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For the Scottish cricketer who played for England, see Gregor MacGregor (cricketer) » For the Australian politician with a similar name, see Gregor McGregor
Gregor MacGregor (
December 24,
1786 –
December 3 1845) was a
Scottish soldier, adventurer and colonizer who fought in the South American struggle for independence. Upon his return to England in 1820, he claimed to be
cazique of
Poyais (also known as
Principality of Poyais,
Territory of Poyais,
Republic of Poyais). Poyais was a fictional
Central American country that MacGregor had invented which, with his help, drew investors and eventually
colonists.
Early life
MacGregor was born in
Edinburgh,
Scotland on
Christmas day 1786. His parents were Captain Daniel MacGregor and Ann Austin.
In 1803, he joined the
Royal Navy. He married Marie Bowater in 1805, who died soon after that. He then served in the Spanish and Portuguese armies, after which he returned to Edinburgh.
By this time, MacGregor heard about the independence movements in South America and in the
Captaincy General of Venezuela in particular, where he arrived in 1811 with the rank of Colonel.
South American independence
Green Cross of Florida
In 1817, MacGregor led a group of 55 men to capture
San Fernandina on
Amelia Island, Florida from the Spanish. The Spanish were surprised and MacGregor's men overran the island on
June 29, and MacGregor raised a flag with a green cross on it. He left a few months later to fight the Spanish.
Cazique of Poyais
Gregor MacGregor came from Latin America to
London,
England, in 1820 and pronounced that he'd been created
cazique (or
prince) of the
Principality of Poyais, an
independent nation on the
Bay of Honduras. Native chief King
George Frederic Augustus I of the
Mosquito Shore and Nation had given him the territory of Poyais, 12,500 mile² (32,400 km²) of fertile land with untapped resources, a small number of settlers of
British origin, and cooperative natives eager to please. He had created the beginnings of a country with
civil service,
army and
democratic government. Now he needed settlers and investment and had come back to the United Kingdom to give people the opportunity.
At the time, British
merchants were all too eager to enter the
South American market that
Spain had denied to them. The region had already become more promising in the wake of wars of South American
independence, when the new governments of
Colombia,
Chile and
Peru had issued
bonds in London
Royal Exchange to raise money.
London high society welcomed the colourful figure of MacGregor, and he and his Spanish-American wife Josefa received many invitations. The
Lord Mayor of London Christopher Magnay even organized an official reception in London
Guildhall. MacGregor claimed descent of
clan MacGregor and that
Rob Roy MacGregor had been his direct ancestor. He enhanced his allure by telling about his exploits in the
Peninsular War and later in the service of
Francisco de Miranda,
Simón Bolívar and South American independence — tales which were rather embellished.
MacGregor was also introduced to Major William John Richardson and by the winter of 1821 he'd made Richardson
legate of Poyais. He had also moved to Oak Hall in Richardson's estate in
Essex, England, as befit his station as a prince. An office for the Legation of the Territory of Poyais was opened at Dowgate Hill in the
City of London. MacGregor enhanced his popularity with elaborate banquets in Oak Hall and invited dignitaries like foreign ambassadors, government ministers and senior military officers.
MacGregor also claimed that one of his ancestors was a rare survivor of the
Darien Scheme, a failed Scottish attempt of
colonization in
Panama in
1690s. In order to compensate for this, he said, he'd decided to draw most of the settlers from
Scotland. For this purpose, he established offices in
Edinburgh and
Glasgow.
In Edinburgh, MacGregor began to sell land rights for 3 shillings and 3 pence per acre (£40.15/km²). Note that the worker's weekly wage at the time was about £1, which meant that the price was very generous. The price steadily rose to 4 shillings (£0.20). Many people willing to have a new start in the new land signed on with their families. On
October 23,
1822 MacGregor raised a loan with the total of £200,000 in behalf of the Poyais government. It was in the form of 2,000
bearer bonds worth £100 each.
