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Reform War

The Reform War, or War of Reform (Spanish: Guerra de Reforma), also known as the Three Years' War (Spanish: Guerra de los Tres Años), and the Mexican Civil War,[2] was a complex civil conflict in Mexico fought between Mexican liberals and conservatives with regional variations over the promulgation of Constitution of 1857. It has been called the "worst civil war to hit Mexico between the War of Independence of 1810-21 and the Revolution of 1910-20."[3] Following the liberals' overthrow of the dictatorship of conservative Antonio López de Santa Anna, liberals passed a series of laws codifying their political program. These laws were incorporated into the new constitution. It aimed to limit the political power of the executive branch, as well as the political, economic, and cultural power of the Catholic Church. Specific measures were the expropriation of Church property; separation of church and state; reduction of the power of the Mexican Army by elimination of their special privileges; strengthening the secular state through public education; and measures to develop the nation economically.[4]

Reform War

Mexico in 1858
  •   Conservatives
  •   Liberals
  •   Independent
Date17 December 1857 – 11 January 1861
(3 years, 3 weeks and 4 days)
Location
Result

Liberal victory

Belligerents
Liberals
 United States[1]
Conservatives
Commanders and leaders
Benito Juárez
Santos Degollado
Ignacio Zaragoza
Santiago Vidaurri
Jesús González Ortega
Emilio Langberg
Félix Zuloaga
Miguel Miramón
Leonardo Márquez
Tomás Mejía
Luis G. Osollo
Strength
78,570 54,889[citation needed]
Casualties and losses
8,713 11,355[citation needed]

The constitution had been promulgated on 5 February 1857 was to come into force on 16 September 1857. Predictably there was fierce opposition from Conservatives and the Catholic Church over its anti-clerical provisions, but there were also moderate liberals, including President Ignacio Comonfort, who considered the constitution too radical and likely to trigger a civil war. The Lerdo Law forced the sale of most of the Church's rural properties. The measure was not exclusively aimed at the Catholic Church, but also Mexico's indigenous peoples, which were forced to sell sizeable portions of their communal lands. Controversy was further inflamed when the Catholic Church decreed excommunication to civil servants who took a government mandated oath upholding the new constitution, which left Catholic civil servants with the choice of losing their jobs or being excommunicated.[5]

General Félix Zuloaga led army troops to the capital and closed congress and issued the Plan of Tacubaya on December 17, 1857. The constitution was nullified, President Comonfort was initially signed onto the plan and was retained in the presidency and given emergency powers. Some liberal politicians were arrested, including President of the Supreme Court of Justice, Benito Juárez.[6] Comonfort, hoping to establish a more moderate government, found himself triggering a civil war and began to back away from Zuloaga. On 11 January 1858, Comonfort resigned and went into exile. He was constitutionally succeeded by president of the Supreme Court, Juárez. Mexican states subsequently chose to side with either the Mexico City based government of Zuloaga or that of Juárez which established itself at the strategic port of Veracruz. Initial choices for one side or the other often shifted over time. The first year of the war was marked by repeated conservative victories, but the liberals remained entrenched in the nation's coastal regions, including their capital at the port of Veracruz, which gave them access to vital customs revenue that could fund their forces.

Both governments attained international recognition, the Liberals by the United States and the Conservatives by France, the United Kingdom, and Spain. Liberals negotiated the McLane–Ocampo Treaty with the United States in 1859. If ratified the treaty would have given the liberal regime cash, but it would have also granted the United States perpetual military and economic rights on Mexican territory. The treaty failed to pass in the U.S. Senate, but the U.S. Navy still helped protect Juárez's government in Veracruz.

Liberals accumulated victories on the battlefield until Conservative forces surrendered on 22 December 1860. Juárez returned to Mexico City on 11 January 1861 and held presidential elections in March.[7] Although Conservative forces lost the war, guerrillas remained active in the countryside and would join the upcoming French intervention to help establish the Second Mexican Empire.[8]

Background edit

After achieving independence in 1821, Mexico was alternatively governed by both liberal and conservative coalitions. The original Constitution of 1824 established the federalist system championed by the liberals, with Mexican states holding sovereign power and the central government being weak. The brief liberal administration of Valentín Gómez Farías attempted to implement anti-clerical measures as early as 1833. The government closed church schools, assumed the right to make clerical appointments to the Catholic Church, and shut down monasteries.[9] The ensuing backlash would result in Gómez Farías's government being overthrown and conservatives established a Centralist Republic in 1835 that lasted until the outbreak of the Mexican–American War in 1846.

