Letter

Scruggs to By the President: T. F. Bayard, August 11, 1885

No. 163.

Mr. Scruggs to Mr. Bayard.

No. 223.]

Sir: Since the date of my No. 221, of July 21, we have information of the evacuation of Barranquilla by the insurgents, and of the capture, by the Government forces, of the mulatto assassin and incendiary, Prestan. You have doubtless received all the particulars from our consuls on the coast.

The insurgents still hold the river between Calamar and Naré, and likewise all the river steamers but one. It is believed here that they have landed a force of some 1,500 men at Puerto Naçional, with the intention of marching upon Socorro, the capital of the State of Santander; but as the National Government has about 4,000 troops in that State, this raid will be a failure.

With the exception of two or three recent outbreaks of a feeble character in Cundinamarca, everything continues quiet off the line of the Magdalena.

All business has been practically suspended since the 25th December last, and the financial distress in the interior cities of the Republic is almost unprecedented.

I have, &c.,

WILLIAM L. SCRUGGS.
Sources
FRUS u2014 Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States, Transmitted to Congress, With the Annual Message of the P View original source ↗
U.S. Department of State, Office of the Historian. Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States, Transmitted to Congress, With the Annual Message of the P.