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Álvaro Obregón

Álvaro Obregón Salido (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈalβaɾo oβɾeˈɣon]; 17 February 1880 – 17 July 1928) was a Mexican military general and politician who served as the 46th President of Mexico from 1920 to 1924. Obregón was re-elected to the presidency in 1928 but was assassinated before he could take office.

Álvaro Obregón
Álvaro Obregón, c. 1920s
46th President of Mexico
In office
1 December 1920 – 30 November 1924
Preceded byAdolfo de la Huerta
Succeeded byPlutarco Elías Calles
President of the Mexican Laborist Party
In office
1918–1924
Succeeded byLuis N. Morones
Secretary of War and Navy
In office
13 March 1916 – 1 May 1917
Preceded byIgnacio L. Pesqueira
Succeeded byIgnacio C. Enríquez
Municipal president of Huatabampo
In office
1911–1912
Preceded byJosé Tiburcio Otero
Succeeded byBenjamín Almada
Personal details
Born
Álvaro Obregón Salido

(1880-02-17)17 February 1880
Siquisiva, Navojoa, Sonora
Died17 July 1928(1928-07-17) (aged 48)
San Ángel, Mexico City
Manner of deathAssassination
NationalityMexican
Political partyLaborist Party (PL)
SpouseMaría Tapia (1888–1971)
Military service
Allegiance Mexico
Branch/service Mexican Army
RankGeneral
Battles/warsMexican Revolution

A widower with small children and a successful farmer, he did not join the Revolution until after the February 1913 coup d'état against Francisco I. Madero that brought General Victoriano Huerta to the presidency. Obregón supported Sonora's decision to follow Governor of Coahuila Venustiano Carranza as leader of the northern revolutionary coalition, the Constitutionalist Army, against the Huerta regime. An untrained soldier but natural leader, Obregón rose quickly in the ranks and became the Constitutionalist Army's best general, along with Pancho Villa. Carranza appointed Obregón commander of the revolutionary forces in northwestern Mexico. When the Constitutionalists defeated Huerta in July 1914, and the Federal Army dissolved in August, Villa broke with Carranza, with Obregón remaining loyal to him despite Carranza's conservatism. In the civil war of the winners (1914–15), between Carranza and Obregón on one side and Villa and peasant leader Emiliano Zapata on the other, Obregón decisively defeated Villa's army in 1915. Carranza became the undisputed leader of Mexico. In 1915 Carranza appointed him as his minister of war. Obregón became increasingly disillusioned with the conservative Carranza, whom Obregón believed should have become interim president of Mexico and thus been excluded from election as the constitutional president. Carranza was elected president in 1917, after the promulgation of the new revolutionary Constitution of Mexico. Obregón returned to his ranch in Sonora, planning on running for the presidency in the 1920 elections. Since Carranza could not be re-elected and he wished to remain a political force, he designated Ignacio Bonillas, a civilian, to succeed him. In response, in 1920, Obregón and fellow Sonoran revolutionary generals Plutarco Elías Calles and Adolfo de la Huerta launched a revolt against Carranza under the Plan of Agua Prieta. De la Huerta became interim president until elections were held. Obregón won the presidency with overwhelming popular support.

Obregón's presidency was the first stable presidency since the Revolution began in 1910. He oversaw massive educational reform, the flourishing of Mexican muralism, moderate land reform, and labor laws sponsored by the increasingly powerful Regional Confederation of Mexican Workers. In August 1923, he signed the Bucareli Treaty that clarified the rights of the Mexican government and U.S. oil interests and brought U.S. diplomatic recognition to his government.[1] In 1923–24, Obregón's finance minister, Adolfo de la Huerta, launched a rebellion when Obregón designated Plutarco Elías Calles as his successor. De la Huerta garnered support by many revolutionaries who were opposed to Obregón's apparent emulation of Porfirio Díaz's example. Obregón returned to the battlefield and defeated the rebellion. In his victory, he was aided by the United States with arms and 17 U.S. planes that bombed de la Huerta's supporters.[2]

In 1924, Obregón's fellow Northern revolutionary general and hand-picked successor, Plutarco Elías Calles, was elected president. Although Obregón ostensibly retired to Sonora, he remained influential under Calles. Calles pushed through constitutional reform to again make re-election possible, but not continuously. Obregón won the 1928 election. Before beginning his second term however, he was assassinated by José de León Toral during the Cristero War. Obregón's political legacy is that of pragmatic centrism, allying with various factions of the revolution to accomplish his goals, with one historian describing him as "Alvaro Obregón stood out as the organizer, the peacemaker, the unifier."[3] His assassination precipitated a political crisis in the country, ultimately leading to Calles founding the National Revolutionary Party, later renamed the Institutional Revolutionary Party, which would dominate Mexican politics throughout the 20th century and retain the presidency until 2000.

Early years, 1880–1911 edit

Obregón was born in Siquisiva, Municipality of Navojoa, Sonora, the eighteenth offspring of Francisco Obregón[4] and Cenobia Salido. Francisco Obregón had once owned a substantial estate, but his business partner supported Emperor Maximilian during the French intervention in Mexico (1862–1867), and the family's estate was confiscated by the Liberal government in 1867.[5] Francisco Obregón died in 1880, the year of Álvaro Obregón's birth. The boy was raised in very straitened circumstances by his mother and his older sisters Cenobia, María, and Rosa.[6] His mother's family was locally prominent, owning haciendas and some held government positions during the Porfirio Díaz regime.[7] Obregón benefited from his relationship with his more distinguished kin, though as an orphan, he was very much the poor relation. He had ambition to make his way in the world. One of his cousin's on his mother's side, Benjamin G. Hill became an important ally in the Mexican Revolution.

Obregón's home state of Sonora was an isolated area with a border with the U.S. and there was frequent interchange with the U.S. and U.S. investment in Sonora. Sonora's distance from the capital and lack of a direct railway line to the capital affected its late nineteenth-century development and its role in the Mexican Revolution. Sonora had direct railway connections to the U.S. and its economy was more closely tied to the U.S. than central Mexico, exporting cattle hides and most especially garbanzos to the U.S. Obregón's family circumstances and the economic situation of the state made his entry into garbanzo farming a way to make a good living as a young man.[8]

During his childhood, Obregón worked on the family farm and became acquainted with the indigenous Mayo people who also worked there and learned the language. His bilingualism served him well in his later military and political career, drawing both Mayos and Yaqui into his orbit. He attended a school run by his brother José in Huatabampo and received an elementary level formal education. However, his mind was "active, inventive, and above all, practical."[9] He spent his adolescence working a variety of jobs, before finding permanent employment in 1898 as a lathe operator at the sugar mill owned by his maternal uncles in Navolato, Sinaloa.[6] Obregón's experience as a skilled worker shaped his attitude toward the rights of labor, and "gave him the sense of what a powerful political tool the workers' sense of rage could be."[10]

In 1903, he married Refugio Urrea and in 1904, he left the sugar mill to sell shoes door-to-door, and then to become a tenant farmer. By 1906, he was in a position to buy his own small farm with a loan from his mother's family, where he grew garbanzos. The next year was tragic for Obregón as his wife and two of his children died, leaving him a widower with two small children, who were henceforth raised by his three older sisters. In 1909, Obregón invented a garbanzo harvester and soon founded a company to manufacture these harvesters, complete with a modern assembly line. He successfully marketed these harvesters to garbanzo farmers throughout the Mayo Valley.[6] Since garbanzos were an export crop, he lobbied for the extension of the railway line, to get his crop to market more efficiently. He also lobbied for irrigation works, to increase his farm's output.[11] Obregón entered politics in 1911 with his election as municipal president of the town of Huatabampo.

Military career, 1911–1915 edit

Early military career, 1911–1913 edit

 
Pascual Orozco (1882–1915), who fought with Francisco I. Madero (1873–1913) in 1910, only to launch a rebellion against him in Chihuahua in 1911. Obregón's first experience in the military was supporting pro-Madero forces under Victoriano Huerta (1850–1916) against Orozco's rebellion.

Obregón expressed little interest in the Anti-Reelectionist movement launched by Francisco I. Madero in 1908–1909 in opposition to President Porfirio Díaz. When Madero called for an uprising against Díaz following the fraudulent 1910 elections, in November 1910 by issuing his Plan of San Luis Potosí, Obregón did not join the struggle against the Díaz regime.[12] As a widowed parent of two small children and running a prosperous farm, Madero's call to arms was not urgent for him. In his memoir, he regretted the delay.

Obregón became a supporter of Madero shortly after he won the presidential election of 1911. In March 1912, Pascual Orozco, a general who had fought for Madero's cause to oust Díaz, launched a revolt against Madero after Madero ordered the fighters that toppled Díaz to disband, retaining the Federal Army that they had defeated. This revolt started in Chihuahua with the financial backing of Luis Terrazas, a former Governor of Chihuahua and the largest landowner in Mexico.[12] In April 1912, Obregón volunteered to join the local Maderista forces, the Fourth Irregular Battalion of Sonora, organized under the command of General Sanginés to oppose Orozco's revolt.[13] Obregón's unit was the largest in the state, and volunteered to go wherever needed.[14] This Battalion supported federal troops under the command of Victoriano Huerta sent by Madero to crush Orozco's rebellion. Within weeks of joining the Battalion, Obregón displayed signs of military genius. Obregón disobeyed his superior's orders but won several battles by luring his enemies into traps, surprise assaults, and encircling maneuvers.[13]

Obregón was quickly promoted through the ranks and attained the rank of colonel before resigning in December 1912, following the victory over Orozco (with Orozco fleeing to the United States).[15]

Obregón had intended to return to civilian life in December 1912, but then in February 1913, the Madero regime was overthrown in a coup d'état (known to Mexican history as La decena trágica) orchestrated by Victoriano Huerta, Félix Díaz, Bernardo Reyes, and Henry Lane Wilson, the United States Ambassador to Mexico. Madero and his vice president were forced to resign, and were then assassinated. Huerta assumed the presidency.[15]

Obregón immediately traveled to Hermosillo to offer his services to the government of Sonora in opposition to the Huerta regime. The Sonoran government refused to recognize the Huerta regime. In early March 1913, Obregón was appointed chief of Sonora's War Department. In this capacity, he set out on a campaign, and in a matter of days had managed to drive federal troops out of Nogales, Cananea, and Naco. He soon followed up by capturing the port city of Guaymas. He squared off against federal troops in May 1913 at the battle of Santa Rosa through an encirclement of enemy forces. As commander of Sonora's forces, Obregón won the respect of many revolutionaries who had fought under Madero in 1910–11, most notably Benjamín G. Hill.[15]

Fight against the Huerta regime, 1913–1914 edit

The Sonoran government was in contact with the government of Coahuila, which had also refused to recognize the Huerta regime and entered a state of rebellion. A Sonoran delegation headed by Adolfo de la Huerta traveled to Monclova to meet with the Governor of Coahuila, Venustiano Carranza. The Sonoran government signed on to Carranza's Plan of Guadalupe, by which Carranza became "primer jefe" of the newly proclaimed Constitutional Army. On 30 September 1913, Carranza appointed Obregón commander-in-chief of the Constitutional Army in the Northwest, with jurisdiction over Sonora, Sinaloa, Durango, Chihuahua, and Baja California.[15]

 
Gen. Obregón and staff of Yaquis, c. 1913

In November 1913, Obregón's forces captured Culiacán, thus securing the supremacy of the Constitutional Army in the entire area of Northwestern Mexico under Obregón's command.[15]

 
Álvaro Obregón (center left) and grey-bearded "First Chief" of the Constitutionalists, Venustiano Carranza.

