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Manuel Ávila Camacho

Manuel Ávila Camacho (Spanish pronunciation: [maˈnwel ˈaβila kaˈmatʃo]; 24 April 1897 – 13 October 1955) was a Mexican politician and military leader who served as the President of Mexico from 1940 to 1946. Despite participating in the Mexican Revolution and achieving a high rank, he came to the presidency of Mexico because of his direct connection to General Lázaro Cárdenas and served him as a right-hand man as his Chief of his General Staff during the Mexican Revolution and afterwards.[1] He was called affectionately by Mexicans "The Gentleman President" ("El Presidente Caballero").[2] As president, he pursued "national policies of unity, adjustment, and moderation."[3] His administration completed the transition from military to civilian leadership, ended confrontational anticlericalism, reversed the push for socialist education, and restored a working relationship with the US during World War II.[4]

Manuel Ávila Camacho
Official portrait, 1940
52nd President of Mexico
In office
1 December 1940 (1940-12-01) – 30 November 1946 (1946-11-30)
Preceded byLázaro Cárdenas
Succeeded byMiguel Alemán Valdés
Secretary of National Defense of Mexico
In office
18 October 1936 – 31 January 1939
PresidentLázaro Cárdenas
Preceded byAndrés Figueroa
Succeeded byJesús Agustín Castro
Personal details
Born(1897-04-24)24 April 1897
Teziutlán, Puebla, Mexico
Died13 October 1955(1955-10-13) (aged 58)
Huixquilucan, State of Mexico, Mexico
Resting placePanteón Francés
Political partyInstitutional Revolutionary
Spouse
Soledad Orozco
(m. 1925)
Military service
AllegianceMexico
Branch/serviceMexican Army
Years of service1914–1933
RankBrigadier general

Early life edit

Manuel Ávila was born in Teziutlán, a small but economically important town in Puebla, to middle-class parents, Manuel Ávila Castillo and Eufrosina Camacho Bello.[5] His older brother, Maximino Ávila Camacho, was a more dominant personality. There were several other siblings, among them a sister, María Jovita Ávila Camacho, and several brothers. Two of his brothers, Maximino Ávila Camacho and Rafael Ávila Camacho, served as governors of Puebla.

Manuel Ávila Camacho did not receive a university degree although he studied at the National Preparatory School.

Early career edit

 
General Manuel Ávila Camacho

He joined the revolutionary army in 1914 as a second lieutenant and reached the rank of colonel by 1920. The same year, he served as the chief of staff of the state of Michoacán under Lázaro Cárdenas and became his close friend. He opposed the 1923 rebellion of former revolutionary general Adolfo de la Huerta.[6] In 1929, he fought under General Cárdenas against the Escobar Rebellion, the last serious military rebellion of disgruntled revolutionary generals, and the same year, he achieved the rank of brigadier general.

He was married to Soledad Orozco García (1904–1996), who was born in Zapopan, Jalisco, and was a member of a prominent family in Jalisco.

After his military service, Ávila Camacho entered the public arena in 1933 as the executive officer of the Secretariat of National Defense and became Secretary of National Defense in 1937. In 1940, he was elected president of Mexico after he had been nominated to represent the party that later became the Institutional Revolutionary Party.

Camacho won the controversial presidential election over right-wing candidate and revolutionary-era General Juan Andreu Almazán.

Presidency edit

End of conflict between church and state edit

 
Official Portrait of Mexican President Manuel Avila Camacho, December 1st 1940
 
WW2-era propaganda poster: "We defend Liberty and fight for a better world," with portraits of Mexican historical leaders: Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla, Benito Juárez, Francisco I. Madero and Camacho.

Camacho, a professed Catholic, said, "I am a believer." Since the revolution, all presidents had been anticlerical.[7] During Camacho's term, the conflict between the Roman Catholic Church in Mexico and the Mexican government largely ended.

Domestic policy edit

 
Mexican Social Security Institute logo

He protected the working class by creating the Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS) in 1943. He worked to reduce illiteracy, continued land reform, and declared a rent freeze to benefit low-income citizens.

