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In the election that follows the adoption …

Years: 1888 - 1899

In the election that follows the adoption of Brazil's new constitution in 1891, Deodoro da Fonseca and Floriano Peixoto are elected president and vice president, respectively, but with the former gaining only 129 votes and the latter 153.

The first president, Deodoro da Fonseca, has difficulty adjusting to sharing power with Congress and, in imperial fashion, dissolves it in November 1891, provoking rebellions in the navy and in Rio Grande do Sul.

To mollify the opposition, he resigns in favor of Vice President Peixoto (acting president, 1891-94).

Peixoto, known as the "Iron Marshal" (marechal de ferro), ousts all the state governors who had supported Deodoro, provoking violence in many parts of the country.

One of the bloodiest of these struggles is the civil war that explodes in Rio Grande do Sul in 1893 and soon spreads into Santa Catarina and Parana, pitting former monarchist liberals against republicans.

Concurrently, the fleet in Guanabara Bay at Rio de Janeiro challenges Peixoto, and the naval revolt quickly becomes linked to the struggle in the South.

Peixoto's diplomat in Washington, Salvador de Mendonca, with the help of New York businessman Charles Flint, is able to assemble a squadron of ships with American crews, which proves decisive in ending the standoff in Guanabara Bay.

The United States government, interested in Brazilian commerce and in the republic's survival, permits this mercenary effort to occur and sends several cruisers to provide a barely concealed escort.

This is the first documented American intervention in Brazil's internal affairs, and significantly it has been organized privately.

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