Obregón and other Sonorans were deeply suspicious of Carranza's Secretary of War, Felipe Ángeles, because they considered Ángeles to be a holdover of the old Díaz regime. At the urging of the Sonorans (the most powerful group in Carranza's coalition following Obregón's victories in the Northwest), Carranza downgraded Ángeles to the position of Sub-Secretary of War.[16]

In spite of his demotion, Ángeles formulated the rebel grand strategy of a three-prong attack south to Mexico City: (1) Obregón would advance south along the western railroad, (2) Pancho Villa would advance south along the central railroad, and (3) Pablo González Garza would advance south along the eastern railroad.[17]

Obregón began his march south in April 1914. Whereas Pancho Villa preferred wild cavalry charges, Obregón was again more cautious. Villa was soon at odds with Carranza, and in May 1914, Carranza instructed Obregón to increase the pace of his southern campaign to ensure that he beat Villa's troops to Mexico City. Obregón moved his troops from Topolobampo, Sinaloa, to blockade Mazatlán, and then to Tepic, where Obregón cut off the railroad from Guadalajara, Jalisco, to Colima, thus leaving both of these ports isolated.[18]

In early July, Obregón moved south to Orendaín, Jalisco, where his troops defeated federal troops, leaving 8000 dead, and making it clear that the Huerta regime was defeated. Obregón was promoted to major general. He continued his march south. Upon Obregón's arrival in Teoloyucan, Mexico State, it was clear that Huerta was defeated, and, on 11 August, on the mudguard of a car, Obregón signed the treaties that ended the Huerta regime. On 16 August 1914, Obregón and 18,000 of his troops marched triumphantly into Mexico City. He was joined shortly by Carranza, who marched triumphantly into Mexico City on 20 August.[18]

In Mexico City, Obregón moved to exact revenge on his perceived enemies. He believed that the Mexican Catholic Church had supported the Huerta regime, and he therefore imposed a fine of 500,000 pesos on the church, to be paid to the Revolutionary Council for Aid to the People.[19]

He also believed that the rich had been pro-Huerta, and he therefore imposed special taxes on capital, real estate, mortgages, water, pavement, sewers, carriages, automobiles, bicycles, etc.[20] Special measures were also taken against foreigners. Some of these were deliberately humiliating: for example, he forced foreign businessmen to sweep the streets of Mexico City.[21]

Relations with Villa, June–September 1914 edit

Although tensions between the conservative Carranza and more radical Pancho Villa grew throughout 1914, Obregón attempted to mediate between the two to keep the revolutionary coalition intact. Villa had created a number of diplomatic incidents and Carranza was worried that would invite further U.S. intervention, whose forces already occupied Veracruz. On 8 July 1914, Villistas and Carrancistas signed the Pact of Torreón, in which they agreed that after Huerta's forces were defeated, 150 generals of the Revolution would meet to determine the future shape of the country. Carranza was angered by Villa's insubordination, particularly ignoring the order not to take Zacatecas. For this reason Carranza refused to let Villa march into Mexico City in August. Villa had contacted Obregón following Villa's capture of Zacatecas in June 1914, suggesting the two successful revolutionary generals could cooperate against the civilian Carranza. Obregón was not willing to do that at this point, preferring to try to keep the revolutionary coalition intact as long as possible. Obregón understood the danger that Villa presented to the Constitutionalists if the coalition was to fracture; he made two trips to Chihuahua in August and September 1914 to see Villa in person to try to mediate the situation between Villa and Carranza. During this period, Obregón got to know both Carranza and Villa well, which informed his later relations with them. Both trips to Villa were extremely risky for Obregón, placing himself in danger of being assassinated by Villa. In September, Villa and Carranza formally split,[21] but Obregón positioned himself for the longer term.

During Obregón's first meeting with Villa in late August, the two agreed that Carranza should declare himself interim president of Mexico, as mandated in Carranza's Plan of Guadalupe when Huerta was defeated. Carranza refused to do so, since it would mean that he could not run for election as president. As the situation stood, Carranza was the head of an extra-legal government. Since the Constitutionalists supposedly fought for the restoration of constitutional government, Carranza was violating that in order to hold onto political power. Villa and Obregón further called on Carranza to appoint judges to the supreme court and establish a civilian judiciary. They also petitioned Carranza to establish councils at the federal and local levels that would then call elections. Obregón and Villa agreed that a new federal congress should make laws benefiting the poor. Since the revolutionary forces had destroyed the old Federal Army, a new military force came into being, the National Army. They agreed that members of the military should be barred from holding high political office. Villa and Obregón's agreement also stipulated that any revolutionaries currently under arms must resign from the military and be ineligible for civilian office for six months. Unlike Carranza, who was positioning himself to be elected president and not violate the no re-election principle for which the Constitutionalists fought, Villa and Obregón were not angling for the presidency, but rather seeking to restore constitutional order. A further agreement between Villa and Obregón was that land reform should be dealt with immediately, since it was the reason that many joined the revolution. Both generals saw immediate action on land for revolutionary soldiers as a priority. Obregón returned to Mexico City and presented the petition to Carranza. Carranza rejected it, even though Obregón told him it would lead to an immediate break with Villa.[22]

Convention of the Winners, 1914 edit

 
Eulalio Gutiérrez (1881–1939), flanked by Francisco "Pancho" Villa (1878–1923) and Emiliano Zapata (1879–1919). Gutiérrez was appointed provisional President of Mexico by the Convention of Aguascalientes, a move that Venustiano Carranza (1859–1920) found intolerable. In the ensuing war, Obregón fought for Carranza against the convention.

Despite the break that came between Villa and Carranza, revolutionary leaders still attempted to resolve their differences and meet to chart the way forward. The Convention that the Carrancistas and Villistas had agreed to in the Treaty of Torreón went ahead at Aguascalientes on 5 October 1914. Carranza did not participate in the Convention of Aguascalientes because he was not a general, but, as a general, Obregón participated. The Convention soon split into two major factions: (1) the Carrancistas, who insisted that the convention should follow the promise of the Plan of Guadalupe and restore the 1857 Constitution of Mexico; and (2) the Villistas, who sought more wide-ranging social reforms than set out in the Plan of Guadalupe. The Villistas were supported by Emiliano Zapata, leader of the Liberation Army of the South, who had issued his own Plan of Ayala, which called for wide-ranging social reforms. For a month and a half, Obregón maintained neutrality between the two sides and tried to reach a middle ground that would avoid a civil war.[23]

Eventually, it became clear that the Villistas/Zapatistas had prevailed at the convention; Carranza, however, refused to accept the convention's preparations for a "pre-constitutional" regime, which Carranza believed was totally inadequate, and in late November, Carranza rejected the authority of the regime imposed by the convention. Forced to choose sides, Obregón sided with Carranza and left the convention to fight for the Primer Jefe. He had made many friends amongst the Villistas and Zapatistas at the convention and was able to convince some of them to depart with him. On 12 December 1914, Carranza issued his Additions to the Plan of Guadalupe, which laid out an ambitious reform program, including Laws of Reform, in conscious imitation of Benito Juárez's Laws of Reform.[23]

War with the Conventionists, 1915 edit

 
General Obregón.

Once again, Obregón was able to recruit loyal troops by promising them land in return for military service. In this case, in February 1915, the Constitutionalist Army signed an agreement with the Casa del Obrero Mundial ("House of the World Worker"), the labor union with anarcho-syndicalist connections which had been established during Francisco I. Madero's presidency. As a result of this agreement, six "Red Battalions" of workers were formed to fight alongside the Constitutionalists against the Conventionists Villa and Zapata. This agreement had the side effect of lending the Carrancistas legitimacy with the urban proletariat.[23]

 
General Álvaro Obregón (left) shown with a cigar in his left hand and his right arm missing, lost in the Battle of Celaya in 1915. Center is First Chief Venustiano Carranza

Obregón's forces easily defeated Zapatista forces at Puebla in early 1915, but the Villistas remained in control of large portions of the country. Forces under Pancho Villa were moving towards the Bajío; General Felipe Ángeles's forces occupied Saltillo and thus dominated the northeast; the forces of Calixto Contreras and Rodolfo Fierro controlled western Mexico; and forces under Tomás Urbina were active in Tamaulipas and San Luis Potosí.[24]

The armies of Obregón and Villa clashed in four battles, collectively known as the Battle of Celaya, the largest military confrontation in Latin American history before the Falklands War of 1982. The first battle took place on 6 April and 7 April 1915 and ended with the withdrawal of the Villistas. The second, in Celaya, Guanajuato, took place between 13 April and 15 April, when Villa attacked the city of Celaya but was repulsed. The third was the prolonged position battle of Trinidad and Santa Ana del Conde between 29 April and 5 June, which was the definitive battle. Villa was again defeated by Obregón, who lost his right arm in the fight.[25]

Villa made a last attempt to stop Obregón's army in Aguascalientes on 10 July but without success. Obregón distinguished himself during the Battle of Celaya by being one of the first Mexicans to comprehend that the introduction of modern field artillery, and especially machine guns, had shifted the battlefield in favor of a defending force. In fact, while Obregón studied this shift and used it in his defense of Celaya, generals in the World War I trenches of Europe were still advocating bloody and mostly failing mass charges.[26]

Obregón's arm edit

 
President Obregón in a business suit, showing that he lost his right arm fighting Pancho Villa in 1915. It earned him the nickname of El Manco de Celaya ("the one-armed man of Celaya").

During the battles with Villa, Obregón had his right arm blown off. The blast nearly killed him, and he attempted to put himself out of his misery and fired his pistol to accomplish that. The aide de camp who had cleaned his gun had neglected to put bullets in the weapon. In a wry story he told about himself, he joined in the search for his missing arm. "I was helping them myself, because it's not so easy to abandon such a necessary thing as an arm." The searchers had no luck. A comrade reached into his pocket and raised a gold coin. Obregón concluded the story, saying "And then everyone saw a miracle: the arm came forth from who knows where, and come skipping up to where the gold azteca [coin] was elevated; it reached up and grasped it in its fingers – lovingly – That was the only way to get my lost arm to appear."[27][28] The arm was subsequently embalmed and then displayed in the monument to Obregón at the Parque de la Bombilla, on the site of where he was assassinated in 1928.[29] Obregón always wore clothing tailored to show that he had lost his arm in battle, a visible sign of his sacrifice to Mexico.

Early political career, 1915–1920 edit

Carranza's Minister of War, 1915–1916 edit

In May 1915, Carranza had proclaimed himself the head of what he termed a "Preconstitutional Regime" that would govern Mexico until a constitutional convention could be held. Obregón had petitioned Carranza as early as 1914 to assume the title of interim president, which he refused to do since it would have precluded his running for the presidency. Obregón had chosen loyalty to Carranza rather than throwing his lot in with Villa and Zapata, and Carranza appointed Obregón as Minister of War in his new cabinet.[26] Although they were ostensibly allies, Carranza and Obregón's relationship was tense, but neither wished an open break at this point. Obregón took the opportunity to build his own power base with laborers and the agrarian movement, as well as with politicians in high places.[30] As Minister of War, Obregón determined to modernize and professionalize the Mexican military thoroughly. In the process, he founded a staff college and a school of military medicine. He also founded the Department of Aviation and a school to train pilots. Munitions factories were placed under the direct control of the military.[26]

Break with Carranza, 1917–1920 edit

In September 1916, Carranza convoked a Constitutional Convention, to be held in Querétaro, Querétaro. He declared that the liberal 1857 Constitution of Mexico would be respected, though purged of some of its shortcomings. When the Constitutional Convention met in December 1916, it had only 85 conservatives and centrists close to Carranza's brand of liberalism, a mainly civilian group known as the bloque renovador ("renewal faction"). There were 132 progressive delegates, who insisted that land reform and labor rights be embodied in the new constitution. Obregón was not himself a delegate, but the progressives sought out his backing for the inclusion in the constitution of guarantees for the goals for which the peasantry and organized labor had fought. Obregón now broke with Carranza and threw his considerable weight behind the radicals. He met with radical legislators, as well as the intellectual leader of the radicals, Andrés Molina Enríquez, and came out in favor of all their key issues. In particular, unlike Carranza, Obregón supported the land reform mandated by Article 27 of the constitution. He also supported the heavily anticlerical Articles 3 and 130 that Carranza opposed.[26][31][32]

The revolutionary Constitution of 1917 was drafted and ratified quickly. Villistas and Zapatistas were excluded from its drafting, but both factions remained militarily a threat to the Constitutionalist regime and its new constitution. Shortly after swearing his allegiance to the new Constitution, Obregón resigned as Minister of War and retired to Huatabampo to resume his life as a garbanzo farmer. He organized the region's garbanzo farmers in a producer's league and briefly entertained the idea of going to France to fight on the side of the Allies in World War I. He made a considerable amount of money in these years, and also entertained many visitors. As the victorious general of the Mexican Revolution, Obregón remained enormously popular throughout the country.[33]

 
Álvaro Obregón, c. 1920s

By early 1919, Obregón had determined to use his immense popularity to run in the presidential election that would be held in 1920. Carranza announced that he would not run for president in 1920, but refused to endorse Obregón, instead endorsing an obscure diplomat, Ignacio Bonillas, a civilian that Carranza could likely control. Obregón announced his candidacy in June 1919. He ran as the candidate for the Partido Liberal Constitutionalista (PLC), a party uniting most of the revolutionary generals. Obregón's cousin and comrade in arms, General Benjamin Hill, was a founding member of the party. He coordinated Obregón's support in Mexico City and reached out to the Zapatista general Genovevo de la O.[34] Carranza had Emiliano Zapata assassinated in 1919, weakening but not eliminating the Zapatista threat to the capital.