He promoted election reform and passed a new electoral law passed in 1946 to make it difficult for opposition parties of the far right and the far left to operate legally. The law established the following criteria that had to be fulfilled by any political organization to be recognized as a political party:

  • have at least 10,000 active members in 10 states;
  • exist for at least three years before elections;
  • agree with the principles established in the constitution;
  • not form alliances or be subordinated to international organizations or foreign political parties.[8]

On 18 January 1946, he had the Party of the Mexican Revolution (PRM) renamed to the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), its current name. The Mexican army had been a sector of the PRM, but it was eliminated from the organization of the PRI.[9]

Economically, he pursued the country's industrialization, which benefited only a small group, and income inequality increased.[10] World War II stimulated Mexican industry, which grew by approximately 10% annually between 1940 and 1945, and Mexican raw materials fueled the US war industry.[11]

In agriculture, his administration invited the Rockefeller Foundation to introduce Green Revolution technology to bolster Mexico's agricultural productivity.[12]

In education, Camacho reversed Lázaro Cárdenas's policy of socialist education in Mexico and had the constitutional amendments that mandated it repealed.[13]

Foreign policy edit

 
Manuel Ávila Camacho, in Monterrey, having dinner with US President Franklin Roosevelt.
 
The first braceros arriving in Los Angeles, California by train in 1942. Photograph by Dorothea Lange.
 
Mexico provided military support for the Allies in World War II, with air Squadron 201

During his term, Camacho faced the difficulty of governing during World War II. After two of Mexico's ships (Potrero del Llano and Faja de Oro) carrying oil were destroyed by German submarines in the Gulf of Mexico,[14] Camacho declared war against the Axis powers on 22 May 1942. Mexican participation in World War II was mainly limited to an airborne squadron, the 201st (Escuadrón 201), to fight the Japanese in the Pacific. The squadron consisted of 300 men, and after receiving training in Texas, it was sent to the Philippines on 27 March 1945. On 7 June 1945, its missions started, and the squadron participated in the Battle of Luzon. By the end of the war, 5 Mexican soldiers had lost their lives in combat. Despite its short participation in the war, Mexico belonged to the victorious nations and had thus gained the right to participate in the postwar international conferences.[15]

Mexico's joining the conflict on the side of the Allies improved relations with the United States. Mexico provided both raw material for the conflict and also 300,000 guest workers under the Bracero program to replace some of the Americans who had left to fight in the war. Mexico also resumed diplomatic relations with the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union, which had been broken off during the presidency of Lázaro Cárdenas.[citation needed] In 1945, Mexico signed the United Nations Charter, and in 1946, it became the headquarters of the Inter-American Conference about War and Peace.[citation needed]

Conflicts with the United States, which had existed in the decades before his presidency, were resolved. Especially in the early years of World War II, Mexican-American relations were excellent. The United States provided Mexico with financial aid for improvements on the railway system and the construction of the Pan American Highway. Moreover, the Mexican foreign debt was reduced.[16]

Later life edit

 
Ávila Camacho in the 1950s

When his term ended in 1946, Camacho retired to work on his farm.[17]

In 1951, President Miguel Alemán Valdés, nearing the end of his six-year term, expressed his desire to have the Constitution amended to allow him to be re-elected. Ávila Camacho and Cárdenas had former president Abelardo L. Rodríguez give a statement that they didn't "think extension of the presidential term or re-election is convenient for the country." This allowed for the transfer of power to President Adolfo Ruiz Cortines in 1954.[18]

Ávila Camacho died on 13 October 1955, at the age of 58.[19]

