Argentina

CHAPTER XXIII

Chapter 237,357 wordsPublic domain

INFORMATION FOR ENGLISH TRAVELLERS

The first information which the traveller seeks is, naturally, how to get to Buenos Aires, and though such information is very accessible, it seldom seems to come his way, for not uncommonly persons are found who appear to have no idea that there is any route except that which they hit on by chance, and if in the course of the journey any change becomes necessary, they usually have considerable difficulty in discovering the means of making the change. Of course any agent will furnish a number of particulars, and any given line will give the fullest information about itself. The ocean voyage is not made as quickly as it might be, for the liners proceed first to Brazil and call at one or two ports, and there are also several stops made in Europe and the islands. The best thing to do is to take one of the fine vessels of the Pacific Steam Navigation Company from Liverpool. The boats call at La Pallice--La Rochelle, Corunna, Vigo, Leixoes (Oporto), Lisbon, St. Vincent, Rio de Janeiro. The only drawback is that the vessels do not go to Buenos Aires, but stop at Montevideo; however, the passengers are speedily transhipped, and the whole voyage lasts about twenty-four days. In comfort and safety the service reaches the highest possible standards, and the traveller can, if he wishes, continue his voyage southward and proceed up the Pacific Coast as far as Panama; this is a charming trip, for the Pacific is usually smooth, and some of the very best boats engage in the coasting service. There are many other English lines--the Royal Mail Steam Packet, Southampton to Buenos Aires, the Lamport and Holt from Liverpool, the Harrison Line, Houlder Bros., the Houston Line, the Allan, the Nelson, the David MacIver, all from Liverpool, the Prince Line from London. The New Zealand Shipping Company's boats, on the homeward voyage only, call at Montevideo.

There are many foreign lines. France is represented by the famous Messageries from Bordeaux, and also by the Soc. Genérale de Transports from Genoa, Marseilles, and Barcelona, and the Chargeurs Réunis from Havre. The Italian boats from Genoa and Barcelona are very numerous. A Spanish line, the Cia Transatlantica de Barcelona, plies between the latter port and Buenos Aires. Germany has the Hamburg-American, the Norddeutscher Lloyd, and the Kosmos. There is also a Dutch line. The Italian boats are large, well-fitted, and fast. If time were an important object, probably the quickest way would be to take an Italian boat to Barcelona, whence London is rapidly reached by rail, but though there is a good accommodation, both British and foreign, it is safe to say that the P.S.N. Co. will be found the most satisfactory.

The traveller ought to carry with him everything he needs, and his needs should be few, because luggage is a great trouble. Unlike some South American lines, the railway companies in Argentina are responsible in that respect, but porters and others are exorbitant, and a piece of luggage rapidly devours its own value in transport charges. Exactly the same clothing should be taken as in England, and ordinary riding kit should be added, also a soft hat, as affording a better protection against the sun than a hard felt or cap. Revolvers or other weapons are unnecessary; indeed nothing is required but what is constantly used at home.

Banks are to be found everywhere, so there is no difficulty about money. The Argentine dollar, which is in universal use, is worth about 1s. 9d.

The hotels at Buenos Aires, as has been said, are not remarkably good, and they are certainly expensive. All are noisy, for the trams run early and late, and a very high price has to be paid for good rooms. But any one who is prepared to pay handsomely can make himself very comfortable. As regards up-country hotels, it is not possible to give a favourable account. At Rosario there are several good-sized houses of entertainment, but they have no particular merit, except that they are cheaper than in the capital. In this rapidly expanding city a very large hotel is being built, which will certainly supply a long-felt want, and doubtless it will be much superior to anything at present to be found at Rosario. At Mendoza there is a large hotel of very handsome appearance, but probably the best accommodation there is to be afforded by a hotel kept by a genial old Frenchman, who has almost abandoned the Parisian in favour of the tongue of Castile. The courtyard, dotted with fruit-trees, and the low buildings with their screened doors, are strongly reminiscent of an Indian up-country hotel. Hotels in other provincial towns are by no means good. It is from the cooking that the traveller will chiefly suffer, for there is usually little to complain of on the score of cleanliness, and the rooms are large, though bare. The Argentine has a good appetite, but he appears to be content to satisfy it chiefly with meat, and this is more often tough than not. The menu contains an imposing array of dishes, which are served without stint, but they are almost all beef, mutton, or veal in some form or other, and this diet, moderate in quality and cooked without art, is extremely monotonous. The light wines of the country are a valuable help in getting through these indigestible meals, and the white wine is particularly good. The peaches, grapes, and other fruits are of excellent quality, but they are not always easy to obtain.

As regards travelling in Argentina, the traveller will find no difficulty as long as he keeps to the railway lines, which give a splendid service to almost every part of the country except Patagonia. When the railway fails, he will of course have to make his own arrangements for horses and mules and the like. An extremely useful work is the fifth edition of the Mulhalls' "Handbook of the River Plate." A new edition of this book is urgently needed,[158] for the last appeared in 1885, and the extremely full statistical information is quite out of date, and travelling in the country, which the handbook well describes, is much easier than it was in those days. But the writers draw up with great care a number of interesting routes, and the traveller, using them as a foundation, can easily bring the information up to date, and will find an interesting study in noting the wonderful changes which have come over Argentina in exactly a quarter of a century. In the bibliography an attempt has been made to enumerate the important books on the whole subject, and that of Captain Musters on Patagonia may be recommended. A great many wanderers in the early part of the nineteenth century have left highly interesting accounts of their adventurous travels. In those days ferocious Indians, who massacred every small party of white men at sight, revolutionary soldiers, and cruel bandits added greatly to the dangers of such excursions, and a journey across the Pampas was looked upon as almost equivalent to taking leave of the world. A young gentleman in the first edition of his book remarks with gentle melancholy that, being disappointed in his hopes of happiness by a "beloved female," he had decided to travel in the Plate district. His editorial friend appends a note that the gentleman had been last heard of in a remote part of Chile many years ago, and was believed to have perished. However, the traveller happily returned and published a second edition or work in which he accounted for his long silence by a series of hardships, among which a lengthy term of imprisonment was only one item. Among these books that of Head is one of the most entertaining, but Darwin's "Voyage of the _Beagle_," must be held to be probably the best work ever published on Argentina, and he observed the country at a most interesting period. Adventures would be hard to find nowadays in the Pampas, but the greater part of Patagonia is as wild and inaccessible as ever, and in many regions of the Gran Chaco the explorer carries his life in his hands owing to the fierce disposition of the Indians.