In August, Obregón concluded an agreement with Luis Napoleón Morones and the Regional Confederation of Mexican Workers, promising that if elected, he would create a Department of Labor, install a labor-friendly Minister of Industry and Commerce, and issue a new labor law.[35] Obregón began to campaign in earnest in November 1919.[36]

Carranza was far more conservative than Obregón and once duly elected as president, he did not implement the revolutionary elements of the 1917 constitution. Carranza attempted to concentrate power in his own hands. Obregón had anticipated that Carranza would encourage him to run for the presidency in 1920, but no word came from him. Obregón informed Carranza by telegram that he would be running for the presidency. Obregón's formal announcement was distributed widely, and Carranza saw Obregón's condemnation of "evils of the Carranza regime." Stung by Obregón's repudiation, Carranza sought a presidential candidate from the state of Sonora, choosing the Mexican Ambassador to the U.S. Ignacio Bonillas.[37] When Obregón heard that his fellow Sonorense was Carranza's chosen candidate, he said "An excellent person, my paisano Bonillas. A man who is serious, honest, and hardworking. The world has lost a magnificent bookkeeper."[38]

At Carranza's behest, the Senate stripped Obregón of his military rank, a move which only increased Obregón's popularity. Then, Carranza orchestrated a plot in which a minor officer claimed that Obregón was planning an armed uprising against the Carranza regime. Obregón was forced to disguise himself as a railwayman and flee to Guerrero, where one of his former subordinates, Fortunato Maycotte, was governor.

On 20 April 1920, Obregón issued a declaration in the town of Chilpancingo accusing Carranza of having used public money in support of Bonillas's presidential candidacy. He declared his allegiance to the Governor of Sonora, Adolfo de la Huerta, in revolution against the Carranza regime.[39]

On 23 April, the Sonorans issued the Plan of Agua Prieta, which triggered a military revolt against the president. Obregón's Sonoran forces were augmented by troops under General Hill and the Zapatistas led by Gildardo Magaña and Genovevo de la O.

The revolt was successful and Carranza was deposed, after Obregon's forces captured Mexico City on 10 May 1920[40] On 20 May 1920, Carranza was killed in the state of Puebla in an ambush led by General Rodolfo Herrero as he fled from Mexico City to Veracruz on horseback.

For six months, from 1 June 1920 to 1 December 1920, Adolfo de la Huerta served as provisional president of Mexico until elections could be held.[41] When Obregón was declared the victor, de la Huerta stepped down and assumed the position of Secretary of the Treasury in the new government.

President of Mexico, 1920–1924 edit

Obregón's election as president essentially signaled the end of the violence of the Mexican Revolution. The death of Lucio Blanco in 1922 and the assassination of Pancho Villa in 1923 would eliminate the last remaining obvious challenges to Obregón's regime. He pursued what seemed to be contradictory policies during his administration.[42]

Educational reforms and cultural developments edit

Obregón appointed José Vasconcelos (Rector of the National Autonomous University of Mexico who had been in exile 1915–1920 because of his opposition to Carranza) as his Secretary of Public Education.[43] Vasconcelos undertook a major effort to construct new schools across the country. Around 1,000 rural schools and 2,000 public libraries were built.[44]

Vasconcelos was also interested in promoting artistic developments that created a narrative of Mexico's history and the Mexican Revolution.[45] Obregón's time as president saw the beginning of the art movement of Mexican muralism, with artists such as Diego Rivera, David Alfaro Siqueiros, José Clemente Orozco, and Roberto Montenegro invited to create murals expressive of the spirit of the Mexican Revolution on the walls of public buildings throughout Mexico.[46]

Obregón also sought to shape public perceptions of the Revolution and its place in history by staging elaborate celebrations in 1921 on the centenary of Mexico's independence from Spain. There had been such celebrations in 1910 by the Díaz regime, commemorating the start of the insurgency by Miguel Hidalgo. 1921 provided a date for Obregon's government to shape historical memory of independence and the Revolution.[47] After a decade of violence during the Revolution, the centennial celebrations provided an opportunity for Mexicans to reflect on their history and identity, as well as to enjoy diversions in peacetime. For Obregón, the centennial was a way to emphasize that revolutionary initiatives had historical roots and that like independence, the Revolution presented new opportunities for Mexicans.[48] Obregón "intended to use the occasion to shore-up popular support for the government, and, by extension, the revolution itself."[49] Unlike the centennial celebrations in 1910, the one of 1921 had no monumental architecture to inaugurate.[50]

Labor relations edit

Obregón kept his August 1919 agreement with Luis Napoleón Morones and the Regional Confederation of Mexican Workers (CROM) and created a Department of Labor, installed a labor-friendly Minister of Industry and Commerce, and issued a new labor law.[51]

 
Luis N. Morones in 1925

Morones and CROM became increasingly powerful in the early 1920s and it would have been very difficult for Obregón to oppose their increased power. Morones was not afraid to use violence against his competitors, nearly eliminating the General Confederation of Workers in 1923.[51]

CROM's success did not necessarily translate to success for all of Mexico's workers, and Article 123 of the Constitution of Mexico was enforced only sporadically. Thus, while CROM's right to strike was recognized, non-CROM strikes were broken up by the police or the army. Also, few Mexican workers got Sundays off with pay, or were able to limit their workday to eight hours.[51]

Land reform edit

Land reform was more extensive under Obregón than it had been under Carranza. Obregón enforced the constitutional land redistribution provisions, and in total, 921,627 hectares of land were distributed during his presidency.[51] However, Obregón was a successful commercial garbanzo farmer in Sonora, and "did not believe in socialism or in land reform" and was in agreement with Madero and Carranza that "radical land reform might very well destroy the Mexican economy and lead to a return to subsistence agriculture."[52]

Relations with Catholic Church edit

Many leaders and members of the Roman Catholic Church in Mexico were highly critical of the 1917 constitution. They especially criticized Article 3, which forbade religious instruction in schools, and Article 130, which adopted an extreme form of separation of church and state by including a series of restrictions on priests and ministers of all religions to hold public office, canvass on behalf of political parties or candidates, or to inherit from persons other than close blood relatives.[51]

Although Obregón was suspicious of the Catholic Church, he was less anticlerical than his successor, Plutarco Elías Calles, would be. Calles's policies would lead to the Cristero War (1926–29). For example, Obregón sent Pope Pius XI congratulations upon his election in 1922 and, in a private message to the pope, emphasized the "complementarity" of the aims of the Catholic Church and the Mexican Revolution.[51]

In spite of Obregón's moderate approach, his presidency saw the beginnings of clashes between Catholics and supporters of the Mexican Revolution. Some bishops[who?] campaigned actively against land reform and the organization of workers into secular unions. Catholic Action movements were founded in Mexico in the wake of Pius XI's 1922 encyclical Ubi arcano Dei consilio, and supporters of the Young Mexican Catholic Action soon found themselves in violent conflict with CROM members.[53]

The most serious diplomatic incident occurred in 1923, when Ernesto Filippi, the Apostolic Nuncio to Mexico, conducted an open air religious service although it was illegal to hold a religious service outside a church. The government invoked Article 33 of the constitution and expelled Filippi from Mexico.[54]

Mexico-U.S. relations edit

 
Adolfo de la Huerta (1881–1955), the former Governor of Sonora under whose banner Obregón purportedly fought in 1920, and who served as Obregón's Finance Minister before launching a rebellion in 1923.

As president, one of Obregón's top priorities was securing US diplomatic recognition of his regime, to resume normal Mexico–United States relations. Although he rejected the U.S. demand that Mexico rescind Article 27 of the constitution, Obregón negotiated a major agreement with the United States, the Bucareli Treaty of August 1923 that made some concessions to the US in order to gain diplomatic recognition.[55] It was particularly helpful when the Mexican Supreme Court, in a case brought by Texas Oil, declared that Article 27 did not apply retroactively. Another important arena in which Obregón resolved issues with the U.S. and other foreign governments was the Mexican-United States General Claims Commission.[56] Finance Minister Adolfo de la Huerta signed a deal in which Mexico recognized a debt of $1.451  million to international bankers. Finally, at the Bucareli Conference, Obregón agreed to an American demand that Mexico would not expropriate any foreign oil companies, and in exchange, the U.S. recognized his government. Many Mexicans criticized Obregón as a sellout (entreguista), including Adolfo de la Huerta for his actions at the Bucareli Conference.[54]

De la Huerta rebellion, 1923–1924 edit

In 1923, Obregón endorsed Plutarco Elías Calles for president in the 1924 election in which Obregón was not eligible to run. Finance Minister Adolfo de la Huerta, who had served as interim president in 1920 before he stepped down after the election of Obregón, joined a rebellion against Obregón and his chosen successor, Calles. De la Huerta believed Obregón was repeating Carranza's mistake of imposing his own candidate on the country. De la Huerta accepted the nomination of the Cooperativist Party to be its candidate in the presidential elections.[57] De la Huerta then joined and gave his name to a major military uprising against Obregón. Over half of the army joined De la Huerta's rebellion, with many of Obregón's former comrades in arms now turning on him. Rebel forces massed in Veracruz and Jalisco.[57] In a decisive battle at Ocotlán, Jalisco, Obregón's forces crushed the rebel forces. Diplomatic recognition by the United States following the signing of the 1923 Bucareli Treaty was significant in Obregón's victory over rebels. The U.S. supplied Obregón arms and also sent 17 U.S. planes, which bombed rebels in Jalisco.[2] Obregón hunted down many of his former comrades in arms, including Gen. Salvador Alvarado and Fortunato Maycotte and had them executed.[58][59] De la Huerta was among those who went into exile. Following the crushing of the rebellion, Calles was elected president, and Obregón stepped down from office.

Later years, 1924–1928 edit

Following the election of Calles as president, Obregón returned to Sonora to farm. He led an "agricultural revolution" in the Yaqui Valley, where he introduced modern irrigation. Obregón expanded his business interests to include a rice mill in Cajeme, a seafood packing plant, a soap factory, tomato fields, a car rental business, and a jute bag factory.[60]

Obregón remained in close contact with President Calles, whom he had installed as his successor, and was a frequent guest of Calles at Chapultepec Castle. This prompted fears that Obregón was intending to follow in the footsteps of Porfirio Díaz and that Calles was merely a puppet figure, the equivalent of Manuel González. These fears became acute in October 1926, when the Mexican Congress repealed term limits, thus clearing the way for Obregón to run for president in 1928.[60]

Obregón returned to the battlefield for the period October 1926 to April 1927 to put down a rebellion led by the Yaqui people. This was ironic because Obregón had first risen to military prominence commanding Yaqui troops, to whom he promised land, and the 1926–27 Yaqui rebellion was a demand for land reform. Obregón probably participated in this campaign to prove his loyalty to the Calles government, to show his continued influence over the military, and to protect his commercial interests in the Yaqui Valley, which had begun to suffer as a result of the increasing violence in the region.[61]

Re-election and assassination edit

 
Obregón July 2, 1928, days before his assassination.

Obregón formally began his presidential campaign in May 1927. CROM and a large part of public opinion were against his re-election, but he still counted on the support of most of the army and of the National Agrarian Party.

