Title: The Mexican Revolution
1The Mexican Revolution
2Jose de la Cruz Porfirio Diaz1876 - 1911
- Led coup against President Lerdo de Tejada in
1876 - Ruled from 1876-1911 as a caudillo
- Industrialized Mexico with foreign money
- Created differentiation of wealth and industrial
inequalities within communities - Was responsible for 1 of Mexican families
controlling 85 of country's wealth - Was blamed for formation of 900 large haciendas
with 60 of population landless
3Military Phase
4Causes of the RevolutionNovember 20, 1910
- Political unrest led to founding of Mexican
Liberal Party by Ricardo Flores Magon to support
peasants labor force - Beginning of Military Phase in 1906- Consolidated
Copper Mine Strike- Cananea, Sonora - -3 pesos for 10-11 hrs for Mexican 7 pesos for
8-10 hrs for Americans - -State troops and then U.S. forces to put down
strike- 23 killed. - 1907 Rio Blanco Textile Workers Strike 200
killed by soldiers. - 1907- 1910 Food crisis due to crop failures
- 1909- Francisco Madero, Anti- Reelectionist
Partys presidential candidate
5Francisco I. Madero
- Educated in France US
- Was leading critic of Diaz political machine
- Family of landowner class with political and
economic ties to Diaz - Madero and over 5000 supporters jailed
- Heard of fraudulent election of Diaz, wrote Plan
of San Luis Potosi
6Plan of San Luis Potosi-1910
- Published when fled to Texas
- Provisions
- Declared 1910 elections null and void
- Assumed title of Provisional President
- Called for free elections when conditions
permitted - No references to Mexicos social problems
7Madero Supporters or Diaz Despisers?
Alvaro Obregon
Pancho Villa
Emiliano Zapata
Venustiano Carranza
Pascual Orozco
8Maderos Power?
- Returned to Mexico only to find no rebel army.
- Jan. 1911- rebellion led by Pascual Orozco
Francisco Pancho Villa in the North. - 1909- Emilio Zapatas army of thousands of
hacienda workers landless peasants in the
South.
9Treaty of Ciudad de JuarezMay 1911
- Capture of Juarez by Villa Orozco
- Several state capitals fell
- Demand by mobs for Diazs resignation
- Provisions
- End to hostilities
- Resignation and exile of Diaz to France
- Francisco de la Barra as provisional president
10El Presidente Madero1911-1913
- Elected in 1911
- Dispute with Zapata over land reform
- Attempted revolts by Bernardo Reyes (Diaz aide)
Felix Diaz (nephew) - "Plan Orozquista, calling for social reforms and
the removal of Madero, issued by Orozco. - Pascual Orozco
- Coup led by Victoriano Huerta aided by American
ambassador Henry Lane Wilson - Revolt aided by release of Reyes and Felix Diaz
(bombarded Mexico City) - La Decena Tragica- Assassination of Madero VP
February 22, 1913, supposedly shot while escaping - Huerta assumes control
11Emiliano Zapata
- Agrarian Revolutionary with Slogan of Tierra y
Libertad - Leader of hacienda workers landless peasants
- Demanded return of land taken under Diaz
- Opposed Maderos desire for orderly land reform
- Wrote Plan of Ayala
- Assassinated in 1919 by orders of General Pablo
Gonzalez
12Plan of Ayala November 1911
- Announced his presidency of Morelos
- Took land of Zapata enemies
- Returned ejidos (communal land) to peasants
- One-third of supportive hacendados redistributed
13Victoriano Huerta1913- 1914
- General under Diaz
- Not recognized by Woodrow Wilson due to method of
gaining power Recalled Henry Lane Wilson - U.S. aids Huertas opponents
- Wanted to reestablish a form of Diaz regime
dissolved both Houses of legislature - February 1914- ¾ of Mexico controlled by rebel
Revolutionary leaders. - July 1914, forced into exile by Zapatistas,
Pancho Villa, Carranza and U.S. - With Orozco, attempted revolt from U.S.
- Arrested, jailed, died of illness
14US Intervention? We never Intervene!