Awards edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Krauze, Enrique. Mexico: Biography of Power. New York: Harper Collins 1997, p. 494.
  2. ^ Krauze, Mexico: Biography of Power, chapter title, 491.
  3. ^ Howard F. Cline Mexico: Revolution to Evolution: 1940-1960. Oxford: Oxford University Press 1963, p. 153.
  4. ^ Roderic Ai Camp, "Manuel Avila Camacho" in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture, vol. 1, p. 244. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons 1996.
  5. ^ LaFrance, David G. "Manuel Ávila Camacho" in Encyclopedia of Mexico, Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn 1997, p. 116.
  6. ^ Camp, "Manuel Avila Camacho", p. 244.
  7. ^ Tuck, Jim. "Mexico's marxist guru: Vicente Lombardo Toledano (1894–1968)". Mexconnect. 9 October 2008.
  8. ^ Delgado de Cantú, Gloria M. (2003). Historia de México II. Pearson Educación. p. 250.
  9. ^ Cline, Howard F. Mexico, 1940-1960: Revolution to Evolution. New York: Oxford University Press 1963, p. 153.
  10. ^ Beezley, William (2010). The Oxford History of Mexico. Oxford University Press. p. 501.
  11. ^ Beezley, William (2010). The Oxford History of Mexico. Oxford University Press. p. 500.
  12. ^ Cotter, Joseph. Troubled Harvest: Agronomy and Revolution in Mexico 1880-2002. Westport CT: Prager 2003.
  13. ^ Camp, "Manuel Avila Camacho," p. 244.
  14. ^ "Faja de Oro". Retrieved 17 November 2013.
  15. ^ Delgado de Cantú, Gloria M. (2003). Historia de México II. Pearson Educación. pp. 257–258.
  16. ^ Beezley, William (2010). The Oxford History of Mexico. Oxford University Press. p. 537.
  17. ^ Camp, "Manel Avila Camacho", p. 244.
  18. ^ Aguilar Plata & García, Áurea Blanca & Carola (2006). Medios de comunicación: del destrape a las campañas electorale, 1934-1982 (in Spanish). Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. ISBN 970-722-577-7. p. 78
  19. ^ Orozco Linares 1996, p. 257
  20. ^ Chinese Ministry of Information (1947). Tong, Hollington K. (ed.). China Yearbook 戰時中華志 [China Handbook 1937-1945 A Comprehensive Survey of Major Developments in China in Eight Years of War] (in English and Chinese). New York: Macmillan Company. p. 186 – via Google Books.

Bibliography edit

  • Orozco Linares, Fernando (1996). Fechas históricas de México: las efemérides más destacadas desde la época prehispánica hasta nuestros días (in Spanish). Panorama Editorial. ISBN 9789683802958.

Further reading edit

  • Camp, Roderic Ai. Mexican Political Biographies. Tucson, Arizona: University of Arizona, 1982.
  • Krauze, Enrique. Mexico: Biography of Power. New York: HarperCollins 1997, chapter 17: "Manuel Ávila Camacho: The Gentleman President", pp. 491–525.
  • Medina, Luis. Historia de la Revolución Mexicana, periodo 1940-1952: Del cardenismo al avilacamachismo. Mexico City: Colegio de México 1978.

External links edit

Political offices
Preceded by
Andrés Figueroa
Secretary of National Defense of Mexico
1936–1939
Succeeded by
Jesús Agustín Castro
Preceded by President of Mexico
1940–1946
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by
Lázaro Cárdenas
PRI nominee for President of Mexico
1940
Succeeded by
Miguel Alemán Valdés

