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History 230-M. News of the South. Mexican Revolution. The 1 st major social revolution of the century Began because politicians could not agree who should rule when Diaz died. Creelman interview in Pearson’s Magazine Would retire when term ended Welcomed opposition party
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Mexican Revolution • The 1st major social revolution of the century • Began because politicians could not agree who should rule when Diaz died. • Creelman interview in Pearson’s Magazine • Would retire when term ended • Welcomed opposition party • He was old and tired • State elections start showing opposition groups
Madero • Francisco I. Madero • Part of the establishment • Father owned cotton plantation • Election of 1910 • Jailed 5000 • “Plan de San Luis Potosi • Called for revolution to begin November 20, 1910 • Moral enforcements of land laws • Declared himself President
Roots of Revolution • Diaz era one of unprecedented economic growth • Growth of a middle class out of power • Industrialization that promoted growth of working class • Land problems festered and go worse
Ricardo Flores Magon • Born Oaxaca Sept. 16, 1874 • Died Fort Leavenworth KS, November 21, 1922 • Founded with brother Enrique, Regeneración, 1900 • Influenced by Peter Kropotkin’s The Conquest of Bread
Anarchists • Praxides Guerrero – 1882 – 1910 • Member of Partido Liberal Mexicano – 1907 • Worked with Magon • PLM was active prior to Madero and much more radical
PLM • Founded in St. Louis 1907 • Land reform – first start hearing “Tierra y Libertad” • Rights for the working class • Participation of women – Daughters of Cuahtemoc (Flores de Andrade) • Never strong politically but radicalizing influence
Influential in the burgeoning labor movement Casa del Obrero Mundial – House of the World Worker Part of a world movement to gain workers’ rights – IWW in the US Eliminate 7 day work week 8 hour day Working Class Tienda de Raya – company store 25 – 75 centavos/day Major strikes 1906-1908 brutally crushed Cananea (Sonora) Rio Blanco (Vera Cruz) The Anarchists
Madero Liberty and political reform References land reform Some social change Quickly lost control North Pancho Villa Tough guy Bandit? Meets Madero and confesses to life of crime South Emiliano Zapata “Land and Liberty” True guerilla warfare Attracted to Madero’s land reform statements Revolution Begins
Zapata • Stableman/horse trainer • Sought justice for the campesino • Restore ejido lands taken under the Ley Lerdo • “Land and Liberty” • Theme of Flores Magon • Anarchists from Casa del Obrero Mundial
The Zapatistas • Who were they? • Many photos from: • http://www.rose-hulman.edu/~delacova/mex-revolution.htm • http://personal.redestb.es/fatela/Izquierda.htm
Plan of Ayala • November 1911- Otilio Montaño • Breaks with Madero • Sets out Zapata’s plan for redistributing the lands taken from the rural people
The Revolution 1910 • Diaz government run by senile old men • Fighting breaks out all over Mexico • Villa appointed Captain – raises forces • Zapata is already redistributing land and writes Madero for permission to revolt in his name • Magonistas invade Baja California • Most success coming in North • Border merchants sold arms to Madero and Villa
The Revolution • The hour had come for Diaz • Defeated in 6 months • Crucial battle at Ciudad Juarez • Pascual Orozco • Pancho Villa • May 25, 1911 he resigns • Limantour brokers the deal • Takes Ypiranga (German boat) from Vera Cruz • Dies in Paris 4 years later.
Madero • Little prepared to keep all the bands together. • Thought he could move slowly • Named Victoriano Huerta military chief of staff to put down Porfirista revolts • Huerta murders Madero, his brother, and the Vice-President
Victoriano Huerta • Assisted by Henry Lane Wilson • Huerta was alcoholic • Betrayed fellow conspirators • Lost US backing with election of Woodrow Wilson • Fighting which had hardly stopped broke out in earnest
Venustiano Carranza • Governor of Coahuila • Had supported Diaz and switched • Had advantage of a great general in Álvaro Obregón • Uneasy alliance with Villa and Zapata
Revolutionary Convention • With the fall of Huerta the three main factions meet to establish a new government and enact reforms. • Constitutional Convention at Aguascalientes • Carranza hoped to control to assure his presidency
The Revolution Continues • Carranza resumed presidency in 1915 • Villa retreats to the north and Zapata remains in his base in Morelos • Villa provokes the US and Pershing to bring them into the fray • Some stability led to a constitutional convention
Constitution of 1917 • Replaced the Constitution of 1857 • Beacon to rest of Latin America • Property could be reclaimed by the state • Ejidos should be restored • Right to unionize • No debt peonage • Church could own nothing • Grand social changes
Mexican Anarchists Juan Sarabia Enrique Magón Antonio Villareal Antonio Diaz Soto y Gama