Indeed, about Argentina as usually visited by Europeans everything is so simple in the matter of getting there and travelling north, south, or west, that there is very little to say, and no more special information is required than in a journey to the United States. But the pioneer still has ample scope in Argentina without crossing the frontier. The impenetrable forests of the north have formed a rich field of exploration for Mr. W. S. Barclay, of the Royal Geographical Society, and there and in the neighbouring wilds of Paraguay the primitive ravage still wanders. "In 1893," says Mr. Barclay,[159] "a party of 700 native-born Australians took up land in the forests of northern Paraguay. In these new surroundings they deteriorated to such an extent that in 1905 the remnants of the original settlers, with their few descendants, attracted the serious attention of the South American Mission, whose ordinary field of work lies among the Indian aborigines of the Chaco. In the tropic forest a man's moral and mental horizon appears to shrink in direct proportion to the range of his physical vision. No aborigines yet discovered, not even the canoe-dwellers round Cape Horn or the black-fellows of Australia, have sunk to the brutish degradation of the Bootcudo club Indians, who smash their trails through the bamboo-smothered forests at the back of Parana and Sao Paulo states." In fact, from Colombia to Entre Rios there lies a tract which will hardly be fully explored, certainly not settled, by the end of the century. Again there are vast fields in the Andes and Patagonia of which many explorers have taken advantage, but considering their importance, due to their being the actual territory or borderland of two great and flourishing Republics, the mountains and plains of the south may be considered to have been neglected.

In the matter of information for travellers to South America, mention must be made of the South American edition of the _Times_, published December 28, 1909. This colossal number of 56 pages contains an invaluable store of accurate articles by the best authorities on South America, and Argentina has its full share. It is characteristic of our history in Argentina that this fine piece of work is due to private enterprise.

To celebrate the Centenary of the Revolution of the 25th of May, 1810, there will be held this year a group of exhibitions in Buenos Aires. They will be as follows: The International Exhibition of Railways and Land Transport; the International Exhibition of Agricultural and Pastoral Products; the International Exhibition of Hygiene; the National Exhibition of Industry; the International Exhibition of Art. There will also be held the International Congress of America, and the International Congress of South American Railways.

The Railway Exhibition will have its site in the city itself. English exhibitors have applied for a far larger space than any of their foreign rivals. The Agricultural Exhibition will be held in the suburb of Palermo, and is sure to present splendid stock. Of cattle (excluding dairy cattle) there will be the following classes--Shorthorns (Durhams), Polled Durhams, Herefords, Polled Angus, Red Polled, Red Lincoln, Devon. The classes of sheep will be--Merinos, Lincolns, Leicesters, Romney Marsh, Southdowns, Shropshires, Oxford and Suffolk, Hampshires.

The increased number of English people visiting Buenos Aires this year will add to the interest which the average newspaper reader takes in this country. Our stake in the country is already so large that, well known as Argentina now is compared to most parts of South America, it is surprising that the country does not fill a larger space in the public mind. The English railways are being fast extended by English capital. English farmers and ranchers are busily at work, and English blood is improving the breeds of sheep and cattle. It is certain, therefore, that our relation with Argentina will become yearly closer and still more mutually advantageous, and the more we learn about the country the better. We have to depend almost entirely upon private enterprise, for, as has been shown in an earlier part of this book, our Government does little in the way of collecting information and putting it in an accessible and attractive form. There are many ways in which the Foreign Office could help traders and others without extravagant expense or incurring the suspicion of grand-motherly legislation. However, these defects are balanced by the splendid enterprise and liberal attitude of private companies which have for years been instructing our countrymen in South American affairs. The railway offices, whether in London or Buenos Aires, are ever ready to give facilities to those who wish to study the industries of Argentina and the same is the case with other commercial organisations. The building up and consolidating of our position in Argentina is one of the proudest exploits of English industry.

Argentina is a nation of which the historical continuity was very roughly broken, and within the last half-century she had to begin her life over again with less help from the past than is afforded to most peoples by tradition and historical associations. Kept in subjection by the Spaniards as one of the less important corners of their dominions, and regarded with a certain measure of indifference and even suspicion as being a discordant factor in the Colonial system and its great industry of exporting gold and silver, Argentina owed her spiritual and intellectual progress chiefly to the Jesuits and her material progress chiefly to benevolent Governors and spirited Creoles. The first rude shock was the expulsion of the Jesuits, and this was followed by a much ruder breach of historical continuity in the Revolution. Misfortune and incompetence long paralysed her, and in fifty years she lost most of what was good in the old system and gained little good from the new. Then the revival came. It was a revival in material prosperity, and also in courage and self-reliance, strenuously fostered by one or two great men. She has prospered beyond the utmost expectations of the world, but hitherto has experienced the usual fate of new countries in failing to grow in wealth of ideas in proportion to her increase in material riches.

One good legacy she had from old days--the Spanish love of liberty. This became perverted as years of anarchy and tyranny ran their demoralising course, and now it is somewhat overgrown by abuses which have been described in the earlier chapters.

But it is not extinct, and political theory is certainly better than political practice, and the people themselves are keen and shrewd critics of their system of government. As they gain more political experience and better assimilate their immigrants, they will force reform after reform upon the office-holders. In one respect they have followed Spain too closely. Madrid usurped the rights of the local governments in Spain, Buenos Aires has done the same. As far as political power goes, the preponderance of the Argentine capital is inevitable and probably beneficent, for the various Provinces are small, weak, and thinly populated; they need a strong and intelligent head. But it is unfortunate that the various provincial centres should be neglected, and that Buenos Aires should be the Mecca of every Argentine. The course of trade is tending somewhat towards decentralisation, and Rosario and Bahia Blanca are growing perhaps as rapidly as Buenos Aires. But it would be well if the many picturesque old Spanish towns in remote districts became, instead of seats of somewhat unimportant governments, real centres of light and leading. There is somewhat of a tendency to regard them as mere places of business at which a man must work until he has time or money to spend in the capital.

