Freebooters Must Die!: The Life and Death of William Walker, the Most Notorious Filibuster of the Nineteenth Century

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Haverford House, 1976 - Biography & Autobiography - 226 pages
In 1855 an American named William Walker invaded Nicaragua with 58 reckless soldiers of fortune. Within a year he took over the government and had himself "declared" president of Nicaragua. Planning to create a vast slave empire in Central America with himself as dictator, Walker challenged the power of Great Britain, the wealth of Cornelius Vanderbilt, and the prestige of the president of the United States. He terrorized the five small Central American republics, as he ruthlessly plunged them into a ghastly bloodbath. Walker rose to the height of fame in the years just prior to the Civil War, his name was on every tongue. Frenzied admirers in New Orleans carried him triumphantly on their shoulders as a conquering hero. But he also inspired the fear, hatred, and vengeance of many who opposed him, and at the age of 36 he was executed by a firing squad of barefoot soldiers in Honduras in September 1860.

Contents

FOREWORD
1
The Misfortunes of Count RaoussetBoulbon
27
Walkers Fiasco in Lower California and Sonora
37
The Fiftyeight Immortals
76
Political and Military Intrigue
88
10
109
1 Walker Elected President of Nicaragua
138
The Tide Turns
151
Cheers at Home for the Vanquished Hero
178
Attempted Invasion of Honduras
196
16 Walkers Execution at Truxillo
205
ILLUSTRATION ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
217
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