In 1854 there was a liberal revolt, known as the Plan of Ayutla against the dictatorship of Santa Anna. A coalition of liberals, including Benito Juárez, then governor of Oaxaca, and Melchor Ocampo of Michoacán overthrew Santa Anna, and the presidency passed on to the liberal caudillo Juan Alvarez.

La Reforma edit

 
Allegory of the Constitution of 1857, Petronilo Monroy, 1869.

Juan Álvarez assumed power in November, 1855. His cabinet was radical and included the prominent liberals Benito Juárez, Miguel Lerdo de Tejada, Melchor Ocampo, and Guillermo Prieto, but also the more moderate Ignacio Comonfort.[10]

Clashes in the cabinet led to the resignation of the radical Ocampo,[11] but the administration was still determined to pass significant reforms. On November 23, 1855, the Juárez Law, named after the Minister of Justice, substantially reduced the jurisdiction of military and ecclesiastical courts which existed for soldiers and clergy.[12]

Further dissension within liberal ranks led to Alvarez's resignation and the more moderate Comonfort becoming president on December 11, who chose a new cabinet. A constituent congress began meeting on February 14, 1856 and ratified the Juárez law. In June, another major controversy emerged over the promulgation of the Lerdo law, named after the secretary of the treasury, Miguel Lerdo de Tejada. The law aimed at disentailing the collective ownership of real estate by the Roman Catholic Church and indigenous communities. It forced 'civil or ecclesiastical institutions' to sell any land that they owned, with the tenants receiving priority and generous terms for purchasing the community-held land they cultivated. The law sought to undermine the economic power of the Church and to force create a class of yeoman farmers of indigenous community members.[13][14] The law was envisioned as a way to develop Mexico's economy by increasing the number of indigenous private property owners,[15] but in practice the land was bought up by rich speculators. Most of the lost indigenous lands community lands increased the size of large landed estates, haciendas.[16][17]

The Constitution of 1857 was promulgated on February 5, 1857 and it integrated both the Juárez and the Lerdo Laws. It was meant to take into effect on September 16.[18] On March 17 it was decreed that all civil servants had to publicly swear and sign and oath to it.[19] The Catholic Church decreed excommunication for anyone that took the oath, and subsequently many Catholics in the Mexican government lost their jobs for refusing the oath.[5]

Controversy over the constitution continued to rage, and Comonfort himself was rumored to be conspiring to form a new government. On December 17, 1857 General Félix Zuloaga proclaimed the Plan of Tacubaya, declaring the Constitution of 1857 nullified, and offered supreme power to President Comonfort, who was to convoke a new constitutional convention to produce a new document more in accord with Mexican interests. In response, congress deposed President Comonfort, but Zuloaga's troops entered the capital on the 18th and dissolved congress. The following day, Comonfort accepted the Plan of Tacubaya, and released a manifesto making the case that more moderate reforms were needed under the current circumstances.[20]

The Plan of Tacubaya did not lead to a national reconciliation, and as Comonfort realized this he began to back away from Zuloaga and the conservatives. He resigned from the presidency and even began to lead skirmishes against the Zuloaga government, but after he was abandoned by most of his loyal troops, Comonfort left the capital on January 11, 1858, with the constitutional presidency having passed to the President of the Supreme Court, Benito Juárez. The Conservative government in the capital summoned a council of representatives that elected Zuloaga as president, and the states of Mexico proclaimed their loyalties to either the conservative Zuloaga or liberal Juárez governments. The Reform War had now begun.[21]

The War edit

Flight of the Liberal Government edit

 
Sculpture portraying Guillermo Prieto saving the life of President Juarez

President Juárez and his ministers fled from Mexico City to Querétaro. General Zuloaga, knowing the strategic importance of the Gulf Coast state of Veracruz, tried to win over its governor, Gutierrez Zamora, who however affirmed his support for the government of Juárez. Santiago Vidaurri and Manuel Doblado organized Liberal forces in the north and led a liberal coalition in the interior headquartered in the town of Celaya. On March 10, 1858, liberal forces under Anastasio Parrodi, governor of Jalisco, and Leandro Valle lost the Battle of Salamanca, which opened up the interior of the country to the conservatives.[22]