manuel, Ávila, camacho, Ávila, camacho, redirects, here, light, train, station, Ávila, camacho, railway, station, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, Ávila, second, maternal, family, name, camacho, spanish, pronunciation, maˈnwel, ˈaβila, kaˈmatʃo, . Avila Camacho redirects here For the light train station see Avila Camacho railway station In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Avila and the second or maternal family name is Camacho Manuel Avila Camacho Spanish pronunciation maˈnwel ˈabila kaˈmatʃo 24 April 1897 13 October 1955 was a Mexican politician and military leader who served as the President of Mexico from 1940 to 1946 Despite participating in the Mexican Revolution and achieving a high rank he came to the presidency of Mexico because of his direct connection to General Lazaro Cardenas and served him as a right hand man as his Chief of his General Staff during the Mexican Revolution and afterwards 1 He was called affectionately by Mexicans The Gentleman President El Presidente Caballero 2 As president he pursued national policies of unity adjustment and moderation 3 His administration completed the transition from military to civilian leadership ended confrontational anticlericalism reversed the push for socialist education and restored a working relationship with the US during World War II 4 Manuel Avila CamachoOfficial portrait 194052nd President of MexicoIn office 1 December 1940 1940 12 01 30 November 1946 1946 11 30 Preceded byLazaro CardenasSucceeded byMiguel Aleman ValdesSecretary of National Defense of MexicoIn office 18 October 1936 31 January 1939PresidentLazaro CardenasPreceded byAndres FigueroaSucceeded byJesus Agustin CastroPersonal detailsBorn 1897 04 24 24 April 1897Teziutlan Puebla MexicoDied13 October 1955 1955 10 13 aged 58 Huixquilucan State of Mexico MexicoResting placePanteon FrancesPolitical partyInstitutional RevolutionarySpouseSoledad Orozco m 1925 wbr Military serviceAllegianceMexicoBranch serviceMexican ArmyYears of service1914 1933RankBrigadier general Contents 1 Early life 2 Early career 3 Presidency 3 1 End of conflict between church and state 3 2 Domestic policy 3 3 Foreign policy 4 Later life 5 Awards 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life editManuel Avila was born in Teziutlan a small but economically important town in Puebla to middle class parents Manuel Avila Castillo and Eufrosina Camacho Bello 5 His older brother Maximino Avila Camacho was a more dominant personality There were several other siblings among them a sister Maria Jovita Avila Camacho and several brothers Two of his brothers Maximino Avila Camacho and Rafael Avila Camacho served as governors of Puebla Manuel Avila Camacho did not receive a university degree although he studied at the National Preparatory School Early career edit nbsp General Manuel Avila CamachoHe joined the revolutionary army in 1914 as a second lieutenant and reached the rank of colonel by 1920 The same year he served as the chief of staff of the state of Michoacan under Lazaro Cardenas and became his close friend He opposed the 1923 rebellion of former revolutionary general Adolfo de la Huerta 6 In 1929 he fought under General Cardenas against the Escobar Rebellion the last serious military rebellion of disgruntled revolutionary generals and the same year he achieved the rank of brigadier general He was married to Soledad Orozco Garcia 1904 1996 who was born in Zapopan Jalisco and was a member of a prominent family in Jalisco After his military service Avila Camacho entered the public arena in 1933 as the executive officer of the Secretariat of National Defense and became Secretary of National Defense in 1937 In 1940 he was elected president of Mexico after he had been nominated to represent the party that later became the Institutional Revolutionary Party Camacho won the controversial presidential election over right wing candidate and revolutionary era General Juan Andreu Almazan Presidency editEnd of conflict between church and state edit nbsp Official Portrait of Mexican President Manuel Avila Camacho December 1st 1940 nbsp WW2 era propaganda poster We defend Liberty and fight for a better world with portraits of Mexican historical leaders Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla Benito Juarez Francisco I Madero and Camacho Camacho a professed Catholic said I am a believer Since the revolution all presidents had been anticlerical 7 During Camacho s term the conflict between the Roman Catholic Church in Mexico and the Mexican government largely ended Domestic policy edit nbsp Mexican Social Security Institute logoHe protected the working class by creating the Mexican Social Security Institute IMSS in 1943 He worked to reduce illiteracy continued land reform and declared a rent freeze to benefit low income citizens He promoted election reform and passed a new electoral law passed in 1946 to make it difficult for opposition parties of the far right and the far left to operate legally The law established the following criteria that had to be fulfilled by any political organization to be recognized as a political party have at least 10 000 active members in 10 states exist for at least three years before elections agree with the principles established in the constitution not form alliances or be subordinated to international organizations or foreign political parties 8 On 18 January 1946 he had the Party of the Mexican Revolution PRM renamed to the Institutional Revolutionary Party PRI its current name The Mexican army had been a sector of the PRM but it was eliminated from the organization of the PRI 9 Economically he pursued the country s industrialization which benefited only a small group and income inequality increased 10 World War II stimulated Mexican industry which grew by approximately 10 annually between 1940 and 1945 and Mexican raw materials fueled the US war industry 11 In agriculture his administration invited the Rockefeller Foundation to introduce Green Revolution technology to bolster Mexico s agricultural productivity 12 In education Camacho reversed Lazaro Cardenas s policy of socialist education in Mexico and had the constitutional