Another Spanish tradition which Argentina has received is that of religion. This, it may be feared, has been dulled among the intellectual classes, but the numerous, large, and well-kept churches, well attended by reverent worshippers, show that the tradition is not forgotten. In course of time, when the glamour of new wealth is less powerful, the people of Argentina will turn in increasing numbers for teaching from the few who are now keeping alive the intellectual and spiritual life.

It is certain that Argentines are essentially teachable. They welcome foreigners and travel to seats of civilisation to educate their children and to learn new ideas. They are extremely sensitive to foreign opinion, and newspapers constantly argue against this or that course by urging that it would give other nations an unfavourable impression of Argentina. In this they are aided by their Government. It has been necessary to say some hard things about it, but this may be said as a set-off--that the Government, on its bureaucratic side at least, represents the considered intellect of the nation and is intelligent and indefatigable in encouraging the best methods in commerce and industry, in beautifying the cities and raising splendid edifices to serve as homes for useful institutions. It has many methods and many enterprises which England might imitate with advantage. Working in a new country, while lacking in traditions to guide it, the Government has, on the other hand, the less rubbish to impede its progress and can make spacious plans.

England has had a long and close connection with Argentina, and each is deeply interested in the other's prosperity. The country may become as great a political force in the world as she is now an industrial, and England, the peace-preserving nation, will then have a redoubled interest, for Argentina has showed herself above all Latin-American nations ever resolute to maintain peace and submit all reasonable claims to arbitration, and while not abusing her superior strength, she sets an example to other nations of firmness, dignity, and good faith in foreign politics. Her increase, then, in power and population, will be for the good of South America and for the good of the world.

Although within the limits of a single volume it is impossible to make an adequate presentation of a country so vast and varied as Argentina, an attempt has been made to view this wonderful land and people as a whole, and it is hoped that this sketch, though inadequate, may be judged not untrustworthy.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Much information is to be found in small publications too numerous to be specified. Many are issued by the Oficina Meterologica Argentina at Buenos Aires and by other Government Departments, and a large number of pamphlets, newspapers, and periodicals, both current and extinct, may be consulted with advantage. This list aims at giving a catalogue of useful books dealing with the history of Argentina and the country in general.

HISTORICAL.

Akers, C. E. A History of South America (1854-1904). London, 1904.

Angelis, Pedro de. Coleccion de Obras y Documentos. 3 vols. Buenos Aires, 1900.

Anonymous--

An account of the Spanish Settlements in South America. London, 1904.

The Argentine Republic, by a Friend of Free Government. London, 1865.

An Authentic Narrative of the ... Expedition ... of ... Gen. Craufurd. London, 1808.

Les Dissensions des Républiques de La Plata. Paris, 1865.

La Doctrina Drago. London, 1908.

Emancipation of South America. _Edinburgh Review_, January, 1809.

The History of Don Francisco Miranda's Attempt, &c. Boston, 1810.

The Missiones Award. Washington, 1895.

Report ... upon the Differences ... with regard to the Frontier between the Argentine and Chilian Republics. 2 vols. London, 1900.

Arcos, S. La Plata. Étude Historique. Paris, 1865.

Blanchard and Ramsay. The Trial at Large of Lieut-Gen. Whitelocke. London, 1808.

Blanco White, J. El Español. 8 vols. London, 1810-14.

Bonnycastle, R. H. Spanish America. London, 1818.

Brackenridge, H. M. Voyage to South America. 2 vols. Baltimore, 1819.

Brossard, Alfred de. Considérations sur les Républiques de la Plata. Paris, 1850.

Calvo, C. Coleccion Completa de los Tratados de la América Latina. 16 vols. Paris, 1862-7.

Cole. J. W. Memoirs of British Generals. 2 vols. London, 1856.

Dawson, T. C. The South American Republics. 2 vols. London, 1893.

Deberle, Alfred. Histoire de l'Amérique du Sud. Paris, 1897.

Dominguez, Luis, L. Historia Argentina. Buenos Aires, 1870.

Echeverria, Estevan. Insurreccion del Sud. Buenos Aires, 1854.

Estrado, J. M. La Politica Liberal bajo la Tirannia de Rosas. Buenos Aires, 1873.

Funes, G. Ensayo de la Historia Civil del Paraguay, Buenos Aires, y Tucuman. 3 vols. Buenos Aires, 1816-17.

Hernandez, José. El Gaucho Martin Fierro. Buenos Aires, 1874.

Herrera, Antonio de. History of America, Vol. VI. Translated by Captain John Stevens. London, 1726.

Herrera, Antonio de. M. Purchas, His Pilgrimage by Samuel Purchas, B.D., Vol. XIV. Glasgow, 1906.

Kennedy, C. The Drago Doctrine. _North American Review_, New York, July 31, 1907.

King, Colonel J. A. Twenty-four Years in the Argentine Republic. London, 1846.

Kirkpatrick, F. A. The Spanish Dominions in America. The Establishment of Independence in Spanish America. The Cambridge Modern History, Vol. X., Chaps. VIII. and IX.

Lopez, V. F. Manual de la Historia Argentina. Buenos Aires, 1907.

Mitré, Bartolomé. Historia de Belgrano. 2 vols. Buenos Aires, 1859.

Mitré, Bartolomé. Historia de San Martin. 3 vols. Buenos Aires, 1887-8.

Moses, Benjamin. The Establishment of Spanish Rule in America. New York, 1898.

Mulhall, M. G. The English in South America. Buenos Aires, 1878.

Parish, Sir Woodbine. Buenos Ayres and the Provinces of the Rio de la Plata. London, 1852.

Payne, E. J. History of the New World called America. Oxford, 1892-4.

Pradt, Archbishop M. de. The Colonies and the Present American Revolution. Translated from the French. London, 1817.

Robertson, W. The History of South America. 4 vols. 12th ed. London, 1812.

Rodney and Graham. The Reports ... of South America. London, 1819.

Root, J. W. Spain and its Colonies. London, 1898.

Sarmiento, D. F. Life in the Argentine Republic in the Days of the Tyrants. Translated from the Spanish by Mrs. Horace Mann. New York, 1868.