Two of Obregón's oldest allies, General Arnulfo R. Gómez and General Francisco Serrano, opposed his re-election. Serrano launched an anti-Obregón rebellion and was ultimately assassinated. Gómez later called for an insurrection against Obregón, but was soon killed as well.[62]

 
Execution of José de León Toral (1900–1929), assassin of Mexican president Álvaro Obregón, on 9 February 1929.

Obregón won the 1928 Mexican presidential election, but months before assuming the presidency he was assassinated. Calles' harsh treatment of Roman Catholics had led to a rebellion known as the Cristero War, which broke out in 1926. As an ally of Calles, Obregón was hated by Catholics and was assassinated in La Bombilla Café[63] on July 17, 1928, shortly after his return to Mexico City, by José de León Toral, a Roman Catholic opposed to the government's anti-Catholic policies.[64] Obregón was not as fiercely anticlerical as Calles and had not imposed the anticlerical provisions of the 1917 constitution when he was president. Toral's subsequent trial resulted in his conviction and execution by firing squad. A Capuchin nun named María Concepción Acevedo de la Llata, "Madre Conchita", was implicated in the case and was thought to be the mastermind behind Obregón's murder.[65] León Toral sought retribution for the execution of Miguel Pro, who was falsely convicted of attempting to assassinate Obregón a year prior.[citation needed]

Honors edit

Álvaro Obregón was awarded Japan's Order of the Chrysanthemum at a special ceremony in Mexico City. On November 26, 1924, Baron Shigetsuma Furuya, Special Ambassador from Japan to Mexico, conferred the honor on the President.[66]

Legacy and posthumous recognition edit

 
Monument to Obregón in Mexico City

Although Obregón was a gifted military strategist during the Revolution and decisively defeated Pancho Villa's División del Norte at the Battle of Celaya and went on to become President of Mexico, his posthumous name recognition and standing as a hero of the Revolution is nowhere near that of Villa's or Emiliano Zapata's. There is no posthumous cult of Obregón as there is to those two losing revolutionary leaders. On the 1945 anniversary of Obregón's assassination, the official ceremony attracted few attendees.[67]

As president, he successfully gained recognition from the United States in 1923, settled for a period the dispute with the U.S. over oil via the Bucareli Treaty, gain full rein to his Secretary of Public Education, José Vasconcelos, who expanded access to learning for Mexicans by building schools, but also via public art of the Mexican muralists. Perhaps as with Porfirio Díaz, Obregón saw himself as indispensable to the nation and had the Constitution of 1917 amended so that he could run again for the presidency in Mexico. This bent and, in many people's minds, violated the revolutionary rule "no re-election" that had been enshrined in the constitution.

His assassination in 1928 before he could take the presidential office created a major political crisis in Mexico, which was solved by the creation of the National Revolutionary Party by his fellow Sonoran, General and former President Plutarco Elías Calles.

An imposing monument to Álvaro Obregón is located in the Parque de la Bombilla in the San Ángel neighborhood of southern Mexico City. It is Mexico's largest monument to a single revolutionary and stands on the site where Obregón was assassinated.[68] The monument held Obregón's severed, and over the years, increasingly deteriorating right arm that he lost in 1915. The monument now has a marble sculpture of the severed arm, after the arm itself was incinerated in 1989. Obregón's body is buried in Huatabampo, Sonora, rather than the Monument to the Revolution in downtown Mexico City where other revolutionaries are now entombed. In Sonora, Obregón is honored with an equestrian statue, where he is shown as a vigorous soldier with two arms.

In Sonora, the second largest city, Ciudad Obregón is named for the revolutionary leader. Obregón's son Álvaro Obregón Tapia served one term as the governor of Sonora as a candidate for the Institutional Revolutionary Party, founded following Obregón's assassination. The Álvaro Obregón Dam, built near Ciudad Obregón, became operational during the gubernatorial term of Obregón's son.

Obregón is honored in the name of a genus of small cactus indigenous to Mexico – Obregonia denegrii.[69]

In popular culture edit

In the novel The Friends of Pancho Villa (1996) by James Carlos Blake, Obregón is a major character.

Obregón is also featured in the novel Il collare spezzato by Italian writer Valerio Evangelisti (2006).

Obregón's legacy and lost limb are the subjects of Mexican-American singer-songwriter El Vez's "The Arm of Obregón", from his 1996 album G.I. Ay! Ay! Blues.[70]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Cline, Howard F. The United States and Mexico. Cambridge: Harvard University Press 1961, p. 208.
  2. ^ a b Cline, U.S. and Mexico, p. 208.
  3. ^ Hall, Linda B. Alvaro Obregón: Power and Revolution in Mexico, 1911–1920. College Station TX: Texas A&M University Press 1981, 3
  4. ^ Buchenau, The Last Caudillo, 32
  5. ^ Krauze, Enrique (1997). Mexico: Biography of Power, p. 374 at Google Books
  6. ^ a b c Krauze, p. 375 at Google Books
  7. ^ Voss, Stuart F. "Alvaro Obregón Salido". Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture, v. 4, 212.
  8. ^ Hall, Alvaro Obregón, 10–11
  9. ^ Dulles, John F.W. Yesterday in Mexico: A Chronicle of the Revolution, 1919–1936. Austin: University of Texas Press 1961, 4.
  10. ^ Hall, Alvaro Obregón, 23.
  11. ^ Voss, "Alvaro Obregón Salidio", 212.
  12. ^ a b Krauze, p. 377 at Google Books
  13. ^ a b Krauze, p. 378.
  14. ^ Voss, "Alvaro Obregón Salido", 212.
  15. ^ a b c d e Krauze, p. 379.
  16. ^ Slattery, Matthew (1982). Felipe Ángeles and the Mexican Revolution, pp. 59–60; Katz, Friedrich (1998). The Life and Times of Pancho Villa, p. 277 at Google Books
  17. ^ Slattery, p. 61.
  18. ^ a b Krauze, p. 380 at Google Books
  19. ^ Krauze, p. 382 at Google Books
  20. ^ Krauze, pp. 382–383, p. 382, at Google Books
  21. ^ a b Krauze, p. 383 at Google Books
  22. ^ Hall, Álvaro Obregón, 67–69
  23. ^ a b c Krauze, p. 384 at Google Books
  24. ^ Krauze, pp. 384–385 at Google Books
  25. ^ Krauze, pp. 386–387.
  26. ^ a b c d Krauze, p. 387 at Google Books
  27. ^ quoted in Dulles, John W.F. Yesterday in Mexico: A Chronicle of Revolution, 1919–1936. Austin: University of Texas 1961, pp. 3–4.
  28. ^ Buchenau, Jürgen. "The Arm and Body of the Revolution: Remembering Mexico's Last Caudillo, Álvaro Obregón" in Lyman L. Johnson, ed. Body Politics: Death, Dismemberment, and Memory in Latin America. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 2004, pp. 179–207.
  29. ^ Carranza, Luis E. (2010). Architecture As Revolution: Episodes in the History of Modern Mexico. Roger Fullington series in architecture. University of Texas Press. pp. 184–187. OCLC 1191803826.
  30. ^ Hall, Alvaro Obregón, 140.
  31. ^ Riner, D. L.; Sweeney, J. V. (1991). Mexico: meeting the challenge. Euromoney. p. 64. ISBN 978-1-870031-59-2.
  32. ^ D'Antonio, William V.; Pike, Fredrick B. (1964). Religion, revolution, and reform: new forces for change in Latin America. Praeger. p. 66.
  33. ^ Buchenau, pp. 94–97.
  34. ^ Matute, Álvaro. "Benjamin Guillermo Hill". Encyclopedia of Mexico, 644.
  35. ^ Krauze, pp. 375–389 at Google Books
  36. ^ Krauze, p. 389 at Google Books
  37. ^ Dulles, Yesterday in Mexico, 17–18
  38. ^ quoted in Dulles, Yesterday in Mexico, 22
  39. ^ Krauze, p. 390 at Google Books
  40. ^ "San Pedro News Pilot 10 May 1920 — California Digital Newspaper Collection".
  41. ^ Krauze, p. 392.
  42. ^ Katz, Friedrich. The Life and Times of Pancho Villa, Stanford: Stanford University Press 1998, 730–32.
  43. ^ Krauze, p. 393.
  44. ^ Meyer, Michael C. and Sherman, William L. The Course of Mexican History.
  45. ^ Mulvey, Laura; Wollen, Peter (1982). Frida Kahlo and Tina Modotti. London: Whitechapel Gallery. p. 12. ISBN 0854880550.
  46. ^ Krauze, p. 394 at Google Books
  47. ^ Gonzales, Michael J. "Imagining Mexico in 1921: Visions of the Revolutionary State and Society in the Centennial Celebration in Mexico City", Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos vol. 25, (2) 2009, pp. 247–270.
  48. ^ Gonzales, "Imagining Mexico in 1921", p. 249.
  49. ^ Gonzales, "Imagining Mexico in 1921", p. 251.
  50. ^ Gonzales, "Imagining Mexico in 1921", pp. 253–54.
  51. ^ a b c d e f Krauze, p. 395 at Google Books
  52. ^ Katz, The Life and Times of Pancho Villa, p. 731.
  53. ^ Krauze, pp. 395–396 at Google Books
  54. ^ a b Krauze, p. 396 at Google Books
  55. ^ Cline, U.S. and Mexico, pp. 207–208.
  56. ^ Cline, U.S. and Mexico, pp. 208–210.
  57. ^ a b Krauze, p. 397 at Google Books
  58. ^ Krauze, p. 398 at Google Books
  59. ^ Lieuwen, Edwin. Mexican Militarism: The Political Rise and Fall of the Revolutionary Army, 1910–1940. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 1968, 72–78
  60. ^ a b Krauze, p. 399.
  61. ^ Buchenau, pp. 150–151.
  62. ^ Krauze, p. 401 at Google Books
  63. ^ "P&A Photos #173503" – New York Bureau
  64. ^ Krauze, p. 403 at Google Books
  65. ^ Heilman, Jaymie. "The Demon Inside: Madre Conchita, Gender, and the Assassination of Obregon". Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos, 18.1 (2002): 23–60.
  66. ^ "Japan Decorates Obregon; Order of the Chrysanthemum is Conferred by Special Ambassador", New York Times, 28 November 1924.
  67. ^ Gillingham, Paul. Unrevolutionary Mexico. New Haven: Yale University Press 2021, 238
  68. ^ "Monumento al General Álvaro Obregón, Mexico City", MyTravelGuide.com
  69. ^ Eggli, Urs et al. (2004). Etymological Dictionary of Succulent Plant Names, pp. 169, 64 at Google Books
  70. ^ McLeod, Kembrew. "El Vez: G.I. Ay! Ay! Blues" at AllMusic. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
  • Weis, Robert (2019). For Christ and Country: Militant Catholic Youth in Post-Revolutionary Mexico. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.[ISBN missing]

Further reading edit

  • Buchenau, Jürgen (2004) "The Arm and Body of a Revolution: Remembering Mexico's Last Caudillo, Álvaro Obregón" in Lyman L. Johnson, ed. Body Politics: Death, Dismemberment, and Memory in Latin America. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, pp. 179–207.
  • Buchenau, Jürgen (2011). The Last Caudillo: Alvaro Obregón and the Mexican Revolution. Chichester, England: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • Castro, Pedro (2009). Álvaro Obregón: Fuego y cenizas de la Revolución Mexicana. Ediciones Era – Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes. ISBN 978-607-445-027-9 (ERA) – ISBN 978-607-455-257-7 (CNCA); Sitio de Pedro Castro[permanent dead link]
  • Eggli, Urs and Newton, Leonard E. (2004). Etymological Dictionary of Succulent Plant Names. Berlin: Springer. ISBN 978-3-540-00489-9; OCLC 248883002
  • Hall, Linda B. (1981). Álvaro Obregón: power and revolution in Mexico, 1911–1920. College Station: Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 978-0890961131; OCLC 7202959
  • Hall, Linda B. "Álvaro Obregón and the Politics of Mexican Land Reform, 1920–1924", Hispanic American Historical Review (1980) 60#2 pp. 213–238 in JSTOR.
  • Heilman, Jaymie. "The Demon Inside: Madre Conchita, Gender, and the Assassination of Obregón". Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos, 18.1 (2002): 23–60.
  • Katz, Friedrich (1998). The Life and Times of Pancho Villa. Stanford: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-3045-7; ISBN 978-0-8047-3046-4; OCLC 253993082
  • Krauze, Enrique, Mexico: Biography of Power. New York: HarperCollins 1997. ISBN 0-06-016325-9
  • Lomnitz-Adler, Claudio (2001). Deep Mexico, Silent Mexico: an Anthropology of Nationalism. University of Minnesota Press.
  • Lucas, Jeffrey Kent (2010). The Rightward Drift of Mexico's Former Revolutionaries: The Case of Antonio Díaz Soto y Gama. Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press. ISBN 978-0773436657; F1234.D585 L83 2010
  • Slattery, Matthew (1982). Felipe Ángeles and the Mexican Revolution. Parma Heights, Ohio: Greenbriar Books. ISBN 978-0-932970-34-3; OCLC 9108261

