The “coffee presidents”
In 1894, amid peaceful conditions in all but the extreme South, Peixoto reluctantly turned over the presidency to the first civilian president, Prudente de Morais, who had served as the first republican governor of coffee-rich São Paulo. Brazil’s successive “coffee presidents,” who were primarily from the states of São Paulo and Minas Gerais, helped ensure peace, reform financial institutions, and increase coffee exports. However, they gave Brazil little real democracy, because only a select landowning minority was allowed to vote, fraudulent elections were widespread, and regional political bosses had virtual impunity as long as they supported the president in power.
The economic and political centres of the nation shifted even farther during the 18th and 19th centuries from the old sugar regions of the Northeast to the new coffee regions of the Southeast. Coffee dominated the economy, accounting for more than half of export earnings by the turn of the 20th century. However, Brazilian farmers soon produced an overabundance of coffee, and the slumping value of that product’s exports threatened the nation’s prosperity. In response, representatives of the three major coffee-producing states—São Paulo, Minas Gerais, and Rio de Janeiro—inaugurated a federally supported scheme in 1906 by which the government would purchase excess coffee and remove it from the international market in order to maintain a stable price.
Brazil received increasing numbers of immigrants, and its rate of urbanization accelerated. The rubber boom in the Amazon River basin changed isolated Manaus into a cosmopolitan city with electricity, streetcars, cinemas, and a grandiose opera house. Meanwhile, the prefect Francisco Pereira Passos helped change Rio de Janeiro into one of the world’s most beautiful cities, and the distinguished physician and scientist Oswaldo Cruz made it a more healthful place by virtually eradicating yellow fever there. The prosperous coffee economy attracted huge numbers of immigrants to São Paulo, the nation’s bustling commercial centre, whose population jumped from 35,000 in 1883 to 350,000 in 1907; nearby Santos became one of the world’s busiest ports, sending vast quantities of coffee to the cities of Europe and North America.
Brazil also underwent a literary renaissance during this period, as intellectuals such as Joaquim Maria Machado de Assis and Afonso Henriques de Lima Barreto took penetrating looks into the traditions, turmoil, and changing nature of Brazilian society. Euclides da Cunha, in his masterful historical narrative, Os Sertões (1902; Rebellion in the Backlands), described a bloody struggle between government forces and a group of messianic separatists in the untamed interior of Bahia state; against this tragic backdrop, Cunha reflected on the shortcomings of Brazilian society, including the pervasive divide between rural and urban traditions: the conflict between the “two Brazils.”
The policy of territorial expansion reached its fruition under the brilliant leadership of the Baron of Rio Branco, José Maria da Silva Paranhos, a diplomat who served most notably as foreign minister (1902–12). On his recommendation, the Brazilian military closed off thousands of miles of inland borders and assumed control of vast disputed territories; consequently, other South American nations yielded to Brazil some 342,000 square miles (886,000 square km) of land—an area larger than France. Except for his land grab, Rio Branco avoided international misunderstandings, disputes, and other potential causes for war. In addition, he emphasized diplomatic relations with the United States over the United Kingdom, partly in deference to the Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine. Brazil, which was generally sympathetic to the Allied cause in World War I, declared war on Germany on October 26, 1917, and it subsequently held a temporary seat on the council of the League of Nations.
Rebellion against the coffee elite
Members of the growing urban middle class resented the government’s political and economic assistance to coffee planters, and some junior military officers shared their feelings. An urban and military coalition challenged the coffee elite in the 1922 presidential election, but, amid charges of fraud, the government declared victory. In response, a handful of disgruntled officers staged a poorly planned and unsuccessful coup in Rio de Janeiro in July. Their revolt initiated an eight-year period of unrest aimed at toppling the old republic.
Groups of junior officers, known as tenentes (“lieutenants”), staged more threatening uprisings in the mid-1920s. The survivors of a 1924 rebellion marched thousands of miles through the interior in an attempt to stir up revolt; however, local landowners retained control over the rural workers and effectively resisted the insurrection. Brazil’s urban areas, in contrast, nourished growing demands for social and political progress. Public gatherings and civic events, such as the Modern Art Week in São Paulo in 1922, promoted nationalistic sentiments. Nationalists increasingly criticized the politics of the “coffee governments,” including their selfish tendencies to monopolize power along regional lines, manipulate elections, and resist economic diversification.
By 1926 the movement of the tenentes adopted a somewhat imprecise nationalistic ideology that championed political and economic development. The tenentes fervently believed that the military could alter the habits of the country and propel it into the modern age. Their primary concern was not democracy but reform and development, which included plans to oust entrenched politicians, expand the base of government, and modernize the economy. They hoped to eradicate regionalism by favouring a strong, centralized government. The tenentes also revealed social democratic tendencies by proposing that the government recognize trade unions and cooperatives, carry out agrarian reform, nationalize natural resources, and establish a minimum wage, maximum working hours, child labour laws, and new educational opportunities. After carrying out reforms, they would consent to return the nation to constitutional rule. Much of the program advocated by the tenentes favoured the goals of the urban middle class, but the two groups failed to coordinate their actions, and the military rebellions did not gain effective urban support. Two related events finally ended the political monopoly of the coffee elites. First, coffee prices declined precipitously because of the international financial crisis of 1929–30, and, second, the elite politicians attempted to install yet another national president.