Sarmiento, D. F. Vida de Facundo Quiroga. Santiago, 1851.

Southey, Robert. History of Brazil. 3 vols. London, 1810-19.

Torrente, D. M. Historia de la Revolucion Hispano-Americana. 3 vols. Madrid, 1829-30.

Watson, R. G. Spanish and Portuguese South America. 2 vols. London, 1884.

Wilcocke, S. H. History of the Viceroyalty of Buenos Ayres. London, 1807.

Winsor, J. History of America. 8 vols. London, 1886-9.

Zinny, A. Biografia Historica. Buenos Aires. 1875.

Zinny, A. Historia de las Provincias Argentinas. 4 vols. Buenos Aires, 1879-82.

GENERAL.

Akers, C. E. Argentine, Patagonia, &c. London, 1893.

Akers, C. E. Article in _Enc. Brit._, Vol. XXV., 10th ed. London, 1902.

Alberdi, J. B. Confederacion Argentina. Valparaiso, 1854.

Alcock, F. Trade and Travel in South America. London, 1903.

Alsina, J. A. La Immigracion Europea en la Republica Argentina. Buenos Aires, 1903.

Ameghino, Florentino. La Antiguëdad del Hombre en La Plata. 2 vols. Paris, 1880.

Andrews, Captain. A Journey from Buenos Ayres, &c. 2 vols. London, 1827.

Anonymous--

The River Plate as a Field for Immigration. London.

Azara, Felix de. Essais sur l'Histoire Naturelle. 2 vols. Paris, 1801.

Barclay, W. S. To the Falls of Iguazu. Buenos Aires, 1903.

Barclay, W. S. The Land of Magellanes. _Geog. Journ._, January, 1904.

Barclay, W. S. The River Parana. _Geog. Journ._, January, 1909.

Bernandez, M. The Argentine Estancia. Buenos Aires, 1903.

Bonelli, L. Hugh de. Travels in Bolivia, with a Tour across the Pampas to Buenos Aires. London, 1854.

Bougainville, Louis de. Voyage autour du Monde. Paris, 1771.

Bresson, André. Sept Années dans l'Amérique Australe.

Burmeister, H. Description Physique de la République Argentine. Paris, 1876-8.

Campbell, W. D. Through Patagonia. London, 1901.

Caldcleugh, Alexander. Travels in South America. 2 vols. London, 1825.

Carpenter, F. G. South America. New York, 1900.

Child, Theodore. The South American Republics. New York, 1892.

Church, Colonel G. E. South America: An Outline of its Physical Geography. _Geog. Journ._, April, 1901.

Church, Colonel G. E. Argentine Geography and the Ancient Pampean Sea. _Geog. Journ._, October, 1898.

Conway, Sir Martin. Aconcagua and Tierra del Fuego. London, 1902.

Cunninghame-Graham, R. B. A Vanished Arcadia. London, 1901.

Daireaux, Émile. La Vie et les Moeurs à la Plata. 2 vols. Paris, 1889.

Darwin, Charles. Journal of Researches during the Voyage of H.M.S. _Beagle_. London, 1843.

Davie, J. C. Letters from Paraguay, &c. London, 1805.

Davie, J. C. Letters from Buenos Ayres and Chile. 2 vols. London, 1819.

Dixie, Lady Florence (Julius Beerbohm). Across Patagonia. London, 1880.

Dixie, Lady Florence (Julius Beerbohm). Wanderings in Patagonia. London, 1879.

D'Orbigny, Alcide. L'Homme Américaine. Paris, 1839.

D'Orbigny, Alcide. Voyage dans l'Amérique Méridionale. 4 vols. Paris, 1835-39.

D'Ursel, Charles. Sud Amérique. Paris, 1879.

Evans, Patrick F. From Peru to the Plate Overland. London, 1899.

Falkner, Thomas. A Description of Patagonia. Hereford, 1774.

Farrell, H. W. The Argentine Year Book. London, 1909.

Ford, I. N. Tropical America. London, 1893.

Fitzroy, Admiral R. The Surveying Voyages of H.M.'s ships _Adventure_ and _Beagle_. London, 1839.

Gallois, Eugéne. En Amérique du Sud. Paris, 1906.

Gibson, Herbert. Sheep Breeding Industry in the Argentine Republic. Buenos Aires, 1893.

Gonnard, René. L'Immigration Européenne au XIX^e Siécle. Paris, 1906.

Gonzalez, Meliton. El Gran Chaco Argentino. Buenos Aires, 1890.

Granillo, A. Tucuman. Buenos Aires, 1872.

Guilaine, Louis. La République Argentine. Paris, 1889.

Haigh, S. Sketches of Buenos Aires and Chile. London, 1829.

Harrisse, Henry. John Cabot. London, 1896.

Hawkesworth, John. An Account of the Voyages. 2 vols. Dublin, 1775.

Head, Captain F. B. Reports relating to the Failure of the Rio Plata Mining Association. London, 1827.

Head, Captain F. B. Royal Notes taken during some Rapid Journeys across the Pampas. London, 1826.

Helps, Sir Arthur. The Spanish Conquests in America. London, 1900.

Holdich, Sir T. H. The Countries of the King's Award. London, 1904.

Holdich, Sir T. H. The Patagonian Andes. _Geog. Journ._, February, 1904.

Hudson, W. H. The Naturalist in La Plata. London, 1903.

Jordan, W. Leighton. Article in _Enc. Brit._, Vol. II., 9th ed. London, 1875.

Keane, A. H., and Markham, C. R. Central and South America. London, 2nd ed., 1909.

Keltie, J. Scott. The Statesman's Year Book. London, 1909.

Killik, S. H. M. Manual of Argentine Railways. London, 1910.

Koebel, W. H. Modern Argentina. London, 1907.

Latzina, F. L'Agriculture et L'Élevage dans la République Argentine. Buenos Aires, 1891.

Latzina, F. Diccionario Geografico Argentino. Buenos Aires, 1890.

Latzina, F. Géographie de la République Argentine. Paris, 1889.

Leach, Walter. Exploration of the Bermejo River. _Geog. Journ._, June, 1890.

Le Bon, Gustave. Les Lois Psychologiques de l'Évolutions des Peuples. Paris, 1894.

