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Sánchez Navarro ranch

The Sánchez Navarro ranch (1765–1866) in Mexico was the largest privately owned estate or latifundio in Latin America. At its maximum extent, the Sánchez Navarro family owned more than 67,000 square kilometres (16,500,000 acres) of land, an area almost as large as the Republic of Ireland and larger than the American state of West Virginia. The Sánchez Navarro latifundio was more than five times the size of the largest ranch, the XIT, in the United States and extended 350 kilometres (220 mi) from north to south.[1] The latifundio was located in the Chihuahuan Desert, mostly in Coahuila, but also in Nuevo Leon, Durango, and Zacatecas.[2]

A typical scene in the Chihuahua desert.

The acquisition of land by José Miguel Sánchez Navarro (1730–1821) began in 1765 and the latifundio existed until 1866 when the land was expropriated by the government of Mexico.[3] Family members continued to be prominent in Mexican society into the 21st century.[4][5] 25°22′36″N 101°28′36″W / 25.37667°N 101.47667°W / 25.37667; -101.47667 Throughout their history the Sánchez Navarros struggled against raids by the Comanche and Apache Indians and frequent and persistent drought and scarcity of water for their livestock, mostly sheep but also cattle, horses, and mules.

History edit

 
Water was scarce in most of the latifundo, except for the Sabinas River.

In the 16th century, most of the Spanish settlements in northern Mexico were established to exploit mineral wealth, especially silver. However, Coahuila (then called Nueva Extremadura) lacked large deposits of precious metals and livestock grazing, mostly sheep and cattle, became the principal economic activity. The sparse vegetation of the desert dictated the need for large tracts of land. Farming was only possible in river valleys, few in number, or where ephemeral lakes formed in the rainy season. Throughout the history of latifundios in Coahuila the scarcity of water due to frequent droughts was one of two major problems, the other being hostile Indians: first, in the 17th century, the Toboso peoples and other hunter-gatherer peoples native to Coahuila, in the 18th century the Apache, and, finally, in the 19th century, the Comanche.[6]

The San Miguel del Aguajo latifundio. In the late 16th century, several early Spanish settlers in Coahuila received large grants of land from the Spanish government in Mexico City. Francisco de Urdiñola built a large latifundio centered on the community at San Francisco de Patos (renamed General Cepeda in 1892). in southern Coahuila. His descendants, including by marriage the Marquis de San Miguel de Aguayo, by the mid 18th century had accumulated nearly as much land as the later Sánchez Navarros and their holdings had roughly the same boundaries. The Marquisate of Aguayo introduced large scale growing of grapes at Parras and exported wine and brandy to Mexico City and other Mexican cities. The owners of San Miguel de Aguayo, as the latifundio was called, raised cattle, horses, and, especially, sheep with herds estimated to exceed 200,000. They also opened the first textile mill in northern Mexico to supply clothing to its workers and residents and created a cavalry force to defend against Indian raids. The headquarters at Patos had a population of 1,200 people in 1765.[7]

Mismanagement and the hazards of raising livestock in a drought-prone region drove the Aguayo family to sell much of their property to English investors in 1825. The Sánchez Navarro family acquired the entire Aguayo estate in 1840.[8]

The Sánchez Navarros. Concurrent with the growth of the San Miguel del Aguayo latifundio in southern Coahuila, the Sánchez Navarros became important in northern Coahuila. Originally a prominent family in Saltillo. José Miguel, a priest, was appointed as Curate in Monclova, the capital of Coahuila, in 1755. He was joined there by his brother José Gregorio (d. 1774). The Sánchez Navarro brothers began to acquire land around Monclova in 1765. They established their headquarters, the Hacienda de San Ignacio del Paso Tapado, 30 kilometres (19 mi) northeast of Monclova. Another brother, Manuel Francisco (1743-1805), soon joined the enterprise and acquired additional lands through marriage and inheritance.[9] Manuel Francisco was the manager of the ranch, focusing mostly on the development of the northern portion of the estate near Santa Rosa (now Santa Rosa de Múzquiz) which is watered by the Sabinas River.[10]

