Battle of San Jerónimo

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Battle of San Jerónimo
Part of the Breña campaign of the War of the Pacific

The exact location of the battle
DateApril 9[1]–11, 1881
Location
San Jerónimo, Department of Lima, Peru
Result Chilean victory
Belligerents
Peru Chile
Commanders and leaders
José A. Bedoya José M. Alcérreca
Units involved
Guerillas of San Jerónimo Soldiers of Buin
Carabineros de Yungay [es]
Casualties and losses
Unknown 3 killed, 11 wounded[2]

The Battle of San Jerónimo was the first battle of the Breña campaign of the War of the Pacific between April 9 and 11, 1881. The battle was fought between the newly formed Peruvian guerillas commanded by Colonel José Agustín Bedoya which were defending the town of San Jerónimo within the Department of Lima against the Chilean occupation force commanded by General José Miguel Alcérreca.

Background[edit]

After the Occupation of Lima and the disastrous Battle of Miraflores, Colonel Andrés Avelino Cáceres would organize the Peruvian resistance to continue the fight against the Chilean Army. Being able to speak Quechua, Cáceres would organize a defense system within the Andes Mountains with Colonels Gregorio Albarracín and Juan Pacheco de Céspedes in the south and Colonel Miguel Iglesias in the north.[citation needed]

In April 1881, the occupational governor of the Peruvian capital of Lima, Pedro Lagos invited José Miguel Alcérreca and would order him to send the Soldiers of Buin and the Carabineros de Yungay [es] to battle the guerilla rebels as well as find survivors of the Battle of San Juan and Chorrillos and the Battle of Miraflores. Determined to receive results, the Chilean forces began the expedition of trekking uphill towards the Andes.[3]

The Battle[edit]

In the town of San Jerónimo, Huarochirí Province would the Breña campaign begin with the forces under Colonel José Agustín Bedoya confronting those of Alcérreca with the latter attempting to capture in the city by the front but would be repulsed by the Peruvians through the stone walls in the town's vicinity. This would leave three Chileans killed and six wounded.[2]

The next day, Major Cámus would reinforce Alcérreca with 100 soldiers as they were dispatched via train from Chosica to San Jerónimo where eight wounded from the battle would also arrive. On April 11 at 7:20 PM would Alcérreca request a further 75 soldiers which would be commanded by Colonel Adolfo Silva Vergara while simotaniously request information about their respective soldiers and the Peruvian forces. He would obtain his response by 8:45 PM that the Chileans had received three more wounded and the Peruvians had suffered enough casualties to withdraw from the town.[3] A few moments later, Alcérreca would later announce that he had occupied the town with the following:

The Buin retook the hills, and at four in the afternoon entered San Jerónimo, news that reached the camp by light of the fire in the town. At eight o'clock at night, thirty carabinieri, crossing the rapid current of the Rimac, transported the rump to the opposite bank as many infantrymen who flanked the enemy position on the right side. A new flare communicated that the town of Cayaguanca had been occupied in turn (...) Around San Jerónimo there are four towns: Chacle, Cayata, Quiromarca and Quilmachai (...) The montoneros dispersed towards all these points, that they are all neighbors or compadres of these places.[4]

Faced with this predicament, Silva Vergara ordered the town to be razed and retreat back to Chosica. On April 12 and at 3 PM, the Chileans would abandon the place "after punishing the civilians of San Jerónimo, Cayagance, Santa Eulalia and the valley in between" according to Alcérreca's report.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Dinator, Carlos (1915). Reseña histórica del no 1 de infantería (después Buin 1.0 de línea) (in Spanish). Santiago de Chile: Imprenta Chile. p. 21. Retrieved June 25, 2023.
  2. ^ a b Ahumada Moreno, Pascual (1884). Guerra del Pacifico: recopilacion completa de todos los documentos (in Spanish). Vol. 5. Valprasio. p. 78.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ a b c "EL COMBATE DE SAN JERÓNIMO". patriciogonzalezgranifo. 23 January 2020. Retrieved June 25, 2023.
  4. ^ Fernández Larraín, Sergio (1979). Boletín De la Guerra Del Pacifico: 1879–1881 (in Spanish). Santiago. p. 1063. Retrieved June 25, 2023.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)