Juárez was in Jalisco's capital Guadalajara at this time, when on 13-15 March part of the army there mutinied and imprisoned him, threatening his life. Liberal minister and fellow prisoner Guillermo Prieto dissuaded the hostile soldiers from shooting Juárez, an event now memorialized by a statue. As rival factions struggled to control the city, Juárez and other liberal prisoners were released on agreement after which Guadalajara was fully captured by conservatives by the end of March. Conservatives took the silver mining center of Zacatecas on 12 April. Juárez reconstituted his regime in Veracruz, embarking from the west coast port of Manzanillo, crossing Panama, and arriving in Veracruz on May 4, 1858, making it the liberal capital.[23]

Conservative Advances edit

Juárez made Santos Degollado the head of the Liberal armies, who went on to defeat upon defeat. Miramón defeated him in the Battle of Atenquique on 2 July. On 24 July, Miramón captured Guanajuato, and San Luis Potosi was captured by the conservatives on 12 September. Vidaurri was defeated at the Battle of Ahualulco on 29 September. By October the conservatives were at the height of their strength.[24]

The liberals failed to take Mexico City on 14 October, but Santos Degollado captured Guadalajara on 27 October, after a thirty days siege that left a third of the city in ruins. This victory caused consternation at the conservative capital, but Guadalajara was taken back by Márquez on 14 December.[25]

The failure of Zuloaga's government to produce a constitution actually led to a conservative revolt against him led by General Echegaray. He resigned in favor of Manuel Robles Pezuela on 23 December. On 30 December a conservative junta in Mexico City elected General Miguel Miramón as president.[26]

First Veracruz Offensive edit

 
Conservative President Miguel Miramón
 
Constitutional President Benito Juárez

President Miramón's most important military priority was now the capture of Veracruz, the liberals' stronghold. He left the capital on February 16, leading the troops in person along with his minister of war. Aguascalientes and Guanajuato had fallen to the liberals. Liberal troops in the West were led by Degollado and headquartered in Morelia, which now served as a liberal arsenal. The conservatives fell ill with malaria, endemic in the Gulf Coast, and abandoned the siege of Veracruz by March 29.[27] Liberal General Degollado made another attempt on Mexico City in early April and was routed in the Battle of Tacubaya by Leonardo Márquez. Márquez captured a large amount of war materiel and gained infamy for including medics among those executed in the aftermath of the battle.[citation needed]

On April 6, the Juárez government was recognized by the United States during the Buchanan administration. Miramón unsuccessfully attempted to besiege Veracruz in June and July. On July 12, the liberal government nationalized the property of the Catholic church, and suppressed the monasteries and convents, the sale of which provided the liberal war effort with new funds, though not as much as had been hoped for since speculators were waiting for more stable times to make purchases.[28]

Miramón met the liberal forces in November at which a truce was declared and a conference was held on the matter of the Constitution of 1857 and the possibility of a constituent congress. Negotiations broke down and hostilities resumed on the 12th after which Degollado was routed at the Battle of Las Vacas.[29]

Second Veracruz Offensive edit

On December 14, 1859, Melchor Ocampo signed the McLane–Ocampo Treaty, which granted the United States perpetual rights to transport goods and troops across three key trade routes in Mexico and granted Americans an element of extraterritoriality. The treaty caused consternation among the conservatives and some liberals, the European press, and even members of Juarez's cabinet. The issue was rendered moot when the U.S. Senate failed to approve the treaty.[30]

 
U.S.S. Saratoga which helped defeat a conservative squadron at the Battle of Antón Lizardo
 
Battle of Calpulalpan, the last battle of the war ending with the liberals prevailing

Miramón was preparing another siege of Veracruz, leaving the conservative capital of Mexico City on February 8, leading his troops in person along with his war minister, hoping to rendezvous with a small naval squadron led by the Mexican General Marin who was disembarking from Havana. The United States Navy however had orders to intercept it.[31] Miramón arrived at Medellín on the 2nd of March, and awaited Marin's attack in order to begin the siege. The U.S. steamer Indianola had been anchored near the fortress of San Juan de Ulúa, to defend Veracruz from attack.[32]

On March 6, Marin's squadron arrived in Veracruz, and was captured by U.S. Navy Captain Joseph R. Jarvis in the Battle of Antón Lizardo The ships were sent to New Orleans, along with the now imprisoned General Marin, depriving the conservatives of an attack force and the substantial artillery, guns, and rations that they were carrying onboard for delivery to Miramón.[33] Miramón's effort to besiege Veracruz was abandoned on the 20th of March, and he arrived back in Mexico City on April 7.