Manuel Francisco's son, José Melchor (1782-1836), took over management of the estate in 1802, then in poor condition due to drought and Apache raids. He established a new hacienda named Nuesta Señora de las Tres Hermanas. Tres Hermanas was large and designed for defense, a large compound surrounded by a wall 3 metres (10 ft) high, with dwellings and wall built of stone. The hacienda was 50 kilometres (31 mi) north of Monclova near the junction of the Monclova and Nadadores rivers. At Tres Hermanas and nearby Tapado Jose Melchor introduced irrigation on a large scale to the latifundio and enlarged a vineyard.[11]

José Melchor died in 1836 and bequeathed the latifundio to his wife, Apolonia Beráin (d. 1876) and the couple's two sons, Jacobo (c.1814-after 1870) and Carlos (1816-1876). Apolonia ran the estate with "unquestionable authority" until her sons reached 25 years of age.[12] In 1840, Carlos, an attorney who lived in Mexico City while Jacobo managed the estate, made the largest acquisition of the family when he purchased the bankrupt estate of San Miguel de Aguayo. This purchase increased the land holdings of the Sánchez Navarros to 67,000 square kilometres (16,500,000 acres).[13] Their latifundio, thus, became the largest in Latin America. Jacobo moved the headquarters of the latifundio southward to Patos, taking over the headquarters of San Miguel de Aguayo.[14] Scattered around the latifundio were 24 large haciendas or cascos each of which operated autonomously. Most of the cascos were in the better-watered northern part of the latifundio.[15][16]

The livestock holdings of the Sánchez Navarros were immense. In 1847, their herds of sheep totaled 250,000 and in addition they possessed large numbers of cattle, horses, and mules. Their number of full-time employees was probably between 1,000 and 1,500. To this total could be added many seasonal employees, plus people who leased land from the Sánchez Navarros.[17]

Mexican War of Independence edit

In the Mexican War of Independence from Spain, led initially by Miguel Hidalgo and Ignacio Allende, the Sánchez Navarro family, led by José Melchor, took the side of royalist Spain. In 1811, defeated in battle, Hidalgo and Allende and their rebel army retreated to Saltillo, near Sánchez Navarro land. Spies told José Melchor that the rebels planned to continue their retreat to Texas passing through Monclova, home of many of the Sánchez Navarros. The royalists quickly took control of Monclova and set up an ambush at the Wells of Baján, on what was or would become Sánchez Navarro property. On March 21, 1811, the rebels were defeated. Hidalgo and Allende were captured and later executed. Among the prisoners taken by the royalists at the Wells of Baján were two nephews of José Miguel Sánchez Navarro who were fighting on the rebel side.[18]

José Melchor continued to be involved in royalist politics, opposing independence for Mexico until 1821 when he supported the Plan of Iguala which called for Mexican independence but "without the social and economic reforms for which Father Hidalgo and his followers had fought."[19]

Threats from Indians edit

 
An artist's conception of Apache raiders.
 
A Comanche chieftain in 1834.

Throughout its history the Sánchez Navarro latifundio suffered less from Indian attacks than other parts of northern Mexico because the family concentrated on raising sheep, rather than horses, mules, and cattle which were more valued by the Apache and Comanche who inhabited the region.[20] Nevertheless, Indian raids were a constant problem, forcing the abandonment of several neighboring haciendas and latifundios. Apache raids were especially serious from the 1770s until the 1790s, the main perpetrators being the Lipan who lived to the northeast and the Mescalero who lived to the northwest. In spring 1790, the Apache depredations on the Sanchez Navarros were most severe. In March, the Apache killed 14 workers at Tapado and plundered an oxcart caravan; in April they slaughtered 500 sheep; and in May they killed 2 herders and kidnapped a youth.[21] However, in 1786 the Comanches in Texas and New Mexico, induced by generous presents, had concluded a peace agreement with the Spanish and helped suppress the Apaches, thereby leading to an era of relative peace from 1793 until the Mexican war of independence undermined Spanish rule in the 1810s.[22]