- Tampico incident- 1914
- - Arms embargo by US blockade of Vera Cruz
- - 14 US seamen arrested by Mexicans
- Vera Cruz occupation by US
- - Other Mexican leaders against U.S. actions
thought theyd be happy - - Troops pulled from from Revolution to
Veracruz, leaves him vulnerable - Mediated by ABC powers of South America
15Pancho Villa
- agrarian revolutionary
- different land reform plan
- - All land confiscated to be used for revolution
by government and distributed after end of
revolution - Leader of small ranchers, cowboys and unemployed
- Created well equipped and well paid professional
army - Later formidable opponent of Venustiano Carranza
when he prevents Villa from entering Mexico city
before Alvaro Obregon - 1923- assassinated while driving car
16Venustiano Carranza
- Governor of state of Coahuila
- Dissident member of landowning elite
- Believed Mexico needed energetic middle class
- Huertas most dangerous enemy
- Issues Plan de Guadalupe (March 1913) to counter
Zapatas Plan de Ayala - Took control of Mexico City in July 1914
17Plan de Guadalupe-March 1913
- Carranza assumed leadership of rebellion
- Declared Huertas claim to power illegitimate
- Declared himself First Chief of the
Constitutionalist Army - Followed by edicts stating (Obregon)
- restoration of ejidos and establishing national
agrarian commission - called for improved conditions of poor
18Aguacalientes ConventionOctober 1914
- Convention of Zapata, Villa, Carranzas
supporters - Hall controlled by Villa troops
- Carranza refused to attend, Obregon joined him in
Veracruz - Beginning of Civil War between Carranza Villa
- Villas statement- both should commit suicide for
good of country - Adoption of Plan de Ayala
19Carranza gains power!
- Obregon defeated Villa, Villa returned to the
north, Zapata continued to attack in the south - Carranza moved to Mexico City
- conducted Constitutional Convention in February
1917 - Became President in March 1917
- Broke politically with Obregon
- Obtained Wilsons support, accused by Villa of
betrayal
20The U.S. Rides Again!
- Attack of Columbus, NM by Villa
- General Pershing sent to capture and punish Villa
- Villa bigger hero- Mexico for the Mexicans!
- Carranza saw action as a "foreign invasion" of
Mexico - Expedition unsuccessful
- Recalled Pershing sent to Europe for WWI
21Constitution of 1917
- Final document more liberal than Carranza
intended - Major clauses
- Article 3 - Secular education
- Article 27 - Land reform
- Article 123 - Labor reform
- Article 130 - Restrictions on Church
22Article 3
- Compulsory elementary education
- Free Public education Prohibited religion from
having any influence in public education
23Article 27
- Nation owner of all lands, waters, and subsoil
- Expropriate with compensation
- All acts since Law of 1856 regarding ownership of
the ejidos null and void
24Article 127
- 8 hour work day
- No child labor
- Equal pay for equal work
- Wages in legal tender not goods, tokens or
vouchers (end of tienda de raya) - Right to bargain collectively, organize and
strike
25Article 130
- No law establishing a state religion
- Marriage a civil contract
- Ministers born in Mexico
- Limited property ownership by church
26Carranza Beginning of the End
- Did not fully implement Constitution
- Announced Article 27 was retroactive, confiscated
US oil companies land - Remained neutral in World War I
- Zimmerman Telegram- Germans recover Texas, New
Mexico, Arizona for Mexican alliance - term end 1920 supported puppet Ignacio
Bonillas - Obregon a candidate
- Carranza manipulated electoral process to favor
Bonillas - Revolt by Obregon and Adolfo de la Huerta to oust
Carranza - Killed by bodyguard escaping by train with gold
bullion, May 7, 1920
27Reform Period
28Alvaro Obregon
- Elected to office, replacing Adolfo de la Huerta
who was provisional president - Reestablished diplomatic links with US
- Pragmatic business approach to government
- Sought accommodation with all groups except
reactionary clergy and landlords - Modern version of "pan o palo
29Obregon PoliciesLand Reform
- Created national agrarian commission to oversee
state commissions - Expropriated hacendado land for landless villages
- Paid with 20 year bonds
- Slow Reform due to
- - Litigation by landlordsArmed resistance by
landlords - - Opposition by clergy
- - Million acres distributed
- - 320 million acres in hands of hacendados
- - Government did not provide seeds, tools,
- credit, training
30Obregon Policies Labor
- 1924- Confederacion Regional Obrera Mexicana
(CROM) - labor union headed by Luis Morones - Ties to Samuel Gompers and the AFL in the United
States - Semi-official status, supported by the government
31Obregon Policies Education
- Jose Vasconcelos - Secretary of modern
educational system - Created rural school, La Casa del Pueblo
- - Designed to serve all of village
- - Taught Three Rs, art, music, sports, theater,
instruction in sanitation and agriculture - - Idealistic but many unprepared teachers
- - Itinerant teachers sent to train those in
villages - Murals on public buildings
- Priests denounced secular education
- did not enforce Article 3 (ban on religious
primary schools) - better to be taught by priest than stay
illiterate
32Obregon Policies Indigenismo
- Supported greatness of old Indian arts, Indian
cultural heritage - 1st director of Office of Anthropology-
- Manuel Gamio
- Preserved restored cultural heritage, i.e.,
Teotihuacan - Idealized Aztec Mexico through paintings and art
33Obregon Policies US Relationship
- Bucareli Agreement - August 1923
- - Obregon- non-retroactivity of Article 27
- - Recognition of Obregon government by US
- Coup attempt - December 1923
- Prevented coup with military supplies from US
-
34El Presidente Calles1924 - 1928
- Dominated next decade of Mexican politics
- Continued policies of Obregon
- Rapid growth of national capitalism
- Created National Bank, strengthened
fiscal/monetary policy - Organized National Road Commission
- Enacted National Electric Codes, stimulated
growth of construction consumer goods
industries - Protective tariffs subsidies to industry
(foreign and domestic) - Land distribution increased, twice as much land
distributed 8 million hectares
35El President Calles (contd)
- Problems
- - Hacendados were able to choose the land they
gave up, most of it was not arable - - Calles did not provide tools or other items to
make the land productive - Government bank to lend money to ejidos
- - 4/5 of money to the hacendados due to
superior credit ratings - - Land reform seen as failure due to grain
production of 1930 below production of 1910 - concluded peasant proprietorship not economically
viable and ended land redistribution
36Calles Labor
- Purpose of Trade unions, keep growing power of
capitalism in check - CROM- corrupt leaders low wages
- Formation of independent unions
37Conflict with US-Say it aint so!