External links edit

  • Admiring essay on the Battle of Celaya with a focus on the tactics used by General Obregón.
  • Priestley, Herbert Ingram (1922). "Obregón, Alvaro" . Encyclopædia Britannica (12th ed.).
  • Newspaper clippings about Álvaro Obregón in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
Political offices
Preceded by President of Mexico
1 December 1920 – 30 November 1924
Succeeded by

Álvaro, obregón, other, uses, disambiguation, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, obregón, second, maternal, family, name, salido, article, lead, section, need, rewritten, please, help, improve, lead, read, lead, layout, guide, december, 2023, learn. For other uses see Alvaro Obregon disambiguation In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Obregon and the second or maternal family name is Salido The article s lead section may need to be rewritten Please help improve the lead and read the lead layout guide December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Alvaro Obregon Salido Spanish pronunciation ˈalbaɾo obɾeˈɣon 17 February 1880 17 July 1928 was a Mexican military general and politician who served as the 46th President of Mexico from 1920 to 1924 Obregon was re elected to the presidency in 1928 but was assassinated before he could take office Alvaro ObregonAlvaro Obregon c 1920s46th President of MexicoIn office 1 December 1920 30 November 1924Preceded byAdolfo de la HuertaSucceeded byPlutarco Elias CallesPresident of the Mexican Laborist PartyIn office 1918 1924Serving with Plutarco Elias CallesSucceeded byLuis N MoronesSecretary of War and NavyIn office 13 March 1916 1 May 1917Preceded byIgnacio L PesqueiraSucceeded byIgnacio C EnriquezMunicipal president of HuatabampoIn office 1911 1912Preceded byJose Tiburcio OteroSucceeded byBenjamin AlmadaPersonal detailsBornAlvaro Obregon Salido 1880 02 17 17 February 1880Siquisiva Navojoa SonoraDied17 July 1928 1928 07 17 aged 48 San Angel Mexico CityManner of deathAssassinationNationalityMexicanPolitical partyLaborist Party PL SpouseMaria Tapia 1888 1971 Military serviceAllegiance MexicoBranch service Mexican ArmyRankGeneralBattles warsMexican RevolutionA widower with small children and a successful farmer he did not join the Revolution until after the February 1913 coup d etat against Francisco I Madero that brought General Victoriano Huerta to the presidency Obregon supported Sonora s decision to follow Governor of Coahuila Venustiano Carranza as leader of the northern revolutionary coalition the Constitutionalist Army against the Huerta regime An untrained soldier but natural leader Obregon rose quickly in the ranks and became the Constitutionalist Army s best general along with Pancho Villa Carranza appointed Obregon commander of the revolutionary forces in northwestern Mexico When the Constitutionalists defeated Huerta in July 1914 and the Federal Army dissolved in August Villa broke with Carranza with Obregon remaining loyal to him despite Carranza s conservatism In the civil war of the winners 1914 15 between Carranza and Obregon on one side and Villa and peasant leader Emiliano Zapata on the other Obregon decisively defeated Villa s army in 1915 Carranza became the undisputed leader of Mexico In 1915 Carranza appointed him as his minister of war Obregon became increasingly disillusioned with the conservative Carranza whom Obregon believed should have become interim president of Mexico and thus been excluded from election as the constitutional president Carranza was elected president in 1917 after the promulgation of the new revolutionary Constitution of Mexico Obregon returned to his ranch in Sonora planning on running for the presidency in the 1920 elections Since Carranza could not be re elected and he wished to remain a political force he designated Ignacio Bonillas a civilian to succeed him In response in 1920 Obregon and fellow Sonoran revolutionary generals Plutarco Elias Calles and Adolfo de la Huerta launched a revolt against Carranza under the Plan of Agua Prieta De la Huerta became interim president until elections were held Obregon won the presidency with overwhelming popular support Obregon s presidency was the first stable presidency since the Revolution began in 1910 He oversaw massive educational reform the flourishing of Mexican muralism moderate land reform and labor laws sponsored by the increasingly powerful Regional Confederation of Mexican Workers In August 1923 he signed the Bucareli Treaty that clarified the rights of the Mexican government and U S oil interests and brought U S diplomatic recognition to his government 1 In 1923 24 Obregon s finance minister Adolfo de la Huerta launched a rebellion when Obregon designated Plutarco Elias Calles as his successor De la Huerta garnered support by many revolutionaries who were opposed to Obregon s apparent emulation of Porfirio Diaz s example Obregon returned to the battlefield and defeated the rebellion In his victory he was aided by the United States with arms and 17 U S planes that bombed de la Huerta s supporters 2 In 1924 Obregon s fellow Northern revolutionary general and hand picked successor Plutarco Elias Calles was elected president Although Obregon ostensibly retired to Sonora he remained influential under Calles Calles pushed through constitutional reform to again make re election possible but not continuously Obregon won the 1928 election Before beginning his second term however he was assassinated by Jose de Leon Toral during the Cristero War Obregon s political legacy is that of pragmatic centrism allying with various factions of the revolution to accomplish his goals with one historian describing him as Alvaro Obregon stood out as the organizer the peacemaker the unifier 3 His assassination precipitated a political crisis in the country ultimately leading to Calles founding the National Revolutionary Party later renamed the Institutional Revolutionary Party which would dominate Mexican politics throughout the 20th century and retain the presidency until 2000 Contents 1 Early years 1880 1911 2 Military career 1911 1915 2 1 Early military career 1911 1913 2 2 Fight against the Huerta regime 1913 1914 2 3 Relations with Villa June September 1914 2 4 Convention of the Winners 1914 2 5 War with the Conventionists 1915 2 6 Obregon s arm 3 Early political career 1915 1920 3 1 Carranza s Minister of War 1915 1916 3 2 Break with Carranza 1917 1920 4 President of Mexico 1920 1924 4 1 Educational reforms and cultural developments 4 2 Labor relations 4 3 Land reform 4 4 Relations with Catholic Church 4 5 Mexico U S relations 4 6 De la Huerta rebellion 1923 1924 5 Later years 1924 1928 6 Re election and assassination 7 Honors 8 Legacy and posthumous recognition 9 In popular culture 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly years 1880 1911 editObregon was born in Siquisiva Municipality of Navojoa Sonora the eighteenth offspring of Francisco Obregon 4 and Cenobia Salido Francisco Obregon had once owned a substantial estate but his business partner supported Emperor Maximilian during the French intervention in Mexico 1862 1867 and the family s estate was confiscated by the Liberal government in 1867 5 Francisco Obregon died in 1880 the year of Alvaro Obregon s birth The boy was raised in very straitened circumstances by his mother and his older sisters Cenobia Maria and Rosa 6 His mother s family was locally prominent owning haciendas and some held government positions during the Porfirio Diaz regime 7 Obregon benefited from his relationship with his more distinguished kin though as an orphan he was very much the poor relation He had ambition to make his way in the world One of his cousin s on his mother s side Benjamin G Hill became an important ally in the Mexican Revolution Obregon s home state of Sonora was an isolated area with a border with the U S and there was frequent interchange with the U S and U S investment in Sonora Sonora s distance from the capital and lack of a direct railway line to the capital affected its late nineteenth century development and its role in the Mexican Revolution Sonora had direct railway connections to the U S and its economy was more closely tied to the U S than central Mexico exporting cattle hides and most especially garbanzos to the U S Obregon s family circumstances and the economic situation of the state made his entry into garbanzo farming a way to make a good living as a young man 8 During his childhood Obregon worked on the family farm and became acquainted with the indigenous Mayo people who also worked there and learned the language His bilingualism served him well in his later military and political career drawing both Mayos and Yaqui into his orbit He attended a school run by his brother Jose in Huatabampo and received an elementary level formal education However his mind was active inventive and above all practical 9 He spent his adolescence working a variety of jobs before finding permanent employment in 1898 as a lathe operator at the sugar mill owned by his maternal uncles in Navolato Sinaloa 6 Obregon s experience as a skilled worker shaped his attitude toward the rights of labor and gave him the sense of what a powerful political tool the workers sense of rage could be 10 In 1903 he married Refugio Urrea and in 1904 he left the sugar mill to sell shoes door to door and then to become a tenant farmer By 1906 he was in a position to buy his own small farm with a loan from his mother s family where he grew garbanzos The next year was tragic for Obregon as his wife and two of his children died leaving him a widower with two small children who were henceforth raised by his three older sisters In 1909 Obregon invented a garbanzo harvester and soon founded a company to manufacture these harvesters complete with a modern assembly line He successfully marketed these harvesters to garbanzo farmers throughout the Mayo Valley 6 Since garbanzos were an export crop he lobbied for the extension of the railway line to get his crop to market more efficiently He also lobbied for irrigation works to increase his farm s output 11 Obregon entered politics in 1911 with his election as municipal president of the town of Huatabampo Military career 1911 1915 editEarly military career 1911 1913 edit nbsp Pascual Orozco 1882 1915 who fought with Francisco I Madero 1873 1913 in 1910 only to launch a rebellion against him in Chihuahua in 1911 Obregon s first experience in the military was supporting pro Madero forces under Victoriano Huerta 1850 1916 against Orozco s rebellion Obregon expressed little interest in the Anti Reelectionist movement launched by Francisco I Madero in 1908 1909 in opposition to President Porfirio Diaz When Madero called for an uprising against Diaz following the fraudulent 1910 elections in November 1910 by issuing his Plan of San Luis Potosi Obregon did not join the struggle against the Diaz regime 12 As a widowed parent of two small children and running a prosperous farm Madero s call to arms was not urgent for him In his memoir he regretted the delay Obregon became a supporter of Madero shortly after he won the presidential election of 1911 In March 1912 Pascual Orozco a general who had fought for Madero s cause to oust Diaz launched a revolt against Madero after Madero ordered the fighters that toppled Diaz to disband retaining the Federal Army that they had defeated This revolt started in Chihuahua with the financial backing of Luis Terrazas a former Governor of Chihuahua and the largest landowner in Mexico 12 In April 1912 Obregon volunteered to join the local Maderista forces the Fourth Irregular Battalion of Sonora organized under the command of General Sangines to oppose Orozco s revolt 13 Obregon s unit was the largest in the state and volunteered to go wherever needed 14 This Battalion supported federal troops under the command of Victoriano Huerta sent by Madero to crush Orozco s rebellion Within weeks of joining the Battalion Obregon displayed signs of military genius Obregon disobeyed his superior s orders but won several battles by luring his enemies into traps surprise assaults and encircling maneuvers 13 Obregon was quickly promoted through the ranks and attained the rank of colonel before resigning in December 1912 following the victory over Orozco with Orozco fleeing to the United States 15 Obregon had intended to return to civilian life in December 1912 but then in February 1913 the Madero regime was overthrown in a coup d etat known to Mexican history as La decena tragica orchestrated by Victoriano Huerta Felix Diaz Bernardo Reyes and Henry Lane Wilson the United States Ambassador to Mexico Madero and his vice president were forced to resign and were then assassinated Huerta assumed the presidency 15 Obregon immediately traveled to Hermosillo to offer his services to the government of Sonora in opposition to the Huerta regime The Sonoran government refused to recognize the Huerta regime In early March 1913 Obregon was appointed chief of Sonora s War Department In this capacity he set out on a campaign and in a matter of days had managed to drive federal troops out of Nogales Cananea and Naco He soon followed up by capturing the port city of Guaymas He squared off against federal troops in May 1913 at the battle of Santa Rosa through an encirclement of enemy forces As commander of Sonora s forces Obregon won the respect of many revolutionaries who had fought under Madero in 1910 11 most notably Benjamin G Hill 15 Fight against the Huerta regime 1913 1914 edit The Sonoran government was in contact with the government of Coahuila which had also refused to recognize the Huerta regime and entered a state of rebellion A Sonoran delegation headed by Adolfo de la Huerta traveled