonial era. His presidency is chiefly remembered, however, for the 1857 YcazaâÂÂPritchett contract, by which Ecuador attempted to settle part of its foreign âÂÂEnglish debtâ through land concessions in the Oriente and on the coast, provoking Peruvian protests and helping trigger the PeruâÂÂEcuador crisis of 1858âÂÂ1860.
Under pressure from PeruâÂÂs blockade and from domestic rivals, Robles moved the seat of government first to Riobamba and then to Guayaquil, but in 1859 Ecuador fragmented into competing regional governments in what Ecuadorian historiography often calls the Año Terrible (âÂÂTerrible YearâÂÂ). Robles was overthrown, exiled to Chile and later Peru, and eventually returned to Guayaquil, where he died in March 1893.
Robles was born in Guayaquil on 5 May 1811, the son of the merchant and landowner Lupercio de Robles Pacheco and Manuela GarcÃÂa y Coronel. He belonged to a prominent coastal family with commercial and rural interests in the Guayas basin. The expanded Guayaquil genealogy compiled by Pedro Robles y Chambers and later updated by Ezio Garay Arellano identifies him as âÂÂJuan Francisco Robles y GarcÃÂaâÂÂ, baptized in the Iglesia Matriz of Guayaquil, and places him within a wider network of Robles, Santistevan, Avilés, and related elite families of the city and its hinterland.
Robles studied at the Escuela Náutica de Guayaquil under the direction of the British-born Ecuadorian naval officer Juan Illingworth Hunt. During the Gran ColombiaâÂÂPeru War, he took part as a young officer in the naval combat of Punta Malpelo on 31 August 1828, one of the formative actions in the naval history of the former Gran Colombia and Peru.
By the 1830s Robles had begun to distinguish himself in both military and political life. During the Marcist Revolution of 1845, which overthrew the dominance of former president Juan José Flores, he supported the anti-Florean movement from the river approaches to Guayaquil while commanding the war steamer Guayas. Under President José MarÃÂa Urbina, Robles rose rapidly: he served as governor of Guayas, commander general of Guayaquil, deputy for ManabÃÂ, and Minister of War before becoming the official candidate of the ruling liberal camp in the 1856 election.
Robles assumed the presidency on 16 October 1856 as the political heir of Urbina and the Marcist liberals. His government sought administrative modernization and educational expansion. Contemporary and later Ecuadorian accounts credit his administration with the founding or reorganization of several schools and colleges, including educational institutions in Latacunga, Loja, Ambato, and Cuenca, and with issuing new regulations for primary education.
One of the major liberal reforms associated with RoblesâÂÂs presidency was the abolition of the Indigenous tribute, a colonial-era fiscal burden imposed on Indigenous communities. In practice the measure removed a longstanding and discriminatory tax, but it also weakened government revenues at a time when EcuadorâÂÂs treasury was already fragile. Historians have therefore treated the reform as both socially important and fiscally destabilizing in the context of the later crisis of his administration.
RoblesâÂÂs most consequential foreign-policy move was the attempt to reduce EcuadorâÂÂs old British debt by assigning public lands to creditors. On 21 September 1857 Ecuador signed the YcazaâÂÂPritchett contractâÂÂalso spelled IcazaâÂÂPritchettâÂÂthrough representatives Francisco Pablo Ycaza and George S. Pritchett. The agreement contemplated concessions in eastern territories and in parts of the coast, including areas in Esmeraldas, Los RÃÂos, and Guayas, as payment for the âÂÂEnglish debtâÂÂ.
Peru protested on the grounds that some of the lands offered lay in regions whose sovereignty remained disputed, especially in the Amazonian hinterland. The dispute sharpened EcuadorâÂÂs long-running boundary conflict with Peru and pushed the Robles government into an increasingly dangerous diplomatic confrontation.
Relations deteriorated further in 1858, when Peru, under President Ramón Castilla, escalated pressure on Ecuador after the two sides failed to resolve both the debt-land issue and their territorial disagreement. Peru authorized coercive action and imposed a naval blockade on EcuadorâÂÂs coast in late 1858, depriving the Ecuadorian state of access to Guayaquil customs revenues, its principal fiscal lifeline.
Facing the blockade and growing political opposition in Quito, Robles moved the capital from Quito to Riobamba on 4 November 1858 and then to Guayaquil on 12 January 1859 in order to direct the defense of the coast more effectively. The move deepened divisions between the coast and highlands and helped trigger rebellions against his authority.
In 1859 Ecuador entered the phase later remembered as the Año Terrible. Rival governments appeared in different regions: a provisional regime in Quito associated with Gabriel GarcÃÂa Moreno, autonomous or semi-autonomous authorities in Cuenca and Loja, and later the Guayaquil regime of Guillermo Franco Herrera. RoblesâÂÂs supporters under Urbina temporarily checked the Quito opposition at the Battle of Tumbuco in June 1859, forcing GarcÃÂa Moreno to flee and seek aid in Peru, but the victory did not restore durable national unity.
As the blockade, civil war, and regional fragmentation worsened, Robles lost effective control of the republic. The crisis eventually opened the way for a new alignment between GarcÃÂa Moreno and Juan José Flores and, after the defeat of Guillermo Franco in 1860, for the conservative reconstruction of the Ecuadorian state under GarcÃÂa Moreno.
After his overthrow in 1859, Robles was sent into exile in Chile and later settled in Peru. Like many Ecuadorian military and political leaders of the era, he remained involved in exile politics. Sources tied to the liberal tradition maintain that he continued to oppose the GarcÃÂa Moreno regime from abroad and had links to later anti-government movements organized by Ecuadorian expatriates in Peru.
Robles eventually returned to Ecuador. During the period of Ignacio de Veintemilla, he briefly re-entered public life and later served as collector of salt revenues in Babahoyo. In his final years he withdrew from active politics and devoted more attention to his estates and family affairs, especially those managed by his son Ignacio.
The exact date of his death remains disputed in accessible sources, but genealogical and biographical references agree that he died in Guayaquil in March 1893.
Robles is generally regarded as one of the last presidents of the Marcist period and as a transitional figure between the liberal coastal politics of the 1840sâÂÂ1850s and the conservative reorganization of the 1860s. His government is remembered for educational reform and abolition of the Indigenous tribute, but above all for the debt-and-territory crisis that precipitated the PeruâÂÂEcuador confrontation and the disintegration of central authority in 1859.
Robles married Carmen de Santistevan y Avilés in Guayaquil on 5 November 1835. The Guayaquil genealogical compilation of Pedro Robles y Chambers, in the revised edition directed by Ezio Garay Arellano, lists three children of that marriage and four additional children with Manuela Avilés, a Daule woman later recorded in the parish of La Soledad.
Robles y Chambers records that Robles also had children with Manuela Avilés, born in Daule circa 1833 and listed in the census of La Soledad in 1871.