José Melchor Sánchez Navarro first noticed the presence of Comanches and their Kiowa allies in the northern part of the estate near Santa Rosa (Muzquiz) in 1825. The Comanches were much more numerous than the Apaches and their raids into Mexico often consisted of hundreds of men. The Sánchez Navarros declined to contribute to self defense units being organized at Monclova, saying their employees were needed to protect the latifundio.[23][24] The first Comanche raid reaching deep into Mexico and menacing the entire area of the Sánchez Navarro latifundo was in the winter of 1840–1841. Defenses against the Comanches were organized at the Sánchez Navarro headquarters at Patos, but 400 Comanches instead attacked the outskirts of the city of Saltillo (population 12,000[25]). In 1842, Patos was again threatened, saved perhaps by the arrival of 70 soldiers commanded by José Juan Sánchez Navarro, the soldier in the family, who responded with alacrity to the threat on his family's property. Thereafter, until the 1860s large and destructive Comanche raids on Sánchez Navarro haciendas and livestock were an almost yearly occurrence.[26][27]

One reason that the Comanches were able to raid with near impunity in northern Mexico was the reluctance of the Sánchez Navarros and other large landowners to arm their employees, fearing revolt if shepherds and others got their hands on firearms. Likewise, they attempted to prevent their employees from fleeing south to safer places.[28][29]

In 1850, the Mexican government persuaded a band of Kickapoo and Seminole Indians to move to Mexico to help fight against the Comanches. In exchange for their services, the Kickapoo were given 7,023 hectares (17,353 acres) of land in the northern part of the Sanchez Navarro estate. The Kickapoo continued to own and occupy the land into the 21st century.[30][31]

The scope of the Sánchez Navarro's losses to Comanches is illustrated by a claim for compensation they submitted to the United States' government which in 1848 had assumed responsibility for preventing Indian raids originating in U.S. territory, a responsibility the U.S. abrogated in 1853 in the Treaty of Guadalupe. The claim (no doubt exaggerated for claims of livestock lost) said that between 1848 and 1853 the family had 141 employees killed by Indians and lost more than 200,000 sheep, 100,000 cattle, and 15,000 horses and mules. The family was never compensated.[32]

Mexican American War edit

In late 1846, U.S. General John Wool and his army occupied Monclova and Saltillo. Jacobo Sánchez Navarro, then managing the latifundio, established a friendly relationship with Wool and made a profit by supplying the American army. At the same time, Jacobo was working on behalf of Mexico, stockpiling flour for the army of Mexican leader Antonio López de Santa Anna which was advancing on Saltillo. Other members of the Sánchez Navarro family were in Santa Anna's army or in guerilla forces. However, the Americans defeated Santa Anna at the Battle of Buena Vista which took place on Sanchez Navarro property south of Saltillo in February 1847. Jacobo persuaded Wool that he was innocent of any deception against the Americans and declared his neutrality in the war. The Sánchez Navarro latifundio emerged unscathed by the war and the American occupation.[33]

Decline and fall edit

The Sánchez Navarro's prominence in Coahuila was reduced after 1855 by the rise of a political enemy, Santiago Vidaurri, whose partisans plundered the latifundio and Jacobo Sánchez Navarro's mansion in Saltillo. The family supported the French invasion of Mexico in 1862 and the subsequent imposition by France of the Austrian prince Maximilian as emperor of Mexico. Jacobo's brother Carlos became prominent at the court of Maximilian in Mexico City, while Jacobo managed the latifundio. In 1867 insurgent forces led by Benito Juárez overthrew and executed Maximilian and Carlos was imprisoned for a year. Carlos then went into exile in Paris, returning to Mexico in 1870 after Juárez granted him amnesty. He died in "genteel poverty" in Mexico City in 1876.[34]