MacCann, William. Two Thousand Miles' Ride through the Argentine Provinces. London, 1853.

Mangel du Mesnil, E. Notoriedades del Plata. Buenos Aires, 1862.

Mansfield, C. B. Paraguay, Brazil, and the Plate. Cambridge, 1856.

Markwich, W. F., and Smith, W. A. The South American Republics. New York, 1901.

Martin, Percy F. Through Five Republics. London, 1905.

Martinez, A. B., and Lewandowski, M. L'Argentine au XX^e Siécle. 3rd. ed. Paris, 1909.

Moncousin, M. P. Notes sur les Tehuelches. Paris, 1900.

Moreno, F. P. Neuquen, Rio Negro, Chubut, y Santa Cruz. La Plata, 1897.

Moreno, F. P. Explorations in Patagonia. _Geog. Journ._, September and October, 1899.

Moreno, F. P. Patagonia. Article in _Enc. Brit._, 10th ed. London, 1902.

Mulhall, M. G. and E. T. Handbook of the River Plate. Buenos Aires, 1885.

Mulhall, Mrs. M. G. Between the Amazon and Andes. London, 1881.

Musters, G. C. At Home with the Patagonians. London, 1873.

Napp, Richard. The Argentine Republic. Buenos Aires, 1876.

Nordenskjöld, Otto. A Journey in South Western Patagonia. _Geog. Journ._, October, 1897.

O'Driscoll, Florence. A Journey to the North of the Argentine Republic. _Geog. Journ._, October, 1904.

Pearce-Edgcumbe, Sir E. R. Zephyrus. London, 1887.

Pelleschi, Juan. Los Indios Matacos. Buenos Aires, 1897.

Pillado, Ricardo. Politica Comercial Argentina. Buenos Aires, 1906.

Prichard, H. H. Through the Heart of Patagonia. London, 1902.

Quesada, Ernesto. La Iglesia Católica y la Cuestion Social. Buenos Aires, 1895.

Rumbold, Sir H. The Great Silver River. London, 1888.

Scarlett, Hon. P. Campbell. South America and the Pacific. 2 vols. London, 1838.

Sclater, P. L., and Hudson, W. H. Argentine Ornithology. 2 vols. London, 1888-9.

Seeber, Francisco. Great Argentina, &c. Buenos Aires, 1903.

Turner, T. A. Argentina and the Argentines. London, 1892.

Ulloa, Antonio de and G. Juan. A Voyage to South America, translated by John Adams. 2 vols. London, 1807.

Vaulx, M. Henry de. A Travers la Patagonia. Paris, 1898.

Wallace, Professor Robert. Argentine Shows and Live Stock. Edinburgh, 1904.

Walter, Richard. A Voyage round the World. Dublin, 1748.

Webster, H. A. Patagonia. Article in _Enc. Brit._ London, 1885.

Wiener, Charles. La République Argentine. Paris, 1899.

Zeballos, E. S. Descripcion Amena de la Républica Argentina. 3 vols. Buenos Aires, 1881-8.

FOOTNOTES:

[158] The _Argentine Year Book_ supplies useful up-to-date information in small compass.

[159] The _Geographical Journal_, January, 1909.

INDEX

[For plants and animals, _see_ Flora and Fauna; and for names of firms and railways, _see_ English Engineers, and Railways.]

Aconcagua, 260

Adams, 77

Aguirre, 94

Akers, 109

Albarracin, 256

Alberoni, 39

Alcorta, 109, 110, 113

Alem, 103

Alfafa, _see_ Lucerne

Alfaro, 55

Almargo, 28

Alvear, 81

Alzaga, 88

Amusements, 183, 184

Anchorena, 90

Andes, 3, 4, 28, 106-108, 258, 260-264

Andrewes, Capt., 160, 278, 280

Anson, 43, 242

Apipe, 265

Apostoles, 266

Arbitration, 109, 110, 121, 122

Arcos, 78

Army, 116-119

_Asiento de Negros_, 38, 39, 40

Asuncion, 26, 27, 28, 97, 188

Atahualpa, 159

Auchmuty, 69-71

Avellanada, 100

Azara, 276

Azolas, 26

Bahia Blanca, 1, 9, 13, 121, 151, 216, 238-240, 292

Baird, 66, 74

Balcarce, 90

Banks, 180, 286

Barclay, 266, 268, 270, 288

Battle of Acari, 28 Angostura, 97 Campo Grande, 97 Casseros, 92 Chacabuco, 82 Curupaiti, 97 India Muerta, 92 Ituzaingo, 88 Maipu, 82 Riachuelo, 96 Tucuman, 80

Belgium, 181, 212

Belgrano (port), 121, 239 (soldier), 79-81, 83 (suburb), 147, 149, 150

Bell, 164

Beresford, 66-68

Bernandez, 202

Bohorquez, 34, 35

Bolivar, 84

Bolivia, 2, 10, 90, 121, 163, 269, 277, 279, 282

Bonelli, 281

Bovril, 204, 205

Bradford, 201

Bravard, 8, 256

Brazil, 10, 37, 48, 87, 95-98, 105, 116, 163, 187, 269, 274

Brewing, 194

Brossard, 90, 93

Brown, 83

Buchanan, 109

Budget, 104

Buenos Aires, 139-151, and _passim_

Burke, 40

Byron, 242, 247

Cabot, 24, 25

Calchaquies, 34, 35

Calvo, 168, 169

Camerones Bay, 251

Campbell, 3, 248

Canning, 85

Capital, British, 180

Carlyle, 40, 53, 125

Carmen, 244, 249

Casas, La, 159

Catamarca, 15, 33, 113, 146, 257

Cathedral, 67, 146, 257, 259

Cattle, 140, 156, 196-209

Cavendish, 241

Caxias, 97

_Cédulas_, 60

Celman, 101, 105, 129, 142, 215

Cerrito, 276

Chaco, El, 114, 138, 187

Charles III., 61

Charles IV., 76

Charles V., 25

Chatham, Lord, 53

Child, 132

Children, Argentine, 153

Chile, 2, 63, 68, 82, 106, 107-110, 116, 118, 163, 165, 230, 246, 255, 263, 264

Chinipies, 276

Chubut, 114, 136, 161, 204, 249

Church, _see_ Religion

Church, Col., 240

Cigars, 148, 222

Cisneros, 77-79

Clarke, 248

Clapham, Prof., 200

Clement XIV., 47

Cleveland, 105

Climate, 13-15

Clubs, 146, 149, 208, 258, 269

Coal, 214, 237

Cole, 69

Colombia, 174

Colonial System, Spanish, 49-64

Commerce, 210-214, and _passim_

Conchas, 81

Concordia, 274

Congress, 108, 112, 123, 146

Consuls, 179, 268

Cordillera, 6, 7, 12, 106, 107

Cordoba, 4, 13, 14, 28, 33, 66, 79, 89, 103, 161, 185, 230, 232, 259, 277-280, 283