to Monclova to meet with the Governor of Coahuila Venustiano Carranza The Sonoran government signed on to Carranza s Plan of Guadalupe by which Carranza became primer jefe of the newly proclaimed Constitutional Army On 30 September 1913 Carranza appointed Obregon commander in chief of the Constitutional Army in the Northwest with jurisdiction over Sonora Sinaloa Durango Chihuahua and Baja California 15 nbsp Gen Obregon and staff of Yaquis c 1913In November 1913 Obregon s forces captured Culiacan thus securing the supremacy of the Constitutional Army in the entire area of Northwestern Mexico under Obregon s command 15 nbsp Alvaro Obregon center left and grey bearded First Chief of the Constitutionalists Venustiano Carranza Obregon and other Sonorans were deeply suspicious of Carranza s Secretary of War Felipe Angeles because they considered Angeles to be a holdover of the old Diaz regime At the urging of the Sonorans the most powerful group in Carranza s coalition following Obregon s victories in the Northwest Carranza downgraded Angeles to the position of Sub Secretary of War 16 In spite of his demotion Angeles formulated the rebel grand strategy of a three prong attack south to Mexico City 1 Obregon would advance south along the western railroad 2 Pancho Villa would advance south along the central railroad and 3 Pablo Gonzalez Garza would advance south along the eastern railroad 17 Obregon began his march south in April 1914 Whereas Pancho Villa preferred wild cavalry charges Obregon was again more cautious Villa was soon at odds with Carranza and in May 1914 Carranza instructed Obregon to increase the pace of his southern campaign to ensure that he beat Villa s troops to Mexico City Obregon moved his troops from Topolobampo Sinaloa to blockade Mazatlan and then to Tepic where Obregon cut off the railroad from Guadalajara Jalisco to Colima thus leaving both of these ports isolated 18 In early July Obregon moved south to Orendain Jalisco where his troops defeated federal troops leaving 8000 dead and making it clear that the Huerta regime was defeated Obregon was promoted to major general He continued his march south Upon Obregon s arrival in Teoloyucan Mexico State it was clear that Huerta was defeated and on 11 August on the mudguard of a car Obregon signed the treaties that ended the Huerta regime On 16 August 1914 Obregon and 18 000 of his troops marched triumphantly into Mexico City He was joined shortly by Carranza who marched triumphantly into Mexico City on 20 August 18 In Mexico City Obregon moved to exact revenge on his perceived enemies He believed that the Mexican Catholic Church had supported the Huerta regime and he therefore imposed a fine of 500 000 pesos on the church to be paid to the Revolutionary Council for Aid to the People 19 He also believed that the rich had been pro Huerta and he therefore imposed special taxes on capital real estate mortgages water pavement sewers carriages automobiles bicycles etc 20 Special measures were also taken against foreigners Some of these were deliberately humiliating for example he forced foreign businessmen to sweep the streets of Mexico City 21 Relations with Villa June September 1914 edit Although tensions between the conservative Carranza and more radical Pancho Villa grew throughout 1914 Obregon attempted to mediate between the two to keep the revolutionary coalition intact Villa had created a number of diplomatic incidents and Carranza was worried that would invite further U S intervention whose forces already occupied Veracruz On 8 July 1914 Villistas and Carrancistas signed the Pact of Torreon in which they agreed that after Huerta s forces were defeated 150 generals of the Revolution would meet to determine the future shape of the country Carranza was angered by Villa s insubordination particularly ignoring the order not to take Zacatecas For this reason Carranza refused to let Villa march into Mexico City in August Villa had contacted Obregon following Villa s capture of Zacatecas in June 1914 suggesting the two successful revolutionary generals could cooperate against the civilian Carranza Obregon was not willing to do that at this point preferring to try to keep the revolutionary coalition intact as long as possible Obregon understood the danger that Villa presented to the Constitutionalists if the coalition was to fracture he made two trips to Chihuahua in August and September 1914 to see Villa in person to try to mediate the situation between Villa and Carranza During this period Obregon got to know both Carranza and Villa well which informed his later relations with them Both trips to Villa were extremely risky for Obregon placing himself in danger of being assassinated by Villa In September Villa and Carranza formally split 21 but Obregon positioned himself for the longer term During Obregon s first meeting with Villa in late August the two agreed that Carranza should declare himself interim president of Mexico as mandated in Carranza s Plan of Guadalupe when Huerta was defeated Carranza refused to do so since it would mean that he could not run for election as president As the situation stood Carranza was the head of an extra legal government Since the Constitutionalists supposedly fought for the restoration of constitutional government Carranza was violating that in order to hold onto political power Villa and Obregon further called on Carranza to appoint judges to the supreme court and establish a civilian judiciary They also petitioned Carranza to establish councils at the federal and local levels that would then call elections Obregon and Villa agreed that a new federal congress should make laws benefiting the poor Since the revolutionary forces had destroyed the old Federal Army a new military force came into being the National Army They agreed that members of the military should be barred from holding high political office Villa and Obregon s agreement also stipulated that any revolutionaries currently under arms must resign from the military and be ineligible for civilian office for six months Unlike Carranza who was positioning himself to be elected president and not violate the no re election principle for which the Constitutionalists fought Villa and Obregon were not angling for the presidency but rather seeking to restore constitutional order A further agreement between Villa and Obregon was that land reform should be dealt with immediately since it was the reason that many joined the revolution Both generals saw immediate action on land for revolutionary soldiers as a priority Obregon returned to Mexico City and presented the petition to Carranza Carranza rejected it even though Obregon told him it would lead to an immediate break with Villa 22 Convention of the Winners 1914 edit nbsp Eulalio Gutierrez 1881 1939 flanked by Francisco Pancho Villa 1878 1923 and Emiliano Zapata 1879 1919 Gutierrez was appointed provisional President of Mexico by the Convention of Aguascalientes a move that Venustiano Carranza 1859 1920 found intolerable In the ensuing war Obregon fought for Carranza against the convention Despite the break that came between Villa and Carranza revolutionary leaders still attempted to resolve their differences and meet to chart the way forward The Convention that the Carrancistas and Villistas had agreed to in the Treaty of Torreon went ahead at Aguascalientes on 5 October 1914 Carranza did not participate in the Convention of Aguascalientes because he was not a general but as a general Obregon participated The Convention soon split into two major factions 1 the Carrancistas who insisted that the convention should follow the promise of the Plan of Guadalupe and restore the 1857 Constitution of Mexico and 2 the Villistas who sought more wide ranging social reforms than set out in the Plan of Guadalupe The Villistas were supported by Emiliano Zapata leader of the Liberation Army of the South who had issued his own Plan of Ayala which called for wide ranging social reforms For a month and a half Obregon maintained neutrality between the two sides and tried to reach a middle ground that would avoid a civil war 23 Eventually it became clear that the Villistas Zapatistas had prevailed at the convention Carranza however refused to accept the convention s preparations for a pre constitutional regime which Carranza believed was totally inadequate and in late November Carranza rejected the authority of the regime imposed by the convention Forced to choose sides Obregon sided with Carranza and left the convention to fight for the Primer Jefe He had made many friends amongst the Villistas and Zapatistas at the convention and was able to convince some of them to depart with him On 12 December 1914 Carranza issued his Additions to the Plan of Guadalupe which laid out an ambitious reform program including Laws of Reform in conscious imitation of Benito Juarez s Laws of Reform 23 War with the Conventionists 1915 edit nbsp General Obregon Once again Obregon was able to recruit loyal troops by promising them land in return for military service In this case in February 1915 the Constitutionalist Army signed an agreement with the Casa del Obrero Mundial House of the World Worker the labor union with anarcho syndicalist connections which had been established during Francisco I Madero s presidency As a result of this agreement six Red Battalions of workers were formed to fight alongside the Constitutionalists against the Conventionists Villa and Zapata This agreement had the side effect of lending the Carrancistas legitimacy with the urban proletariat 23 nbsp General Alvaro Obregon left shown with a cigar in his left hand and his right arm missing lost in the Battle of Celaya in 1915 Center is First Chief Venustiano CarranzaObregon s forces easily defeated Zapatista forces at Puebla in early 1915 but the Villistas remained in control of large portions of the country Forces under Pancho Villa were moving towards the Bajio General Felipe Angeles s forces occupied Saltillo and thus dominated the northeast the forces of Calixto Contreras and Rodolfo Fierro controlled western Mexico and forces under Tomas Urbina were active in Tamaulipas and San Luis Potosi 24 The armies of Obregon and Villa clashed in four battles collectively known as the Battle of Celaya the largest military confrontation in Latin American history before the Falklands War of 1982 The first battle took place on 6 April and 7 April 1915 and ended with the withdrawal of the Villistas The second in Celaya Guanajuato took place between 13 April and 15 April when Villa attacked the city of Celaya but was repulsed The third was the prolonged position battle of Trinidad and Santa Ana del Conde between 29 April and 5 June which was the definitive battle Villa was again defeated by Obregon who lost his right arm in the fight 25 Villa made a last attempt to stop Obregon s army in Aguascalientes on 10 July but without success Obregon distinguished himself during the Battle of Celaya by being one of the first Mexicans to comprehend that the introduction of modern field artillery and especially machine guns had shifted the battlefield in favor of a defending force In fact while Obregon studied this shift and used it in his defense of Celaya generals in the World War I trenches of Europe were still advocating bloody and mostly failing mass charges 26 Obregon s arm edit nbsp President Obregon in a business suit showing that he lost his right arm fighting Pancho Villa in 1915 It earned him the nickname of El Manco de Celaya the one armed man of Celaya During the battles with Villa Obregon had his right arm blown off The blast nearly killed him and he attempted to put himself out of his misery and fired his pistol to accomplish that The aide de camp who had cleaned his gun had neglected to put bullets in the weapon In a wry story he told about himself he joined in the search for his missing arm I was helping them myself because it s not so easy to abandon such a necessary thing as an arm The searchers had no luck A comrade reached into his pocket and raised a gold coin Obregon concluded the story saying And then everyone saw a miracle the arm came forth from who knows where and come skipping up to where the gold azteca coin was elevated it reached up and grasped it in its fingers lovingly That was the only way to get my lost arm to appear 27 28 The arm was subsequently embalmed and then displayed in the monument to Obregon at the Parque de la Bombilla on the site of where he was assassinated in 1928 29 Obregon always wore clothing tailored to show that he had lost his arm in battle a visible sign of his sacrifice to Mexico Early political career 1915 1920 editCarranza s Minister of War 1915 1916 edit In May 1915 Carranza had proclaimed himself the head of what he termed a Preconstitutional Regime that would govern Mexico until a constitutional convention could be held Obregon had petitioned Carranza as early as 1914 to assume the title of interim president which he refused to do since it would have precluded his running for the presidency Obregon had chosen loyalty to Carranza rather than throwing his lot in with Villa and Zapata and Carranza appointed Obregon as Minister of War in his new cabinet 26 Although they were ostensibly allies Carranza and Obregon s relationship was tense but neither wished an open break at this point Obregon took the opportunity to build his own power base with laborers and the agrarian movement as well as with politicians in high places 30 As Minister of War Obregon determined to modernize and professionalize the Mexican military thoroughly In the process he founded a staff college and a school of military medicine He also founded the Department of Aviation and a