In 1866, Juárez ordered the expropriation of the Sánchez Navarro latifundio and other large estates in Mexico. After litigation the family regained some of its property in the 1870s, but promptly sold it.[35] Members of the family continued to be prominent. Juan Sánchez-Navarro y Peón (1913-2006) was a prominent businessman, a founder of the National Action Party (PAN), and the author of a book about his ancestor's role in designing the Alamo in San Antonio, Texas.[36] Several Sanchez Navarros are actors in Mexican movies and television.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ DeLay, Brian (2008), War of a Thousand Deserts, New Haven: Yale University Press, p. 52
  2. ^ Harris III, Charles H. (1975) A Mexican Family Empire: the Latifundio of the Sanchez Navarro, 1765-1867, Austin: University of Texas Press, p. xvii
  3. ^ Harris, p. 3
  4. ^ Zuñiga, Juan Antonio; Gonzalez G., Susana (2006-02-13). . La Jornada (in Spanish). Archived from the original on March 17, 2007. Retrieved 2006-12-08.
  5. ^ Los Sánchez Navarro y su amor por el arte," [1], accessed 25 Jul 2019
  6. ^ Harris, p. 5
  7. ^ Jones, Oakah L. (1979), Los Paisonos: Spanish Settlers on the Northern Frontier of New Spain, Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 29; Harris. p.8
  8. ^ Harris, pp. 162-169.
  9. ^ Harris, pp. 11-19
  10. ^ Harris, pp 11-30
  11. ^ Harris, pp. 42-48
  12. ^ Mendirichaga, José Roberto (Autumn 2016), "Patricia Martinez: El tejido familiar de los Sánchez Navarro, 1805-1840," Relaciones Estudios de Historia y Sociedad, p. 300, [2], accessed 26 Dec 2018
  13. ^ "Sanchez Navarro Collection, 1658-1804," Texas Archival Resources Online, [3], accessed 18 Dec 2018
  14. ^ Harris, pp. xvii, 182
  15. ^ Harris, map, frontispiece
  16. ^ Mendirichaga, p. 302
  17. ^ Harris, pp. 186-187, 210-211
  18. ^ Harris, pp. 128-136
  19. ^ Harris, pp. 142-143
  20. ^ Harris, p. 35
  21. ^ Harris, pp. 35-38
  22. ^ DeLay, pp. 13-16
  23. ^ Harris, pp. 192-193
  24. ^ DeLay, p. 317.
  25. ^ Jones, p. 27
  26. ^ Harris, pp 193-197
  27. ^ DeLay, pp. 317-318
  28. ^ Harris, p. 196.
  29. ^ DeLay, p. 197
  30. ^ Latoree, Dolores L. and Felipe A. (Jul-Sep 1977), "Plants Used by the Mexican Kickapoo Indians," Economic Botany, Vol. 31, No 3, p. 340. Downloaded from JSTOR.
  31. ^ Harris, p. 173
  32. ^ Harris, pp. 198-200
  33. ^ Harris, pp. 286-289
  34. ^ Harris, p, 293, 198-299, 305-309
  35. ^ Harris, pp. 307-309
  36. ^ "Sanchez Navarro y Peon Juan". Memoria Politica de Mexico. Retrieved 24 December 2022.