Corrientes, 10, 11, 29, 30, 95, 96, 113, 207, 265

Costa, 103, 104

Cotton, 281

Cotton-spinning, 195

Crawford, 68, 70-72

Credit, 101

Crossbreeds, 201

Cunningham, 247, 248

Currency, 196

Cuzo, 265

Daireaux, 163, 171

Darwin, 5-9, 12, 13, 15, 19, 89, 141, 156, 235, 241, 245, 246, 247, 250, 252, 262

Davis, 241

Dawson, 99

Deputies, House of, 112, 113

Desire, Port, 241

Diamond Jubilee, 150

Distilleries, 194

D'Orbigny, 8, 9, 12, 20-22, 247

Dorrego, 87-89

Drago, 169, 170

Drake, 38, 241, 247

Duff, 72

Durhams, 205, 208, 290

Durqui, 94

Education, 161-163

Edward VII., 110, 150, 208, 264

Ehrenberg, 5

Elio, 80

England, 65-75, and _passim_

English Engineers, 270, 271 Trade, 211, 212, and _passim_

Ensenado, 70

Entre Rios, 11, 30, 47, 92, 99, 113, 187, 215, 230

Estancias, 196-209, and _passim_

Ethnology, 20-23

Exports, 213, 214

Falkner, 243, 244, 247

Falkland Islands, 202

Famatina, 234, 235

Famine, Port, 241

Fauna, 251-253, 276

Federalists, 87, 93, 100

Ferdinand, 50, 76, 79

Finns, 266

Flora, 276

Flores, 95

Flotsam, 150

Flour, 195

Formosa, 95, 114, 194

France, 63, 78, 212, and _passim_

Francia, 92

Free Trade, 218, 219, 224

French Railways, 191

Funes, 34, 167, 278

Gallegos, Port, 241, 243

Gamboa, 241

Garay, 28-31, 272

Gardiner, 252

Gaucho, 117, 155-157, 198

Germany, 179, 180, 211, 212

Giants, 243

Giebert, 206

Goats, 197

_Gobernaciones_, 113, 114

Godoy, 267

Gold, 56, 289

Gonnard, 131, 135

Gonzalez, 277

Gran Chaco, 2, 4, 11, 195, 270, 275-277

Gregory XV., 279

Guaranies, 20, 21, 28

Guarpes, 258

Guatemala, 174

Guilaine, 132

Hague Congress, 169, 170

Hawkesworth, 243

Hay, 169

Head, 141, 235, 236, 256, 272, 288

Herefords, 207, 208, 290

Hernan Darias, 31

Hernandez, José, 157

Hides, 46, 56, 206

Hogs, 197

Holditch, Sir T., 109, 110, 117, 118

Holland, Lord, 69

Horn, Cape, 2, 38, 252

Horses, 117, 150, 197, 249

Hotels, 144, 286

Howorth, Sir H. H., 8, 19

Hudson, 249

Humaita, 96, 97

Ibicuy, 187

Iguazu Falls, 273, 274

Immigration, 131-138, 266

Imports, 211, 212

Incas, 22, 60

Industries, 178, and _passim_

Indians, 2, 100, 159, 253, 275

Irala, 28

Italy, 133-135

Jenkins' Ear, War of, 40-44

Jesuits, 22, 29, 33, 35, 44-47, 61, 91, 160, 266, 279, 289

Jordan, 99

Journalism, 163-166

Jubileo, 207

Justice, 105, 114

Jujuy, 114, 163, 279

Kirkpatrick, 62

La Luis, 207

La Madrid, 189

La Plata, 143, 162

La Quevas, 185

La Rioja, 14, 113

La Sabana, 227

Lakes, 251, 252

Larreta, 173, 174

Lavalle, 88, 89

Laughton, 41

Lebon, 132

Lemco, 205

Lerma, 281

Leveson-Gower, 71

Lewandowski, 198

Lewis, 69

Licences, 130

Liebig, 206

Lincolns, 201

Liniers, 67, 72, 73, 79

Linseed, 228

Literature, 166-177

Locusts, 288

Londonderry, Lord, 82

Lopez, 88, 90, 91, 95-98 Dr., 104

Los Andes, 114

Lozano, 223, 274, 280

Lucerne, 228, 229

Luiggi, 239

Luscan, 259

Lumley, 70

Lynch, 97

MacCann, 215

Macovies, 276

Magellan, 26, 37, 106, 107 Explorer, 241

Mahon, 70

Maize, 214, 227, 228

Mammoth, 19

Mansfield, 141

Marmol, 172, 175

Martinez, 198

Manufacturers, 53

Marriage, 153

Matacos, 276

Maza, 91

Meat, 204-207

Mendoza, 4, 13, 15, 129, 130, 154, 161, 254-261

Mercado, 34

Mérou, M. G., 170, 171, 176, 219

Miranda, 77

Misiones, 14, 67, 96, 105, 114, 194

Mitre, A, 176 General, 94, 95, 97, 103, 167

Moore, 38

Moreno, 79

Mules, 197

Mulhalls, The, 164, 198, 256, 287

Munroe Doctrine, 83, 169

Musters, 247

Mutton, 201

"Nacion, La," and other journals, _see_ Journalism

Napp, 201

Navy, 119-121

Nequen, 114

Nordenskjöld, 249, 251

Nova Colonia, 37, 38, 44, 67

Oats, 229

Ocantos, 172

Officers, Army, 117

Pacific Steam Navigation Company, 143, 284, 285

Palermo, 142, 147, 149

Pampa, 114

Pampas, 2, 4, 5, 11, 15, 90, 155, 199, 204, 205, 275

Pampean mud, 7-9 Sea, 240

Paper, 195

Paraguay, 10, 28, 31, 38, 45, 80, 92, 94-98, 139, 140, 161, 163, 187 River, _see_ Rivers