school to train pilots Munitions factories were placed under the direct control of the military 26 Break with Carranza 1917 1920 edit In September 1916 Carranza convoked a Constitutional Convention to be held in Queretaro Queretaro He declared that the liberal 1857 Constitution of Mexico would be respected though purged of some of its shortcomings When the Constitutional Convention met in December 1916 it had only 85 conservatives and centrists close to Carranza s brand of liberalism a mainly civilian group known as the bloque renovador renewal faction There were 132 progressive delegates who insisted that land reform and labor rights be embodied in the new constitution Obregon was not himself a delegate but the progressives sought out his backing for the inclusion in the constitution of guarantees for the goals for which the peasantry and organized labor had fought Obregon now broke with Carranza and threw his considerable weight behind the radicals He met with radical legislators as well as the intellectual leader of the radicals Andres Molina Enriquez and came out in favor of all their key issues In particular unlike Carranza Obregon supported the land reform mandated by Article 27 of the constitution He also supported the heavily anticlerical Articles 3 and 130 that Carranza opposed 26 31 32 The revolutionary Constitution of 1917 was drafted and ratified quickly Villistas and Zapatistas were excluded from its drafting but both factions remained militarily a threat to the Constitutionalist regime and its new constitution Shortly after swearing his allegiance to the new Constitution Obregon resigned as Minister of War and retired to Huatabampo to resume his life as a garbanzo farmer He organized the region s garbanzo farmers in a producer s league and briefly entertained the idea of going to France to fight on the side of the Allies in World War I He made a considerable amount of money in these years and also entertained many visitors As the victorious general of the Mexican Revolution Obregon remained enormously popular throughout the country 33 nbsp Alvaro Obregon c 1920sBy early 1919 Obregon had determined to use his immense popularity to run in the presidential election that would be held in 1920 Carranza announced that he would not run for president in 1920 but refused to endorse Obregon instead endorsing an obscure diplomat Ignacio Bonillas a civilian that Carranza could likely control Obregon announced his candidacy in June 1919 He ran as the candidate for the Partido Liberal Constitutionalista PLC a party uniting most of the revolutionary generals Obregon s cousin and comrade in arms General Benjamin Hill was a founding member of the party He coordinated Obregon s support in Mexico City and reached out to the Zapatista general Genovevo de la O 34 Carranza had Emiliano Zapata assassinated in 1919 weakening but not eliminating the Zapatista threat to the capital In August Obregon concluded an agreement with Luis Napoleon Morones and the Regional Confederation of Mexican Workers promising that if elected he would create a Department of Labor install a labor friendly Minister of Industry and Commerce and issue a new labor law 35 Obregon began to campaign in earnest in November 1919 36 Carranza was far more conservative than Obregon and once duly elected as president he did not implement the revolutionary elements of the 1917 constitution Carranza attempted to concentrate power in his own hands Obregon had anticipated that Carranza would encourage him to run for the presidency in 1920 but no word came from him Obregon informed Carranza by telegram that he would be running for the presidency Obregon s formal announcement was distributed widely and Carranza saw Obregon s condemnation of evils of the Carranza regime Stung by Obregon s repudiation Carranza sought a presidential candidate from the state of Sonora choosing the Mexican Ambassador to the U S Ignacio Bonillas 37 When Obregon heard that his fellow Sonorense was Carranza s chosen candidate he said An excellent person my paisano Bonillas A man who is serious honest and hardworking The world has lost a magnificent bookkeeper 38 At Carranza s behest the Senate stripped Obregon of his military rank a move which only increased Obregon s popularity Then Carranza orchestrated a plot in which a minor officer claimed that Obregon was planning an armed uprising against the Carranza regime Obregon was forced to disguise himself as a railwayman and flee to Guerrero where one of his former subordinates Fortunato Maycotte was governor On 20 April 1920 Obregon issued a declaration in the town of Chilpancingo accusing Carranza of having used public money in support of Bonillas s presidential candidacy He declared his allegiance to the Governor of Sonora Adolfo de la Huerta in revolution against the Carranza regime 39 On 23 April the Sonorans issued the Plan of Agua Prieta which triggered a military revolt against the president Obregon s Sonoran forces were augmented by troops under General Hill and the Zapatistas led by Gildardo Magana and Genovevo de la O The revolt was successful and Carranza was deposed after Obregon s forces captured Mexico City on 10 May 1920 40 On 20 May 1920 Carranza was killed in the state of Puebla in an ambush led by General Rodolfo Herrero as he fled from Mexico City to Veracruz on horseback For six months from 1 June 1920 to 1 December 1920 Adolfo de la Huerta served as provisional president of Mexico until elections could be held 41 When Obregon was declared the victor de la Huerta stepped down and assumed the position of Secretary of the Treasury in the new government President of Mexico 1920 1924 editObregon s election as president essentially signaled the end of the violence of the Mexican Revolution The death of Lucio Blanco in 1922 and the assassination of Pancho Villa in 1923 would eliminate the last remaining obvious challenges to Obregon s regime He pursued what seemed to be contradictory policies during his administration 42 Educational reforms and cultural developments edit Obregon appointed Jose Vasconcelos Rector of the National Autonomous University of Mexico who had been in exile 1915 1920 because of his opposition to Carranza as his Secretary of Public Education 43 Vasconcelos undertook a major effort to construct new schools across the country Around 1 000 rural schools and 2 000 public libraries were built 44 Vasconcelos was also interested in promoting artistic developments that created a narrative of Mexico s history and the Mexican Revolution 45 Obregon s time as president saw the beginning of the art movement of Mexican muralism with artists such as Diego Rivera David Alfaro Siqueiros Jose Clemente Orozco and Roberto Montenegro invited to create murals expressive of the spirit of the Mexican Revolution on the walls of public buildings throughout Mexico 46 Obregon also sought to shape public perceptions of the Revolution and its place in history by staging elaborate celebrations in 1921 on the centenary of Mexico s independence from Spain There had been such celebrations in 1910 by the Diaz regime commemorating the start of the insurgency by Miguel Hidalgo 1921 provided a date for Obregon s government to shape historical memory of independence and the Revolution 47 After a decade of violence during the Revolution the centennial celebrations provided an opportunity for Mexicans to reflect on their history and identity as well as to enjoy diversions in peacetime For Obregon the centennial was a way to emphasize that revolutionary initiatives had historical roots and that like independence the Revolution presented new opportunities for Mexicans 48 Obregon intended to use the occasion to shore up popular support for the government and by extension the revolution itself 49 Unlike the centennial celebrations in 1910 the one of 1921 had no monumental architecture to inaugurate 50 Labor relations edit Obregon kept his August 1919 agreement with Luis Napoleon Morones and the Regional Confederation of Mexican Workers CROM and created a Department of Labor installed a labor friendly Minister of Industry and Commerce and issued a new labor law 51 nbsp Luis N Morones in 1925Morones and CROM became increasingly powerful in the early 1920s and it would have been very difficult for Obregon to oppose their increased power Morones was not afraid to use violence against his competitors nearly eliminating the General Confederation of Workers in 1923 51 CROM s success did not necessarily translate to success for all of Mexico s workers and Article 123 of the Constitution of Mexico was enforced only sporadically Thus while CROM s right to strike was recognized non CROM strikes were broken up by the police or the army Also few Mexican workers got Sundays off with pay or were able to limit their workday to eight hours 51 Land reform edit Land reform was more extensive under Obregon than it had been under Carranza Obregon enforced the constitutional land redistribution provisions and in total 921 627 hectares of land were distributed during his presidency 51 However Obregon was a successful commercial garbanzo farmer in Sonora and did not believe in socialism or in land reform and was in agreement with Madero and Carranza that radical land reform might very well destroy the Mexican economy and lead to a return to subsistence agriculture 52 Relations with Catholic Church edit Many leaders and members of the Roman Catholic Church in Mexico were highly critical of the 1917 constitution They especially criticized Article 3 which forbade religious instruction in schools and Article 130 which adopted an extreme form of separation of church and state by including a series of restrictions on priests and ministers of all religions to hold public office canvass on behalf of political parties or candidates or to inherit from persons other than close blood relatives 51 Although Obregon was suspicious of the Catholic Church he was less anticlerical than his successor Plutarco Elias Calles would be Calles s policies would lead to the Cristero War 1926 29 For example Obregon sent Pope Pius XI congratulations upon his election in 1922 and in a private message to the pope emphasized the complementarity of the aims of the Catholic Church and the Mexican Revolution 51 In spite of Obregon s moderate approach his presidency saw the beginnings of clashes between Catholics and supporters of the Mexican Revolution Some bishops who campaigned actively against land reform and the organization of workers into secular unions Catholic Action movements were founded in Mexico in the wake of Pius XI s 1922 encyclical Ubi arcano Dei consilio and supporters of the Young Mexican Catholic Action soon found themselves in violent conflict with CROM members 53 The most serious diplomatic incident occurred in 1923 when Ernesto Filippi the Apostolic Nuncio to Mexico conducted an open air religious service although it was illegal to hold a religious service outside a church The government invoked Article 33 of the constitution and expelled Filippi from Mexico 54 Mexico U S relations edit nbsp Adolfo de la Huerta 1881 1955 the former Governor of Sonora under whose banner Obregon purportedly fought in 1920 and who served as Obregon s Finance Minister before launching a rebellion in 1923 As president one of Obregon s top priorities was securing US diplomatic recognition of his regime to resume normal Mexico United States relations Although he rejected the U S demand that Mexico rescind Article 27 of the constitution Obregon negotiated a major agreement with the United States the Bucareli Treaty of August 1923 that made some concessions to the US in order to gain diplomatic recognition 55 It was particularly helpful when the Mexican Supreme Court in a case brought by Texas Oil declared that Article 27 did not apply retroactively Another important arena in which Obregon resolved issues with the U S and other foreign governments was the Mexican United States General Claims Commission 56 Finance Minister Adolfo de la Huerta signed a deal in which Mexico recognized a debt of 1 451 million to international bankers Finally at the Bucareli Conference Obregon agreed to an American demand that Mexico would not expropriate any foreign oil companies and in exchange the U S recognized his government Many Mexicans criticized Obregon as a sellout entreguista including Adolfo de la Huerta for his actions at the Bucareli Conference 54 De la Huerta rebellion 1923 1924 edit In 1923 Obregon endorsed Plutarco Elias Calles for president in the 1924 election in which Obregon was not eligible to run Finance Minister Adolfo de la Huerta who had served as interim president in 1920 before he stepped down after the election of Obregon joined a rebellion against Obregon and his chosen successor Calles De la Huerta believed Obregon was repeating Carranza s mistake of imposing his own candidate on the country De la Huerta accepted the nomination of the Cooperativist Party to be its candidate in the presidential elections 57 De la Huerta then joined and gave his name to a major military uprising against Obregon Over half of the army joined De la Huerta s rebellion with many of Obregon s former comrades in arms now turning on him Rebel forces massed in Veracruz and Jalisco 57 In a decisive battle at Ocotlan Jalisco Obregon s forces crushed the rebel forces Diplomatic recognition by the United States following the signing of the 1923 Bucareli Treaty was significant in Obregon s victory over rebels The U S supplied Obregon arms and also sent 17 U S planes which bombed rebels in Jalisco 2 Obregon hunted down many of his former comrades in arms including Gen Salvador Alvarado and Fortunato Maycotte and had them executed 58 59 De