sánchez, navarro, ranch, 1765, 1866, mexico, largest, privately, owned, estate, latifundio, latin, america, maximum, extent, sánchez, navarro, family, owned, more, than, square, kilometres, acres, land, area, almost, large, republic, ireland, larger, than, ame. The Sanchez Navarro ranch 1765 1866 in Mexico was the largest privately owned estate or latifundio in Latin America At its maximum extent the Sanchez Navarro family owned more than 67 000 square kilometres 16 500 000 acres of land an area almost as large as the Republic of Ireland and larger than the American state of West Virginia The Sanchez Navarro latifundio was more than five times the size of the largest ranch the XIT in the United States and extended 350 kilometres 220 mi from north to south 1 The latifundio was located in the Chihuahuan Desert mostly in Coahuila but also in Nuevo Leon Durango and Zacatecas 2 A typical scene in the Chihuahua desert The acquisition of land by Jose Miguel Sanchez Navarro 1730 1821 began in 1765 and the latifundio existed until 1866 when the land was expropriated by the government of Mexico 3 Family members continued to be prominent in Mexican society into the 21st century 4 5 25 22 36 N 101 28 36 W 25 37667 N 101 47667 W 25 37667 101 47667 Throughout their history the Sanchez Navarros struggled against raids by the Comanche and Apache Indians and frequent and persistent drought and scarcity of water for their livestock mostly sheep but also cattle horses and mules Contents 1 History 2 Mexican War of Independence 3 Threats from Indians 4 Mexican American War 5 Decline and fall 6 See also 7 ReferencesHistory edit nbsp Water was scarce in most of the latifundo except for the Sabinas River In the 16th century most of the Spanish settlements in northern Mexico were established to exploit mineral wealth especially silver However Coahuila then called Nueva Extremadura lacked large deposits of precious metals and livestock grazing mostly sheep and cattle became the principal economic activity The sparse vegetation of the desert dictated the need for large tracts of land Farming was only possible in river valleys few in number or where ephemeral lakes formed in the rainy season Throughout the history of latifundios in Coahuila the scarcity of water due to frequent droughts was one of two major problems the other being hostile Indians first in the 17th century the Toboso peoples and other hunter gatherer peoples native to Coahuila in the 18th century the Apache and finally in the 19th century the Comanche 6 The San Miguel del Aguajo latifundio In the late 16th century several early Spanish settlers in Coahuila received large grants of land from the Spanish government in Mexico City Francisco de Urdinola built a large latifundio centered on the community at San Francisco de Patos renamed General Cepeda in 1892 in southern Coahuila His descendants including by marriage the Marquis de San Miguel de Aguayo by the mid 18th century had accumulated nearly as much land as the later Sanchez Navarros and their holdings had roughly the same boundaries The Marquisate of Aguayo introduced large scale growing of grapes at Parras and exported wine and brandy to Mexico City and other Mexican cities The owners of San Miguel de Aguayo as the latifundio was called raised cattle horses and especially sheep with herds estimated to exceed 200 000 They also opened the first textile mill in northern Mexico to supply clothing to its workers and residents and created a cavalry force to defend against Indian raids The headquarters at Patos had a population of 1 200 people in 1765 7 Mismanagement and the hazards of raising livestock in a drought prone region drove the Aguayo family to sell much of their property to English investors in 1825 The Sanchez Navarro family acquired the entire Aguayo estate in 1840 8 The Sanchez Navarros Concurrent with the growth of the San Miguel del Aguayo latifundio in southern Coahuila the Sanchez Navarros became important in northern Coahuila Originally a prominent family in Saltillo Jose Miguel a priest was appointed as Curate in Monclova the capital of Coahuila in 1755 He was joined there by his brother Jose Gregorio d 1774 The Sanchez Navarro brothers began to acquire land around Monclova in 1765 They established their headquarters the Hacienda de San Ignacio del Paso Tapado 30 kilometres 19 mi northeast of Monclova Another brother Manuel Francisco 1743 1805 soon joined the enterprise and acquired additional lands through marriage and inheritance 9 Manuel Francisco was the manager of the ranch focusing mostly on the development of the northern portion of the estate near Santa Rosa now Santa Rosa de Muzquiz which is watered by the Sabinas River 10 Manuel Francisco s son Jose Melchor 1782 1836 took over management of the estate in 1802 then in poor condition due to drought and Apache raids He established a new hacienda named Nuesta Senora de las Tres Hermanas Tres Hermanas was large and designed for defense a large compound surrounded by a wall 3 metres 10 ft high with dwellings and wall built of stone The hacienda was 50 kilometres 31 mi north of