Liberal Triumph edit

The conservatives also suffered defeats in the interior, losing Aguascalientes and San Luis Potosí before the end of April. Degollado was sent into the interior to lead the liberal campaign since their enemies had now exhausted their resources. He appointed José López Uraga as Quartermaster General[34] Uraga split his troops and attempted to lure out Miramón to isolate him, but in late May Uraga then committed the strategic blunder of attempting to assault Guadalajara with Mirámon's troops behind him. The assault failed and Uraga was taken prisoner.[35]

Miramón was routed on August 10, in Silao, which resulted in his commander Tomás Mejía being taken prisoner, and Miramón retreated to Mexico City. In response to the disaster, Miramón resigned as president to seek a vote of confidence. The conservative junta elected him president again after a two days interregnum.[36] By the end of August, liberals were preparing for a decisive final battle. The Mexico City was cut off from the rest of the country. Guadalajara was surrounded by 17,000 liberal troops while the conservatives in the city only had 7000. The conservative commander Castillo surrendered without firing a shot and was allowed to leave the city with his troops. General Leonardo Márquez was routed on the 10th of November, attempting to reinforce General Castillo without being aware of his surrender.[37]

Miramón on November 3 convoked a war council, including in it prominent citizens to meet the crisis and by November 5 it was resolved to fight until the end. The conservatives were not struggling with a shortage of funds and increasing defections. Nonetheless, Miramon gained a victory when he attacked the liberal headquarters of Toluca on the 9th of December, in which almost all of their forces were captured.[38] With the tide turning to liberal victories, Juárez rejected the McLane-Ocampo Treaty in November, while the treaty had previously been rejected in the U.S. Senate May 31 and not ratified. Juárez had secured recognition from the U.S. government with the opening of negotiations with the United States, rejected outright sale of Mexican territory to the United States, and received aid from the U.S. Navy, in the end securing benefits to Mexico without actually concluding the treaty.

In early December as the tide of war had clearly turned to the liberals, Juárez signed the Law for the Liberty of Religious Worship on December 4, the final step in the liberals' program to disempower the Roman Catholic Church by allowing religious tolerance in Mexico.[39]

General González Ortega approached Mexico City with reinforcements. The decisive battle took place on December 22, at Calpulalpan. The conservatives had 8,000 troops and the liberals 16,000. Miramon lost and retreated back towards the capital.[40]

Another conservative war council agreed to surrender. The conservative government fled the city, and Miramón himself escaped to European exile. Márquez escaped to the mountains of Michoacan. The triumphant liberals entered the city with 25,000 troops on January 1, 1861, and Juárez entered the capital on January 11.[41]

Foreign owers edit

After Zuloaga's coup, the conservative government was recognized swiftly by Spain and France. Neither conservatives nor liberals ever had official foreign troops as part of their respective armed forces. The conservative government signed the Mon-Almonte Treaty with Spain that promised to pay the Spanish government indemnities in exchange for aid. The liberals also sought foreign support from the United States. Mexico signed the McLane-Ocampo Treaty, which would have granted to the United States perpetual transit and extraterritorial rights in Mexico. This treaty was denounced by conservatives and some liberals, with Juárez countering that the territorial losses to the United States had occurred under the conservatives.[42] With the liberal victory, Juárez's government was unable to meet foreign debt obligations, some of which stemmed from the Mon-Almonte Treaty. When Juárez's government suspended payments, the pretext was used to inaugurate the Second French Intervention in Mexico.

During the Reform War as the military stalemate continued, some liberals considered the idea of foreign intervention. The brothers Miguel Lerdo de Tejada and Sebastián were liberal politicians from Veracruz and had commercial connections with the United States. Miguel Lerdo, Juárez's Minister of Finance, attempted to negotiate a loan with the United States. He was reported to despair of Mexico's situation and saw some form of protection from the United States as the way forward and the way to prevent a resurgence of Spanish colonialism. Correspondence between Melchor Ocampo and Santos Degollado discussing Lerdo's attempt to negotiate a loan was captured and published by conservatives.[43] Degollado was later to advocate mediation through the diplomatic corps in Mexico to end the conflict. Juárez flatly refused Degollado's call to resign, since Juárez saw that as turning over Mexico's future to European powers.[44]

Aftermath edit

A French invasion and the establishment of the Second Mexican Empire followed almost immediately after the end of the Reform War, and key figures of the Reform War would continue to play roles during the rise and fall of the Empire.