la Huerta was among those who went into exile Following the crushing of the rebellion Calles was elected president and Obregon stepped down from office Later years 1924 1928 editFollowing the election of Calles as president Obregon returned to Sonora to farm He led an agricultural revolution in the Yaqui Valley where he introduced modern irrigation Obregon expanded his business interests to include a rice mill in Cajeme a seafood packing plant a soap factory tomato fields a car rental business and a jute bag factory 60 Obregon remained in close contact with President Calles whom he had installed as his successor and was a frequent guest of Calles at Chapultepec Castle This prompted fears that Obregon was intending to follow in the footsteps of Porfirio Diaz and that Calles was merely a puppet figure the equivalent of Manuel Gonzalez These fears became acute in October 1926 when the Mexican Congress repealed term limits thus clearing the way for Obregon to run for president in 1928 60 Obregon returned to the battlefield for the period October 1926 to April 1927 to put down a rebellion led by the Yaqui people This was ironic because Obregon had first risen to military prominence commanding Yaqui troops to whom he promised land and the 1926 27 Yaqui rebellion was a demand for land reform Obregon probably participated in this campaign to prove his loyalty to the Calles government to show his continued influence over the military and to protect his commercial interests in the Yaqui Valley which had begun to suffer as a result of the increasing violence in the region 61 Re election and assassination edit nbsp Obregon July 2 1928 days before his assassination Obregon formally began his presidential campaign in May 1927 CROM and a large part of public opinion were against his re election but he still counted on the support of most of the army and of the National Agrarian Party Two of Obregon s oldest allies General Arnulfo R Gomez and General Francisco Serrano opposed his re election Serrano launched an anti Obregon rebellion and was ultimately assassinated Gomez later called for an insurrection against Obregon but was soon killed as well 62 nbsp Execution of Jose de Leon Toral 1900 1929 assassin of Mexican president Alvaro Obregon on 9 February 1929 Obregon won the 1928 Mexican presidential election but months before assuming the presidency he was assassinated Calles harsh treatment of Roman Catholics had led to a rebellion known as the Cristero War which broke out in 1926 As an ally of Calles Obregon was hated by Catholics and was assassinated in La Bombilla Cafe 63 on July 17 1928 shortly after his return to Mexico City by Jose de Leon Toral a Roman Catholic opposed to the government s anti Catholic policies 64 Obregon was not as fiercely anticlerical as Calles and had not imposed the anticlerical provisions of the 1917 constitution when he was president Toral s subsequent trial resulted in his conviction and execution by firing squad A Capuchin nun named Maria Concepcion Acevedo de la Llata Madre Conchita was implicated in the case and was thought to be the mastermind behind Obregon s murder 65 Leon Toral sought retribution for the execution of Miguel Pro who was falsely convicted of attempting to assassinate Obregon a year prior citation needed Honors editAlvaro Obregon was awarded Japan s Order of the Chrysanthemum at a special ceremony in Mexico City On November 26 1924 Baron Shigetsuma Furuya Special Ambassador from Japan to Mexico conferred the honor on the President 66 Legacy and posthumous recognition editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Alvaro Obregon news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Monument to Obregon in Mexico CityAlthough Obregon was a gifted military strategist during the Revolution and decisively defeated Pancho Villa s Division del Norte at the Battle of Celaya and went on to become President of Mexico his posthumous name recognition and standing as a hero of the Revolution is nowhere near that of Villa s or Emiliano Zapata s There is no posthumous cult of Obregon as there is to those two losing revolutionary leaders On the 1945 anniversary of Obregon s assassination the official ceremony attracted few attendees 67 As president he successfully gained recognition from the United States in 1923 settled for a period the dispute with the U S over oil via the Bucareli Treaty gain full rein to his Secretary of Public Education Jose Vasconcelos who expanded access to learning for Mexicans by building schools but also via public art of the Mexican muralists Perhaps as with Porfirio Diaz Obregon saw himself as indispensable to the nation and had the Constitution of 1917 amended so that he could run again for the presidency in Mexico This bent and in many people s minds violated the revolutionary rule no re election that had been enshrined in the constitution His assassination in 1928 before he could take the presidential office created a major political crisis in Mexico which was solved by the creation of the National Revolutionary Party by his fellow Sonoran General and former President Plutarco Elias Calles An imposing monument to Alvaro Obregon is located in the Parque de la Bombilla in the San Angel neighborhood of southern Mexico City It is Mexico s largest monument to a single revolutionary and stands on the site where Obregon was assassinated 68 The monument held Obregon s severed and over the years increasingly deteriorating right arm that he lost in 1915 The monument now has a marble sculpture of the severed arm after the arm itself was incinerated in 1989 Obregon s body is buried in Huatabampo Sonora rather than the Monument to the Revolution in downtown Mexico City where other revolutionaries are now entombed In Sonora Obregon is honored with an equestrian statue where he is shown as a vigorous soldier with two arms In Sonora the second largest city Ciudad Obregon is named for the revolutionary leader Obregon s son Alvaro Obregon Tapia served one term as the governor of Sonora as a candidate for the Institutional Revolutionary Party founded following Obregon s assassination The Alvaro Obregon Dam built near Ciudad Obregon became operational during the gubernatorial term of Obregon s son Obregon is honored in the name of a genus of small cactus indigenous to Mexico Obregonia denegrii 69 In popular culture editIn the novel The Friends of Pancho Villa 1996 by James Carlos Blake Obregon is a major character Obregon is also featured in the novel Il collare spezzato by Italian writer Valerio Evangelisti 2006 Obregon s legacy and lost limb are the subjects of Mexican American singer songwriter El Vez s The Arm of Obregon from his 1996 album G I Ay Ay Blues 70 See also edit nbsp Mexico portal nbsp Biography portal nbsp Politics portalList of heads of state of Mexico Mexican Revolution Sonora in the Mexican RevolutionReferences edit Cline Howard F The United States and Mexico Cambridge Harvard University Press 1961 p 208 a b Cline U S and Mexico p 208 Hall Linda B Alvaro Obregon Power and Revolution in Mexico 1911 1920 College Station TX Texas A amp M University Press 1981 3 Buchenau The Last Caudillo 32 Krauze Enrique 1997 Mexico Biography of Power p 374 at Google Books a b c Krauze p 375 at Google Books Voss Stuart F Alvaro Obregon Salido Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture v 4 212 Hall Alvaro Obregon 10 11 Dulles John F W Yesterday in Mexico A Chronicle of the Revolution 1919 1936 Austin University of Texas Press 1961 4 Hall Alvaro Obregon 23 Voss Alvaro Obregon Salidio 212 a b Krauze p 377 at Google Books a b Krauze p 378 Voss Alvaro Obregon Salido 212 a b c d e Krauze p 379 Slattery Matthew 1982 Felipe Angeles and the Mexican Revolution pp 59 60 Katz Friedrich 1998 The Life and Times of Pancho Villa p 277 at Google Books Slattery p 61 a b Krauze p 380 at Google Books Krauze p 382 at Google Books Krauze pp 382 383 p 382 at Google Books a b Krauze p 383 at Google Books Hall Alvaro Obregon 67 69 a b c Krauze p 384 at Google Books Krauze pp 384 385 at Google Books Krauze pp 386 387 a b c d Krauze p 387 at Google Books quoted in Dulles John W F Yesterday in Mexico A Chronicle of Revolution 1919 1936 Austin University of Texas 1961 pp 3 4 Buchenau Jurgen The Arm and Body of the Revolution Remembering Mexico s Last Caudillo Alvaro Obregon in Lyman L Johnson ed Body Politics Death Dismemberment and Memory in Latin America Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 2004 pp 179 207 Carranza Luis E 2010 Architecture As Revolution Episodes in the History of Modern Mexico Roger Fullington series in architecture University of Texas Press pp 184 187 OCLC 1191803826 Hall Alvaro Obregon 140 Riner D L Sweeney J V 1991 Mexico meeting the challenge Euromoney p 64 ISBN 978 1 870031 59 2 D Antonio William V Pike Fredrick B 1964 Religion revolution and reform new forces for change in Latin America Praeger p 66 Buchenau pp 94 97 Matute Alvaro Benjamin Guillermo Hill Encyclopedia of Mexico 644 Krauze pp 375 389 at Google Books Krauze p 389 at Google Books Dulles Yesterday in Mexico 17 18 quoted in Dulles Yesterday in Mexico 22 Krauze p 390 at Google Books San Pedro News Pilot 10 May 1920 California Digital Newspaper Collection Krauze p 392 Katz Friedrich The Life and Times of Pancho Villa Stanford Stanford University Press 1998 730 32 Krauze p 393 Meyer Michael C and Sherman William L The Course of Mexican History Mulvey Laura Wollen Peter 1982 Frida Kahlo and Tina Modotti London Whitechapel Gallery p 12 ISBN 0854880550 Krauze p 394 at Google Books Gonzales Michael J Imagining Mexico in 1921 Visions of the Revolutionary State and Society in the Centennial Celebration in Mexico City Mexican Studies Estudios Mexicanos vol 25 2 2009 pp 247 270 Gonzales Imagining Mexico in 1921 p 249 Gonzales Imagining Mexico in 1921 p 251 Gonzales Imagining Mexico in 1921 pp 253 54 a b c d e f Krauze p 395 at Google Books Katz The Life and Times of Pancho Villa p 731 Krauze pp 395 396 at Google Books a b Krauze p 396 at Google Books Cline U S and Mexico pp 207 208 Cline U S and Mexico pp 208 210 a b Krauze p 397 at Google Books Krauze p 398 at Google Books Lieuwen Edwin Mexican Militarism The Political Rise and Fall of the Revolutionary Army 1910 1940 Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 1968 72 78 a b Krauze p 399 Buchenau pp 150 151 Krauze p 401 at Google Books P amp A Photos 173503 New York Bureau Krauze p 403 at Google Books Heilman Jaymie The Demon Inside Madre Conchita Gender and the Assassination of Obregon Mexican Studies Estudios Mexicanos 18 1 2002 23 60 Japan Decorates Obregon Order of the Chrysanthemum is Conferred by Special Ambassador New York Times 28 November 1924 Gillingham Paul Unrevolutionary Mexico New Haven Yale University Press 2021 238 Monumento al General Alvaro Obregon Mexico City MyTravelGuide com Eggli Urs et al 2004 Etymological Dictionary of Succulent Plant Names pp 169 64 at Google Books McLeod Kembrew El Vez G I Ay Ay Blues at AllMusic Retrieved 16 November 2015 Weis Robert 2019 For Christ and Country Militant Catholic Youth in Post Revolutionary Mexico Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN missing Further reading editBuchenau Jurgen 2004 The Arm and Body of a Revolution Remembering Mexico s Last Caudillo Alvaro Obregon in Lyman L Johnson ed Body Politics Death Dismemberment and Memory in Latin America Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press pp 179 207 Buchenau Jurgen 2011 The Last Caudillo Alvaro Obregon and the Mexican Revolution Chichester England Wiley Blackwell Castro Pedro 2009 Alvaro Obregon Fuego y cenizas de la Revolucion Mexicana Ediciones Era Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes ISBN 978 607 445 027 9 ERA ISBN 978 607 455 257 7 CNCA Sitio de Pedro Castro permanent dead link Eggli Urs and Newton Leonard E 2004 Etymological Dictionary of Succulent Plant Names Berlin Springer ISBN 978 3 540 00489 9 OCLC 248883002 Hall Linda B 1981 Alvaro Obregon power and revolution in Mexico 1911 1920 College Station Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 0890961131 OCLC 7202959 Hall Linda B Alvaro Obregon and the Politics of Mexican Land Reform 1920 1924 Hispanic American Historical Review 1980 60 2 pp 213 238 in JSTOR Heilman Jaymie The Demon Inside Madre Conchita Gender and the Assassination of Obregon Mexican Studies Estudios Mexicanos 18 1 2002 23 60 Katz Friedrich 1998 The Life and Times of Pancho Villa Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 3045 7 ISBN 978 0 8047 3046 4 OCLC 253993082 Krauze Enrique Mexico Biography of Power New York HarperCollins 1997 ISBN 0 06 016325 9 Lomnitz Adler Claudio 2001 Deep Mexico Silent Mexico an Anthropology of Nationalism University of Minnesota Press Lucas Jeffrey Kent 2010 The Rightward Drift of Mexico s Former Revolutionaries The Case of Antonio Diaz Soto y Gama Lewiston NY Edwin Mellen Press ISBN 978 0773436657 F1234 D585 L83 2010 Slattery Matthew 1982 Felipe Angeles and the Mexican Revolution Parma Heights Ohio Greenbriar Books ISBN 978 0 932970 34 3 OCLC 9108261External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alvaro Obregon Admiring essay on the Battle of Celaya with a focus on the tactics used by General Obregon Priestley Herbert Ingram 1922 Obregon Alvaro Encyclopaedia Britannica 12th ed Newspaper clippings about Alvaro Obregon in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWPolitical officesPreceded byAdolfo de la Huerta President of Mexico1 December 1920 30 November 1924 Succeeded byPlutarco Elias Calles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alvaro Obregon amp oldid 1207258199, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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