Juan Sánchez Ramírez

Juan Sánchez Ramírez
Portrait of Governor Juan Sánchez Ramírez. Work by Luis Desangles
72nd Governor of the Spanish Colony of Santo Domingo (1809–1821)
In office
December 13, 1808  February 11, 1811
Preceded byJoseph-David de Barquier
Succeeded byManuel Caballero y Masot
Personal details
Born1762 (1762)
Cotuí, Captaincy General of Santo Domingo
DiedFebruary 11, 1811 (1811-02-12) (aged 48–49)
Santo Domingo, Captaincy General of Santo Domingo
Resting placeNational Pantheon of the Dominican Republic
NationalitySpanish and Dominican
SpouseJosefa del Monte y Pichardo
Children2
Parent(s)Francisca Ramírez and Miguel Sánchez
Residence(s)Santo Domingo, Puerto Rico (1803–1807)
OccupationPlanter, politician and military commander
ProfessionPolitician and Captain general
Military service
Allegiance Great Britain
 Dominican Republic
 Spain
Branch/service Dominican Army
 Spanish Army
Years of service1793–1811
Rank Captain general
Battles/wars

Juan Sánchez Ramírez (1762 – February 11, 1811) was a Dominican general who was the primary leader of the War of Reconquista. He is known for leading the troops in the Battle of Palo Hincado. The decisive Dominican victory resulted in the end of French rule in eastern Hispaniola in 1809. He was the first Dominican to serve as governor of Santo Domingo.

In 1795, the island of Santo Domingo ceased to be linked to Spain by the Peace Treaty of Basel (Switzerland), which put an end to the War of the Convention (1793–1795), by which it passed under French rule. In 1808, after Napoleon invaded Spain, the La Reconquista movement was created on the island, led, among others, by Sánchez Ramírez, with the aim of returning to Spanish rule.

Sánchez Ramírez, an agricultural landowner of Criollo origin, had already fought against the French in the War of the Convention, and in 1803 he had emigrated to Puerto Rico, from where he returned in 1807 to foment the insurrection. To do this, he requested the help of the governor of Puerto Rico, Toribio Montes, and of Dominican settlers who had fled to that island, with whose forces he revolted against the French troops of general and governor Jean-Louis Ferrand, whom he defeated on November 7, 1808 in the historical Battle of Palo Hincado. Shortly after, with the help of the English fleet sent by Hugh Lyle Carmichael that came to support him from Jamaica, he managed to take the capital of the island. He was therefore appointed captain general and mayor of the island by the Junta of Seville, thereby reestablishing Spanish sovereignty.

During his government he harshly repressed any independence attempt, acting with total impunity in the face of the indifference of the Spanish metropolis. He maintained this position until his death in 1811, afterwards the colony attained its independence from Spain in 1821.