While the main fighting in the Reform War was over by the end of 1860, guerilla conflict continued to be waged in the countryside. After the fall of the conservative government, General Leonardo Marquez remained at large, and in June, 1861, he succeeded in assassinating Melchor Ocampo. President Juarez sent the former head of his troops during the Reform War, Santos Degollado after Marquez, only for Marquez to succeed in killing Degollado as well.

Having been influenced by Mexican monarchist exiles, and using Juarez's suspension of foreign debts as a pretext, and with the American Civil War preventing the enforcement of the Monroe Doctrine, Napoleon III invaded Mexico in 1862, and sought local help in setting up a monarchical client state. Former liberal president Ignacio Comonfort, who had played such a key role in the outbreak of the Reform War, was killed in action that year, having returned to the country to fight the French, and having been given a military command. Former conservative president during the Reform War Manuel Robles Pezuela was also executed in 1862 by the Juarez government for attempting to help the French. Seeing the intervention as an opportunity to undo the Reform, conservative generals and statesmen who had played a role during the War of the Reform joined the French and a conservative assembly voted in 1863 to invite Habsburg Archduke Maximilian to become Emperor of Mexico.

The Emperor, however, proved to be of liberal inclinations and ended up ratifying the Reform laws. Regardless, the liberal government of Benito Juárez, still resisted and fought the French and Mexican Imperial forces with the backing of the United States, which since the end of the Amerivan Civil War could now once again enforce the Monroe Doctrine. The French eventually withdrew in 1866, which led the monarchy to collapse in 1867. Former President Miguel Miramon and the conservative general Tomas Mejia would die alongside the Emperor and be executed by firing squad on June 19, 1867. Santiago Vidaurri, once Juarez's commander in the north during the Reform War had actually joined the imperialists, but he was captured and executed for his betrayal on July 8, 1867. Leonardo Marquez would once again escape, this time to Cuba, and live until 1913 and publishing a defense of his role in the empire.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ [Juarez is aided by U.S. troops in the War of Reform] (in Spanish). Mexico: El Dictamen. 2012-10-08. Archived from the original on 2014-02-02.
  2. ^ Will Fowler, The Grammar of Civil War: A Mexican Case Study, 1857-61. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press 2022
  3. ^ Fowler, The Grammar of Civil War, p. 43
  4. ^ Sinkin, The Mexican Reform, 169.
  5. ^ a b Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1886). History of Mexico Volume V. The Bancroft Company. p. 710.
  6. ^ Fowler, The Grammar of Civil War p.43
  7. ^ Hamnett, Brian. Juárez. New York: Longman 1994, 255
  8. ^ Sinkin, The Mexican Reform, 177.
  9. ^ Meyer, Michael (1979). The Course of Mexican History. Oxford University Press. p. 327.
  10. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1886). History of Mexico Volume V. The Bancroft Company. p. 668.
  11. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1886). History of Mexico Volume V. The Bancroft Company. p. 669.
  12. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1886). History of Mexico Volume V. The Bancroft Company. p. 669.
  13. ^ Fehrenbach, T.R. (1995). Fire and Blood: A History of Mexico. Da Capo Press. p. 413.
  14. ^ Kirkwood, Burton (2000). The History of Mexico. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. p. 101. ISBN 9780313303517. OCLC 1035597669. Retrieved 4 July 2022.
  15. ^ Hamnett, Brian (2006) [1999]. A Concise History of Mexico (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 159. ISBN 978-0-521-85284-5.
  16. ^ Fehrenbach, T.R. (1995). Fire and Blood: A History of Mexico. Da Capo Press. p. 414.
  17. ^ Nutini, Hugo (1995). The Wages of Conquest: The Mexican Aristocracy in the Context of Western Aristocracies. University of Michigan. p. 294.
  18. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1886). History of Mexico Volume V. The Bancroft Company. p. 696.
  19. ^ Fehrenbach, T.R. (1995). Fire and Blood: A History of Mexico. Da Capo Press. p. 416.
  20. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1886). History of Mexico Volume V. The Bancroft Company. p. 725.
  21. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1886). History of Mexico Volume V. The Bancroft Company. pp. 729–730.
  22. ^ Hamnett, "Wars of Reform", 1601
  23. ^ Hamnett, "Wars of Reform", 1602
  24. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1885). History of Mexico Volume V 1824-1861. The Bancroft Company. pp. 747–748.
  25. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1885). History of Mexico Volume V 1824-1861. The Bancroft Company. pp. 748–749.
  26. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1885). History of Mexico Volume V 1824-1861. The Bancroft Company. pp. 750–753.
  27. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1885). History of Mexico Volume V 1824-1861. The Bancroft Company. pp. 757–759.
  28. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1885). History of Mexico Volume V 1824-1861. The Bancroft Company. pp. 768–769.
  29. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1885). History of Mexico Volume V 1824-1861. The Bancroft Company. p. 771.
  30. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1885). History of Mexico Volume V 1824-1861. The Bancroft Company. pp. 774–775.
  31. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1886). History of Mexico Volume V. The Bancroft Company. p. 776.
  32. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1886). History of Mexico Volume V. The Bancroft Company. p. 777.
  33. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1886). History of Mexico Volume V. The Bancroft Company. pp. 778–779.
  34. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1886). History of Mexico Volume V. The Bancroft Company. pp. 780–781.
  35. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1886). History of Mexico Volume V. The Bancroft Company. p. 782.
  36. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1886). History of Mexico Volume V. The Bancroft Company. p. 785.
  37. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1886). History of Mexico Volume V. The Bancroft Company. p. 790.
  38. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1886). History of Mexico Volume V. The Bancroft Company. p. 792.
  39. ^ Hamnett, Juárez, 255
  40. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1886). History of Mexico Volume V. The Bancroft Company. p. 793.
  41. ^ Bancroft, Hubert Howe (1886). History of Mexico Volume V. The Bancroft Company. p. 795.
  42. ^ Sinkin, The Mexican Reform, 151-54
  43. ^ Hamnett, Juárez, 121-22
  44. ^ Hamnett, Juárez, 124.