Parana, river, _see_ Rivers town, 162

Parish, 39, 83

Patagonia, 2, 3, 5, 8, 10, 12, 13, 15, 31, 107, 108, 136, 199, 240, 242, 244-253

Patagonians, size of, 2, 3, 100, 247, 248

Paulistas, 21, 35, 36, 61

Pavon, 94

Payaguas, 276

Payne, 18

Paz, General, 89, 90 José C., 164

Pellegrini, 101, 105, 133

Peña, 103, 104

Peribebuy, 97

Peru, 31, 38, 43, 63, 119, 140, 163, 174, 200, 255, 275, 278

Petroleum, 236, 237

Pettenkofer, 206

Philip II., 143

Pigafetta, 247

Pillado, 220, 223

Pitt, 77

Poles, 266

Politics, 122-124

Polled Angus, 205, 290

Polo, 149

Pombal, 44

Popham, 66, 68, 74

Population, 99, 113, 114

Port Madryn, 250

Port St. Julian, 5, 6

Ports and Docks, 180, 183, 216, 239

Porteños, 94, 100, 101, 103

Portuguese, 18, 61

Posadas, 81, 187, 266, 274

President, 112 Vice, 113

Provinces, 113, 114

Puente del Inca, 261-263

Puirredon, 67, 81, 82

Puna de Atacama, 108, 109

Punta Arenas, 249

Purchas, 25

Quesada, Ernesto, 166, 167, 171, 280 V. G., 166

Quilmes, 66

Quiroga, 88-91

Racing, 149, 150

Rafaela, 189

Railways, 178-194

Rain, 5, 14

Rams, 201

Religion, 158-161

_Reseñas y Criticas_, and other works, _see_ Literature

Resistencia, 277

Rio Negro, _see_ Rivers _Gobernacion_, 114, 249, 250

Rivadavia, 82, 88, 90, 110

Rivers, Chico, 12 Chubut, 3, 12 Colorado, 2, 4, 6, 11 Coyly, 3 Desaguerdo, 259 Deseado, 243, 251 Gallegos, 3, 12, 251 Ivahi, 265 Iguazu, 265 Limaz, 12 Mendoza, 11 Nequen, 12 Negro, 4, 9, 90, 100, 244, 249, 250 Paraguay, 25, 28, 29 Parana, 10, 12, 28, 45, 93, 96, 143, 184, 265-272 Paranahybo, 265 Paranapanema, 265 Pardo, 265 Pepiri, 105 Pilcomayo, 11 Salado, 11, 265 San Antonio, 105 Santa Cruz, 3, 6, 12, 244, 252 Saranai, 11 Sauces, 244 Tiete, 245 Tunuyan, 259 Uruguay, _passim_ Vermejo, 11

Robles, 96

Roca, 100-103, 105, 110, 112, 250

Rojas, 188, 189

Romney Marsh, 201

Rondeau, 82

Rosario, 10, 13, 94, 103, 129, 130, 151, 185, 190, 238, 290

Rosas, 89-93, 100, 112, 122, 132, 142, 175, 255, 279, 281

Rum, 194

Russia, 200, 216, 266

Saavedra, 79, 80

Salta, 14, 91, 114, 189, 232, 277, 281, 282

San Javier, 205 Juan, 13, 14, 113, 185, 230, 255 Luis, 13, 114, 235 Martin, 81, 82, 83, 118 Rafael, 135, 185, 260

Santa Cruz, 114, 204, 249, 251, 252 Elena, 205 Fé 13, 80, 92, 103, 113, 162, 189, 230, 268, 272

Santiago del Ertero, 114, 163, 277

Schouten, 38

Seeber, 117

Seeley, 52

Senate, 112

Seneca, 17

Sheep, 196-209

Shoes, 195

Smith, Adam, 54, 56

Smollett, 43

Solis, de, 34

South American Missionary Society, 250

Southey, 29, 36

Spain, _passim_

Stallions, 150, 199

_Statesmen's Yearbook_, 211, 217

Steamship Lines, 284, 285

Sterling, 65

Stuart, 83

Sugar, 4, 194, 223, 229

Tallow, 205

Tanning, 195

Tariff, 218-224

Tehuelches, 244, 247

Thucydides, 23

Tierra del Fuego, 106, 114, 202

Timber, 214, 231-233

Tobas, 276

Tobacco, 56, 229

Tosca, 7

Tramways, 180, 188

Tucuman, 1, 11, 14, 31, 35, 38, 55, 80, 83, 90, 91, 189, 194, 195, 200, 223, 232

United States, 109, 110, 116, 211, 212, 215, 216, 219

Universities, 33, 162, 279, 280

Urquiza, 91, 92-94, 95, 96

Uruguay, 36, 37, 47, 81, 84, 88, 94, 95, 142, 187, 199, 206 river, _see_ Rivers

Ushwiya, 13

Vaca, Cabeza de, 27

Valparaiso, 185, 254

Valverde, 159

Van Noort, 247

Venezuela, 169

Vernon, 42

Viamont, 89

Viedmas, 244, 245, 247, 249

Vilelas, 276

Villa Corta, 38 Mercedes, 196

Villaruel, 280

Wages, 126-129

Waleffe, 174

Wallis, 247

Walpole, 40

Wentworth, 42

Wheat, 225-227, and _passim_

Whitelocke, 68, 70

Whittingham, 73

Windham, 83

Windsor, 159

Wine, 56

Witchcraft, 248, 249

Women, Argentine, 132, 153, 259

Wool, 214

_Yerba Maté_, 233, 234

Zarate, 188, 200

UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED, THE GRESHAM PRESS, WOKING AND LONDON.

THE SOUTH AMERICAN SERIES

EDITED BY MARTIN HUME, M.A.

THE SOUTH AMERICAN SERIES

_Demy 8vo, cloth._

1. CHILE. By G. F. SCOTT ELLIOTT, F.R.G.S. With an Introduction by Martin Hume, a Map, and 39 Illustrations. (3rd Impression.)