Also in 1822 MacGregor published a 350-page guidebook entitled
Sketch of the Mosquito Shore, including the Territory of Poyais, descriptive of the country, supposedly written by one Captain Thomas Strangeways. It described the Poyais with glowing terms and mainly concentrated on how much profit one could get from the country's ample resources. Poyais was said to be a very
anglophilic region with already existing
infrastructure, untapped gold and silver mines and large amounts of fertile soil ready to be settled. The region was even free of tropical diseases. The book also claimed that British settlers had founded the capital of Poyais, St Joseph, in the
1730s.
Eager settlers
The Legation of Poyais chartered a ship called
Honduras Packet, whose crew MacGregor already knew, and five London merchants received contracts to provision the ship with food and ammunition. Its cargo also included a chest full of "Poyais Dollars", Poyaisian currency MacGregor had printed in Scotland. Many of the settlers had changed their pounds to Poyais dollars.
On
September 10 1822 the
Honduras Packet departed from the
Port of London with 70 would-be-settlers aboard. They included
doctors,
lawyers and a
banker who had been promised appropriate positions in the Poyais civil service. Some had also purchased officer commissions in the Poyaisian army.
On
January 22 1823 another ship, the
Kennersley Castle, left
Leith Harbour in Scotland for Poyais with 200 would-be-settlers. The ship also carried enough provisions for a year. It arrived in the appropriate place
March 20 and spent two days looking for a port. Eventually the newcomers found the settlers who had sailed on the
Honduras Packet.
What the settlers had found was an untouched
jungle, some and couple of American
hermits who had made their homes there. "St Joseph" consisted of only couple of ruins of a previous attempt at settlement abandoned on the previous century. There was no settlement of any kind. The
Honduras Packet had been swept away by a storm.
When some of the labourers begun to build rudimentary shelter for themselves, the officers and civil servants decided to try to find a way out. Lieutenant-Colonel Hector Hall, would-be-governor of Poyais, had left to look for the
Honduras Packet or another ship to take them back to Britain.
The would-be-settlers begun to argue with each other and some of them, who had expected better accommodation, refused to do anything. The
Kennersley Castle sailed away.
Tropical diseases also begun to take their toll. One settler committed suicide.
In April, the
Mexican Eagle, an official ship from
British Honduras with the chief magistrate on board, accidentally found the settlers. Chief magistrate Bennet listened to their story and told them that there was no such place as Poyais. He agreed to take them to British Honduras. A couple of days later Colonel Hall returned with King George Frederic and announced that the King had effectively revoked the land grant because MacGregor had assumed sovereignty. The
Mexican Eagle took sixty settlers to British Honduras. The rest were evacuated later.
Many settlers were weakened on their short sea voyage and many of them later died in hospitals in British Honduras. 180 of the 250 would-be settlers had perished during the ordeal.
Edward Codd, Superintendent for Belize, sent a warning to London where naval vessels were sent to call back five ships of would-be-settlers that had departed after the
Kennersley Castle. Those survivors who didn't decide to settle on the British Honduras or move elsewhere in the Americas sailed on the
Ocean on
August 1 1823 to London. More people died during that journey, and less than 50 came back alive to Britain.
72 days later the
Ocean docked in London. The next day, city papers published the whole story.
However, regardless of the experiences of the survivors, some of them refused to believe that MacGregor would have been the main culprit. One of them, James Hastie, who had lost two of his children to tropical diseases, wrote and published a book
Narrative of a Voyage in the Ship Kennersley Castle from Leith Roads to Poyais. He blamed Sir Gregor's advisers and publicists for spreading the false information. A group of survivors signed a declaration of their belief that had Sir Gregor gone with them, things would have turned out differently. Major Richardson sued the papers for libel and defended MacGregor against the charges of fraud.
MacGregor himself, however, had already left for
Paris,
France, in October.
Poyaisian scheme in France
MacGregor had already contacted the trading organization "Compagnie de la Nouvelle Neustrie" and commissioned it to further the affairs of Poyais in France.
In March 1825 MacGregor summoned from London Gustavus Butler Hippisley, an acquaintance from the army, on the pretext of discussing his appointment as a representative of Poyais in Colombia. Hippisley was to write about the Poyais affair in France in
Acts of Oppression Committed under the Administration of m. de Villele, Prime minister of Charles X, in the years 1825-6.