amendments that mandated it repealed 13 Foreign policy edit nbsp Manuel Avila Camacho in Monterrey having dinner with US President Franklin Roosevelt nbsp The first braceros arriving in Los Angeles California by train in 1942 Photograph by Dorothea Lange nbsp Mexico provided military support for the Allies in World War II with air Squadron 201During his term Camacho faced the difficulty of governing during World War II After two of Mexico s ships Potrero del Llano and Faja de Oro carrying oil were destroyed by German submarines in the Gulf of Mexico 14 Camacho declared war against the Axis powers on 22 May 1942 Mexican participation in World War II was mainly limited to an airborne squadron the 201st Escuadron 201 to fight the Japanese in the Pacific The squadron consisted of 300 men and after receiving training in Texas it was sent to the Philippines on 27 March 1945 On 7 June 1945 its missions started and the squadron participated in the Battle of Luzon By the end of the war 5 Mexican soldiers had lost their lives in combat Despite its short participation in the war Mexico belonged to the victorious nations and had thus gained the right to participate in the postwar international conferences 15 Mexico s joining the conflict on the side of the Allies improved relations with the United States Mexico provided both raw material for the conflict and also 300 000 guest workers under the Bracero program to replace some of the Americans who had left to fight in the war Mexico also resumed diplomatic relations with the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union which had been broken off during the presidency of Lazaro Cardenas citation needed In 1945 Mexico signed the United Nations Charter and in 1946 it became the headquarters of the Inter American Conference about War and Peace citation needed Conflicts with the United States which had existed in the decades before his presidency were resolved Especially in the early years of World War II Mexican American relations were excellent The United States provided Mexico with financial aid for improvements on the railway system and the construction of the Pan American Highway Moreover the Mexican foreign debt was reduced 16 Later life edit nbsp Avila Camacho in the 1950sWhen his term ended in 1946 Camacho retired to work on his farm 17 In 1951 President Miguel Aleman Valdes nearing the end of his six year term expressed his desire to have the Constitution amended to allow him to be re elected Avila Camacho and Cardenas had former president Abelardo L Rodriguez give a statement that they didn t think extension of the presidential term or re election is convenient for the country This allowed for the transfer of power to President Adolfo Ruiz Cortines in 1954 18 Avila Camacho died on 13 October 1955 at the age of 58 19 Awards edit1945 Order of Propitious Clouds with Special Grand Cordon 20 from the Republic of China Poland in exile Order of the White EagleSee also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Mexico portalList of heads of state of MexicoReferences edit Krauze Enrique Mexico Biography of Power New York Harper Collins 1997 p 494 Krauze Mexico Biography of Power chapter title 491 Howard F Cline Mexico Revolution to Evolution 1940 1960 Oxford Oxford University Press 1963 p 153 Roderic Ai Camp Manuel Avila Camacho in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture vol 1 p 244 New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1996 LaFrance David G Manuel Avila Camacho in Encyclopedia of Mexico Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 p 116 Camp Manuel Avila Camacho p 244 Tuck Jim Mexico s marxist guru Vicente Lombardo Toledano 1894 1968 Mexconnect 9 October 2008 Delgado de Cantu Gloria M 2003 Historia de Mexico II Pearson Educacion p 250 Cline Howard F Mexico 1940 1960 Revolution to Evolution New York Oxford University Press 1963 p 153 Beezley William 2010 The Oxford History of Mexico Oxford University Press p 501 Beezley William 2010 The Oxford History of Mexico Oxford University Press p 500 Cotter Joseph Troubled Harvest Agronomy and Revolution in Mexico 1880 2002 Westport CT Prager 2003 Camp Manuel Avila Camacho p 244 Faja de Oro Retrieved 17 November 2013 Delgado de Cantu Gloria M 2003 Historia de Mexico II Pearson Educacion pp 257 258 Beezley William 2010 The Oxford History of Mexico Oxford University Press p 537 Camp Manel Avila Camacho p 244 Aguilar Plata amp Garcia Aurea Blanca amp Carola 2006 Medios de comunicacion del destrape a las campanas electorale 1934 1982 in Spanish Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico ISBN 970 722 577 7 p 78 Orozco Linares 1996 p 257 Chinese Ministry of Information 1947 Tong Hollington K ed China Yearbook 戰時中華志 China Handbook 1937 1945 A Comprehensive Survey of Major Developments in China in Eight Years of War in English and Chinese New York Macmillan Company p 186 via Google Books Bibliography edit Orozco Linares Fernando 1996 Fechas historicas de Mexico las efemerides mas destacadas desde la epoca prehispanica hasta nuestros dias in Spanish Panorama Editorial ISBN 9789683802958 Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Manuel Avila Camacho Camp Roderic Ai Mexican Political Biographies Tucson Arizona University of Arizona 1982 Krauze Enrique Mexico Biography of Power New York HarperCollins 1997 chapter 17 Manuel Avila Camacho The Gentleman President pp 491 525 Medina Luis Historia de la Revolucion Mexicana periodo 1940 1952 Del cardenismo al avilacamachismo Mexico City Colegio de Mexico 1978 External links editNewspaper clippings about Manuel Avila Camacho in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWPolitical officesPreceded byAndres Figueroa Secretary of National Defense of Mexico1936 1939 Succeeded byJesus Agustin CastroPreceded byLazaro Cardenas President of Mexico1940 1946 Succeeded byMiguel Aleman ValdesParty political officesPreceded byLazaro Cardenas PRI nominee for President of Mexico1940 Succeeded byMiguel Aleman Valdes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Manuel Avila Camacho amp oldid 1186180060, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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