Monclova near the junction of the Monclova and Nadadores rivers At Tres Hermanas and nearby Tapado Jose Melchor introduced irrigation on a large scale to the latifundio and enlarged a vineyard 11 Jose Melchor died in 1836 and bequeathed the latifundio to his wife Apolonia Berain d 1876 and the couple s two sons Jacobo c 1814 after 1870 and Carlos 1816 1876 Apolonia ran the estate with unquestionable authority until her sons reached 25 years of age 12 In 1840 Carlos an attorney who lived in Mexico City while Jacobo managed the estate made the largest acquisition of the family when he purchased the bankrupt estate of San Miguel de Aguayo This purchase increased the land holdings of the Sanchez Navarros to 67 000 square kilometres 16 500 000 acres 13 Their latifundio thus became the largest in Latin America Jacobo moved the headquarters of the latifundio southward to Patos taking over the headquarters of San Miguel de Aguayo 14 Scattered around the latifundio were 24 large haciendas or cascos each of which operated autonomously Most of the cascos were in the better watered northern part of the latifundio 15 16 The livestock holdings of the Sanchez Navarros were immense In 1847 their herds of sheep totaled 250 000 and in addition they possessed large numbers of cattle horses and mules Their number of full time employees was probably between 1 000 and 1 500 To this total could be added many seasonal employees plus people who leased land from the Sanchez Navarros 17 Mexican War of Independence editIn the Mexican War of Independence from Spain led initially by Miguel Hidalgo and Ignacio Allende the Sanchez Navarro family led by Jose Melchor took the side of royalist Spain In 1811 defeated in battle Hidalgo and Allende and their rebel army retreated to Saltillo near Sanchez Navarro land Spies told Jose Melchor that the rebels planned to continue their retreat to Texas passing through Monclova home of many of the Sanchez Navarros The royalists quickly took control of Monclova and set up an ambush at the Wells of Bajan on what was or would become Sanchez Navarro property On March 21 1811 the rebels were defeated Hidalgo and Allende were captured and later executed Among the prisoners taken by the royalists at the Wells of Bajan were two nephews of Jose Miguel Sanchez Navarro who were fighting on the rebel side 18 Jose Melchor continued to be involved in royalist politics opposing independence for Mexico until 1821 when he supported the Plan of Iguala which called for Mexican independence but without the social and economic reforms for which Father Hidalgo and his followers had fought 19 Threats from Indians edit nbsp An artist s conception of Apache raiders nbsp A Comanche chieftain in 1834 Throughout its history the Sanchez Navarro latifundio suffered less from Indian attacks than other parts of northern Mexico because the family concentrated on raising sheep rather than horses mules and cattle which were more valued by the Apache and Comanche who inhabited the region 20 Nevertheless Indian raids were a constant problem forcing the abandonment of several neighboring haciendas and latifundios Apache raids were especially serious from the 1770s until the 1790s the main perpetrators being the Lipan who lived to the northeast and the Mescalero who lived to the northwest In spring 1790 the Apache depredations on the Sanchez Navarros were most severe In March the Apache killed 14 workers at Tapado and plundered an oxcart caravan in April they slaughtered 500 sheep and in May they killed 2 herders and kidnapped a youth 21 However in 1786 the Comanches in Texas and New Mexico induced by generous presents had concluded a peace agreement with the Spanish and helped suppress the Apaches thereby leading to an era of relative peace from 1793 until the Mexican war of independence undermined Spanish rule in the 1810s 22 Jose Melchor Sanchez Navarro first noticed the presence of Comanches and their Kiowa allies in the northern part of the estate near Santa Rosa Muzquiz in 1825 The Comanches were much more numerous than the Apaches and their raids into Mexico often consisted of hundreds of men The Sanchez Navarros declined to contribute to self defense units being organized at Monclova saying their employees were needed to protect the latifundio 23 24 The first Comanche raid reaching deep into Mexico and menacing the entire area of the Sanchez Navarro latifundo was in the winter of 1840 1841 Defenses against the Comanches were organized at the Sanchez Navarro headquarters at Patos but 400 Comanches instead attacked the outskirts of the city of Saltillo population 12 000 25 In 1842 Patos was again threatened saved perhaps by the arrival of 70 soldiers commanded by Jose Juan Sanchez Navarro the soldier in the family who responded with alacrity to the threat on his family s property Thereafter until the 1860s large and destructive Comanche raids on Sanchez Navarro haciendas and livestock were an almost yearly occurrence 26 27 One reason that the Comanches were able to raid with near impunity in northern Mexico was the reluctance of the Sanchez Navarros and other large