MacGregor claimed to Hippisley that he needed the help of the French government to obtain a formal renunciation of any (nonexistent) claims Spain might have to Poyais and that he'd met with French Prime Minister
Jean-Baptiste de Villèle. MacGregor and la Nouvelle Noustrie, already had plans to send French emigrants to Poyais. Hippisley wrote back to London, castigating the journalists who had called MacGregor a "penniless adventurer".
In August, MacGregor published a new constitution of Poyais; he'd changed it into a
republic with himself as the head of state. On
August 18,
1825 he issued a £300.00 loan with 2.5% interest through the London bank of Thomas Jenkins & Company. The bond was probably never issued. At the same time, la Nouvelle Noustrie recruited settlers with the requirement that they buy FFr100 worth of the company shares.
When French officials noticed that a number of people had obtained
passports in order to voyage to a country they'd never heard of, they seized the la Nouvelle Neustrie vessel in
Le Havre. Some of the would-be-
emigrants realized that something wasn't right and demanded investigation of the affairs of the la Nouvelle Neustrie and Sir Gregor. Hippisley was arrested but MacGregor was nowhere to be found.
Hippisley and MacGregor's secretary Thomas Irving were held in custody in
La Force prison when the police investigation was going on. Lehuby, one of the directors of La Nouvelle Noustrie fled to Belgium. MacGregor went into hiding until he was brought into the prison
December 7, two months after the first arrests. He proceeded to comfort his associates and in January 1826 made a proclamation to Central American states — it was written in French and primarily meant to affect French opinion. The accused were later moved to
Bicetre prison.
The trial began on
April 6,
1826. MacGregor, Hippisley, Irving and Lehuby (in absentia) were accused of fraud by means of the Poyais emigration program. Their lawyer, Merilhou, put the blame on Lehuby and the prosecutor was ready to withdraw the charges if the men were deported from France. Initially the court agreed but judges changed their minds when Belgium agreed to extradite Lehuby. Lawyer Merilhou was later summoned as a witness for the prosecution.
The new trial began on
July 10, 1826, and lasted for four days. Merilhou's replacement, Berville, eloquently put the blame on anybody else but MacGregor. MacGregor was acquitted and Hippisley and Irving were released. Lehuby was convicted for 13 months for making false promises.
Lesser Poyais schemes
In 1826 MacGregor returned to London, where the furore over his affairs had died down. Shortly after his arrival he was arrested and taken to
Tothill Fields Bridewell prison in
Westminster on charges now unknown. He was released in less than a week.
MacGregor proceeded with the modified schemes. This time he claimed that (non-existent) natives had elected him as the
head of state and became just "Cacigue of the Republic of Poyais" and opened a new office at 23 Threadneedle Street in the City, without any diplomatic trappings and in much a smaller scale than before. He issued a loan worth £800.000 as 20-year bonds with Thomas Jenkins & Company as brokers. The scheme was announced in the summer 1827.
However, investors were now more careful and somebody circulated a handbill that warned against investing in "Poyais humbug". MacGregor had to pass the most of the unsold certificates to a consortium of speculators for an undisclosed sum. He made only a little money.
Further Poyais schemes were equally successful. In 1828 MacGregor tried to sell land from Poyais at the price of 5 shillings per acre. In 1830
Robert Charles Frederic, brother and successor of King George Frederic, began to offer for sale the same territories to
lumber companies. These certificates competed with those of MacGregor. When older investors demanded their interest, he could only pay with more certificates to the value of the interest payments he owed. Others begun to use the same trick too - two men named Upton opened a rival "Poyaisian office"" and offered land
debentures for sale.
In 1831 MacGregor promoted a "Poyaisian New Three per cent Consolidated Stock" as "the President of the Poyaisian Republic". In 1834 he was living in Scotland and had to issue a new series of land certificates as payment for unredeemed securities. In 1836 he wrote a new constitution for the Poyaisian Republic. The last record of any Poyais scheme is in 1837, when he tried to sell some land certificates.
In 1839 Gregor MacGregor moved to
Venezuela where he'd requested and received a pension as a general who had fought for independence. He died on
December 4 1845.
Further Information
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