Further reading edit

  • Connaughton, Brian, coord. México durante la Guerra de Reforma, tomo I: Iglesia, religión y leyes de reforma. Xalapa: Universidad Veracruzana 2011.
  • Fowler, Will. La Guerra de Tres Años, 1857-1861: El conflicto del que nació el Estado laico mexicano. Mexico City: Crítica 2020.
  • Fowler, Will. The Grammar of Civil War: A Mexican Case Study, 1857-1861. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press 2022. ISBN 9781496230461
  • Hamnett, Brian. Juárez. London: Longman 1994.
  • Olliff, Donathan. Reforma Mexico and the United States: A Search for Alternatives to Annexation, 1854-1861. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press 1981.
  • Powell, T.G. "Priests and Peasants in Central Mexico: Social Conflict during La Reforma". Hispanic American Historical Review 57(1997): 296-313.
  • Sinkin, Richard. The Mexican Reform, 1855-1876: A Study in Liberal Nation Building. Austin: Institute of Latin American Studies 1979.

reform, this, article, about, 19th, century, mexico, early, modern, wars, reformation, europe, european, wars, religion, reform, spanish, guerra, reforma, also, known, three, years, spanish, guerra, tres, años, mexican, civil, complex, civil, conflict, mexico,. This article is about the 19th century war in Mexico For early modern Wars of the Reformation in Europe see European wars of religion The Reform War or War of Reform Spanish Guerra de Reforma also known as the Three Years War Spanish Guerra de los Tres Anos and the Mexican Civil War 2 was a complex civil conflict in Mexico fought between Mexican liberals and conservatives with regional variations over the promulgation of Constitution of 1857 It has been called the worst civil war to hit Mexico between the War of Independence of 1810 21 and the Revolution of 1910 20 3 Following the liberals overthrow of the dictatorship of conservative Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna liberals passed a series of laws codifying their political program These laws were incorporated into the new constitution It aimed to limit the political power of the executive branch as well as the political economic and cultural power of the Catholic Church Specific measures were the expropriation of Church property separation of church and state reduction of the power of the Mexican Army by elimination of their special privileges strengthening the secular state through public education and measures to develop the nation economically 4 Reform WarMexico in 1858 Conservatives Liberals IndependentDate17 December 1857 11 January 1861 3 years 3 weeks and 4 days LocationMexicoResultLiberal victory Nation s infrastructure and finances are left in ruins Convention of London is signed by the United Kingdom Spain and France to guarantee debt payments Conservatives collaborate with the French during the subsequent second French intervention in Mexico to establish a monarchyBelligerentsLiberals United States 1 ConservativesCommanders and leadersBenito JuarezSantos DegolladoIgnacio ZaragozaSantiago VidaurriJesus Gonzalez OrtegaEmilio LangbergFelix ZuloagaMiguel MiramonLeonardo MarquezTomas MejiaLuis G OsolloStrength78 57054 889 citation needed Casualties and losses8 71311 355 citation needed The constitution had been promulgated on 5 February 1857 was to come into force on 16 September 1857 Predictably there was fierce opposition from Conservatives and the Catholic Church over its anti clerical provisions but there were also moderate liberals including President Ignacio Comonfort who considered the constitution too radical and likely to trigger a civil war The Lerdo Law forced the sale of most of the Church s rural properties The measure was not exclusively aimed at the Catholic Church but also Mexico s indigenous peoples which were forced to sell sizeable portions of their communal lands Controversy was further inflamed when the Catholic Church decreed excommunication to civil servants who took a government mandated oath upholding