landowners to arm their employees fearing revolt if shepherds and others got their hands on firearms Likewise they attempted to prevent their employees from fleeing south to safer places 28 29 In 1850 the Mexican government persuaded a band of Kickapoo and Seminole Indians to move to Mexico to help fight against the Comanches In exchange for their services the Kickapoo were given 7 023 hectares 17 353 acres of land in the northern part of the Sanchez Navarro estate The Kickapoo continued to own and occupy the land into the 21st century 30 31 The scope of the Sanchez Navarro s losses to Comanches is illustrated by a claim for compensation they submitted to the United States government which in 1848 had assumed responsibility for preventing Indian raids originating in U S territory a responsibility the U S abrogated in 1853 in the Treaty of Guadalupe The claim no doubt exaggerated for claims of livestock lost said that between 1848 and 1853 the family had 141 employees killed by Indians and lost more than 200 000 sheep 100 000 cattle and 15 000 horses and mules The family was never compensated 32 Mexican American War editIn late 1846 U S General John Wool and his army occupied Monclova and Saltillo Jacobo Sanchez Navarro then managing the latifundio established a friendly relationship with Wool and made a profit by supplying the American army At the same time Jacobo was working on behalf of Mexico stockpiling flour for the army of Mexican leader Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna which was advancing on Saltillo Other members of the Sanchez Navarro family were in Santa Anna s army or in guerilla forces However the Americans defeated Santa Anna at the Battle of Buena Vista which took place on Sanchez Navarro property south of Saltillo in February 1847 Jacobo persuaded Wool that he was innocent of any deception against the Americans and declared his neutrality in the war The Sanchez Navarro latifundio emerged unscathed by the war and the American occupation 33 Decline and fall editThe Sanchez Navarro s prominence in Coahuila was reduced after 1855 by the rise of a political enemy Santiago Vidaurri whose partisans plundered the latifundio and Jacobo Sanchez Navarro s mansion in Saltillo The family supported the French invasion of Mexico in 1862 and the subsequent imposition by France of the Austrian prince Maximilian as emperor of Mexico Jacobo s brother Carlos became prominent at the court of Maximilian in Mexico City while Jacobo managed the latifundio In 1867 insurgent forces led by Benito Juarez overthrew and executed Maximilian and Carlos was imprisoned for a year Carlos then went into exile in Paris returning to Mexico in 1870 after Juarez granted him amnesty He died in genteel poverty in Mexico City in 1876 34 In 1866 Juarez ordered the expropriation of the Sanchez Navarro latifundio and other large estates in Mexico After litigation the family regained some of its property in the 1870s but promptly sold it 35 Members of the family continued to be prominent Juan Sanchez Navarro y Peon 1913 2006 was a prominent businessman a founder of the National Action Party PAN and the author of a book about his ancestor s role in designing the Alamo in San Antonio Texas 36 Several Sanchez Navarros are actors in Mexican movies and television See also editJuan Sanchez Navarro y PeonReferences edit DeLay Brian 2008 War of a Thousand Deserts New Haven Yale University Press p 52 Harris III Charles H 1975 A Mexican Family Empire the Latifundio of the Sanchez Navarro 1765 1867 Austin University of Texas Press p xvii Harris p 3 Zuniga Juan Antonio Gonzalez G Susana 2006 02 13 Sanchez Navarro abarco varias epocas de Mexico desde la vision empresarial La Jornada in Spanish Archived from the original on March 17 2007 Retrieved 2006 12 08 Los Sanchez Navarro y su amor por el arte 1 accessed 25 Jul 2019 Harris p 5 Jones Oakah L 1979 Los Paisonos Spanish Settlers on the Northern Frontier of New Spain Norman University of Oklahoma Press 29 Harris p 8 Harris pp 162 169 Harris pp 11 19 Harris pp 11 30 Harris pp 42 48 Mendirichaga Jose Roberto Autumn 2016 Patricia Martinez El tejido familiar de los Sanchez Navarro 1805 1840 Relaciones Estudios de Historia y Sociedad p 300 2 accessed 26 Dec 2018 Sanchez Navarro Collection 1658 1804 Texas Archival Resources Online 3 accessed 18 Dec 2018 Harris pp xvii 182 Harris map frontispiece Mendirichaga p 302 Harris pp 186 187 210 211 Harris pp 128 136 Harris pp 142 143 Harris p 35 Harris pp 35 38 DeLay pp 13 16 Harris pp 192 193 DeLay p 317 Jones p 27 Harris pp 193 197 DeLay pp 317 318 Harris p 196 DeLay p 197 Latoree Dolores L and Felipe A Jul Sep 1977 Plants Used by the Mexican Kickapoo Indians Economic Botany Vol 31 No 3 p 340 Downloaded from JSTOR Harris p 173 Harris pp 198 200 Harris pp 286 289 Harris p 293 198 299 305 309 Harris pp 307 309 Sanchez Navarro y Peon Juan Memoria Politica de Mexico Retrieved 24 December 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sanchez Navarro ranch amp oldid 1213127203, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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