Andrew Clarence Hendy was a Hereditary Chief of the Mosquito Reservation. He grew up in Nicaragua outside of the reservation and was supported by Nicaraguans in claiming the chiefdom in 1888. Lacking support among the Miskito he abdicated in 18889 in favour of his cousin Jonathan I. Hendy returned to the reservation in 1891 to claim the chiefdom following the death of Jonathan and won support from the Miskito Sambu but lost out to Robert Henry Clarence. Robert was deposed by the Nicaraguans in 1894 and Hendy was selected as chief in a disputed convention which also permitted the reincorporation of the reservation into Nicaragua. Hendy saw several rebellions against his rule and the chiefdom was ended in the 1900s.
Biography
thumb|Bluefields in 1893
Andrew Hendy was a Miskito but grew up at Rayapura on the Coco River in Nicaragua, outside of the Mosquito reservation. Hendy was proclaimed as hereditary chief by the Nicaraguans on the death of his cousin George V, who died on 8 November 1888. He was repudiated by many people of the Miskitu Nation and abdicated in favour of his cousin Jonathan I, on 8 March 1889. He retired to Nicaraguan territory where he became a Miskitu Jefe Inspector and River Magistrate.
Hendy was subsequently chosen as a rival Chief by General Rigoberto Cabezas who deposed Robert Henry Clarence in 1894 and reincorporated the reservation into Nicaragua. The chiefdom ended within the first decade of the 20th century, as the Nicaraguan government had no intention of allowing it any power. Hendy sank into obscurity. The British anthropologist Lilian Elliott met Hendy in his later life and described him as a "short, thick-set, clean-visaged old man with a remarkably intelligent face, and clad in clean clothes and boots" in her 1925 book Central America: New Paths in Ancient Lands.