2. PERU. By C. REGINALD ENOCK, F.R.G.S. With an Introduction by Martin Hume, a Map, and 72 Illustrations. (2nd Impression.)

3. MEXICO. By C. REGINALD ENOCK, F.R.G.S. With an Introduction by Martin Hume, a Map, and 64 Illustrations. (2nd Impression.)

4. ARGENTINA. By W. A. HIRST. With an Introduction by Martin Hume, a Map, and 64 Illustrations. (3rd Impression.)

5. BRAZIL. By PIERRE DENIS. With a Historical Chapter by Bernard Miall, a Map, and 36 Illustrations.

6. URUGUAY. By W. H. KOEBEL. With a Map and 55 Illustrations.

7. GUIANA: British, French, and Dutch. By JAMES RODWAY. With a Map and 36 Illustrations.

8. VENEZUELA. By LEONARD V. DALTON, B.Sc. (Lond.), F.G.S., F.R.G.S. With a Map and 36 Illustrations.

9. LATIN AMERICA: Its Rise and Progress. By F. GARCIA CALDERON. With a Preface by Raymond Poincare, President of France, a Map, and 34 Illustrations.

10. COLOMBIA. By PHANOR JAMES EDER, A.B., LL.B. With 2 Maps and 40 Illustrations. (2nd Impression.)

11. ECUADOR. By C. REGINALD ENOCK, F.R.G.S.

"The output of the books upon Latin America has in recent years been very large, a proof doubtless of the increasing interest that is felt in the subject. Of these the South American Series edited by Mr. Martin Hume is the most noteworthy."--TIMES.

"Mr. Unwin is doing good service to commercial men and investors by the production of his 'South American Series.'"--SATURDAY REVIEW.

"Those who wish to gain some idea of the march of progress in these countries cannot do better than study the admirable 'South American Series.'"--CHAMBER OF COMMERCE JOURNAL.

* * * * *

Transcriber's Notes

A page of advertisements for other books in the series has been moved from the beginning to the end of the book. Illustration captions have been moved next to the text which they illustrate, and so may not match the order in the List of Illustrations. A duplicate heading "ARGENTINA" on the half title page has been removed.

Superscript is represented by a carat symbol (^) preceding the superscripted characters.

The following were not clearly printed, and have been corrected by reference to a 1910 printing:

p. 96 "Ertigarribia"

p. 96 "Lopez"

p. 97 "war. The allied"; "and Brazilian"; "beyond Curupaiti."

p. 123 note "Siècle"

p. 269 "the workshop"

p. 292 "received is that"

p. 303 "Curupaiti, 97"

The following were inconsistently hyphenated, capitalised or spelled:

cheekbones and cheek-bones

seafaring and sea-faring

snowdrifts and snow-drifts

Viceroyalty and Vice-royalty

yerba maté and Yerba Maté

gaucho and Gaucho

Cordoba and Cordova

alfalfa and alfafa

Mitré and Mitre

Asunçion and Asuncion

Paraná and Parana

Républica and Republica

São Paulo and Sao Paulo

Obvious errors in spelling and punctuation have been corrected as follows:

p. XX "smalls barks" changed to "small barks"

p. 19 quotation mark added (sepulchre for these extinct animals.")

p. 57 full stop added (long period of disorder and bloodshed.)

p. 63 "hidalguiá" changed to "hidalguía"

p. 64 it changed to its (was successful as far as its)

p. 69 hyphen added (Leveson-Gower was in favour)

p. 78 "favourable" changed to "unfavourable"

p. 78 "influenc ewas" changed to "influence was"

p. 78 (note) quotation mark added (Peru or Spain")

p. 78 (note) quotation mark changed to comma (Arcos, "La Plata)

p. 91 "prescription" changed to "proscription"

p. 108 (note) "_I.e,_" changed to "_I.e._,"

p. 123 "megolomania" changed to "megalomania"

p. 132 quotation mark removed (M. Gustave Le Bon,[2])

p. 133 (note) quotation mark added (au XX^{e} Siècle,")

p. 137 "heathly" changed to "healthy"

p. 143 "Montevides" changed to "Montevideo"

p. 173 "Isles of March" changed to "Ides of March"

p. 182 (note) full stops added (Argentine Great Western.; Blanca and North-Western.)

p. 193 (note) "Emile" changed to "Émile"

Illustration after p. 196 "SANTIA" changed to "SANTA"

p. 207 "north of Argentina" changed to "north of Buenos Aires"

p. 209 quotation mark added ("One way a band)

p. 212 "sent to Argentine" changed to "sent to Argentina"

p. 216 "Steamship" changed to "Steamships"

p. 247 (note) full stop added (six feet by a few inches.)

p. 249 opening bracket added ((Hudson, "Idle Days)

Illustration after p. 250 full stop added (six feet by a few inches.)

p. 256 "If" changed to "It" (It seemed an interminable)

p. 272 Quotation mark added (and its longitude 47°.")

p. 277 (note) "El Gran Chaco Argentins" changed to "El Gran Chaco Argentino"

p. 282 "1852" changed to "1582"

p. 289 "Panana" changed to "Parana" (Parana and Sao Paulo states.")

p. 296 "Considerations" changed to "Considérations"

p. 298 full stop changed to comma (2 vols. Paris, 1880.)

p. 299 "El Gran Chaco, Argentine." changed to "El Gran Chaco Argentino."

p. 301 full stop changed to comma (Matacos. Buenos Aires, 1897.)

p. 301 full stop added to text (Heart of Patagonia. London, 1902.)

p. 304 comma added to text after 34 (Calchaquies, 34, 35)

p. 304 "Cedulas" changed to "Cédulas"

p. 304 comma added to text after 208 (Clubs, 146, 149, 208, 258, 269)

p. 304 comma added to text after 150 (Edward VII., 110, 150, 208, 264)

p. 305 "Hernandez, Jose" changed to "Hernandez, José"

p. 306 "Merou, M. G.," changed to "Mérou, M. G.,"

p. 307 "Pena" changed to "Peña"

A possible spelling error on p. 156 ("carne cum cuero") has been left unchanged.