- Laws passed implementing Article 27
- Oil ownership a lease arrangement
- exchange title for 50 year concession (possible
30 year renewal, possible further extension - Mexican view
- Gave oil companies firm titles
- Stopped calls for nationalization of oil
- Oil Company view
- Confiscatory Law
- threatened to drill without concessions
- Saber rattling American hardliners
38Conflict with US(contd)
- Intervention stopped by
- - progressive senators
- - press, church, academia
- - would have little us national support
- Mexican Supreme Court ruled time limit of law
unconstitutional - provided for confirmatory concessions
reaffirmed national ownership of subsoil
39Church vs. Modernization of Revolution
- January 1926- Church disavowed Constitution
- Enforced anti-clerical clauses by Calles
- Calles law
- - registration of priests
- - closed all religious primary schools
- Suspension of all religious services in Mexico
- boycott of all goods except necessities
- Cristeros targeted government schools teachers
- Severe government repression
40Presidential Election of 1928
- Deal between Calles Obregon
- change in Constitution- allow former presidents
to be reelected after one term - term extended from 4 to 6 years
- Two opponents conspired against Obregon and
Calles - Arrested and shot by Calles orders
- Obregon elected
- Three weeks assassinated by Cristero in Mexico
City
41El Jefe Maximo
- Three different men placed as president by
Calles- each resigned - 1929 military uprising crushed
42National Revolutionary Party (NPR)
- Established official political party of Mexico by
calles. - Name changed to Party of the Mexican Revolution
(PRM) to Party of Institutional Revolution (PRI) - Turned conservative with Great Depression
- Progressive wing of PNR with General Lazaro
Cardenas as party chairman in 1930 - Nominated for presidency with Calles blessing
- Cabinet picked by Calles
43El Presidente Cardenas1934 - 1940
- Continued reformation
- Established spirit of service in bureaucracy
- Closed gambling houses
- Cut own salary in ½
- 45 million acres of Land distributed
- land given to both the ejido the rancho
- large collective farms established
- provided with seeds, machinery, credit
- Increased productivity
44Cardenas Problems with Agrarian Reforms
- Dealt with land hunger, not real agricultural
development - Ejido size too small
- Distributed land of poor quality
- Inadequate technical assistance
45Labor Reforms of Cardenas
- Corrupt leaders removed
- Confederacion de Trabajadores Mexicanos (CTM)
replaced CROM - Strikes supported by government when appropriate
46Fall of Calles
- Actions angered Calles, plotted against Cardenas
- Cardenas installed new Anti-Calles cabinet
- 1936- Calles deported for "plotting against the
government - Reorganized and purged party of Calles influence.
- Renamed Party of the Mexican Revolution (PRM)
- Three pillars- Labor, Peasantry and Army
47Oil Crisis
- American British oil companies vs. workers
unions - Strike to arbitration, but companies refused
settlement - March 18, 1938- oil companies
- nationalized by Cardenas
- Economic Independence
- 90 of mining still in foreign hands
- No strong action by US due to
- Good Neighbor Policy under Franklin Roosevelt
- Ambassador understood Cardenas policies and
reasons - Timing of move fortunate
- Coming war in Europe
- Mexico pay all just claims
48El Presidente Camacho
- 1940 election- Avila Camacho
- Conservative, but loyal to Cardenas