the new constitution which left Catholic civil servants with the choice of losing their jobs or being excommunicated 5 General Felix Zuloaga led army troops to the capital and closed congress and issued the Plan of Tacubaya on December 17 1857 The constitution was nullified President Comonfort was initially signed onto the plan and was retained in the presidency and given emergency powers Some liberal politicians were arrested including President of the Supreme Court of Justice Benito Juarez 6 Comonfort hoping to establish a more moderate government found himself triggering a civil war and began to back away from Zuloaga On 11 January 1858 Comonfort resigned and went into exile He was constitutionally succeeded by president of the Supreme Court Juarez Mexican states subsequently chose to side with either the Mexico City based government of Zuloaga or that of Juarez which established itself at the strategic port of Veracruz Initial choices for one side or the other often shifted over time The first year of the war was marked by repeated conservative victories but the liberals remained entrenched in the nation s coastal regions including their capital at the port of Veracruz which gave them access to vital customs revenue that could fund their forces Both governments attained international recognition the Liberals by the United States and the Conservatives by France the United Kingdom and Spain Liberals negotiated the McLane Ocampo Treaty with the United States in 1859 If ratified the treaty would have given the liberal regime cash but it would have also granted the United States perpetual military and economic rights on Mexican territory The treaty failed to pass in the U S Senate but the U S Navy still helped protect Juarez s government in Veracruz Liberals accumulated victories on the battlefield until Conservative forces surrendered on 22 December 1860 Juarez returned to Mexico City on 11 January 1861 and held presidential elections in March 7 Although Conservative forces lost the war guerrillas remained active in the countryside and would join the upcoming French intervention to help establish the Second Mexican Empire 8 Contents 1 Background 2 La Reforma 3 The War 3 1 Flight of the Liberal Government 3 2 Conservative Advances 3 3 First Veracruz Offensive 3 4 Second Veracruz Offensive 3 5 Liberal Triumph 4 Foreign owers 5 Aftermath 6 See also 7 References 8 Further readingBackground editMain articles Liberal Party Mexico and Conservative Party Mexico After achieving independence in 1821 Mexico was alternatively governed by both liberal and conservative coalitions The original Constitution of 1824 established the federalist system championed by the liberals with Mexican states holding sovereign power and the central government being weak The brief liberal administration of Valentin Gomez Farias attempted to implement anti clerical measures as early as 1833 The government closed church schools assumed the right to make clerical appointments to the Catholic Church and shut down monasteries 9 The ensuing backlash would result in Gomez Farias s government being overthrown and conservatives established a Centralist Republic in 1835 that lasted until the outbreak of the Mexican American War in 1846 In 1854 there was a liberal revolt known as the Plan of Ayutla against the dictatorship of Santa Anna A coalition of liberals including Benito Juarez then governor of Oaxaca and Melchor Ocampo of Michoacan overthrew Santa Anna and the presidency passed on to the liberal caudillo Juan Alvarez La Reforma editMain article La Reforma nbsp Allegory of the Constitution of 1857 Petronilo Monroy 1869 Juan Alvarez assumed power in November 1855 His cabinet was radical and included the prominent liberals Benito Juarez Miguel Lerdo de Tejada Melchor Ocampo and Guillermo Prieto but also the more moderate Ignacio Comonfort 10 Clashes in the cabinet led to the resignation of the radical Ocampo 11 but the administration was still determined to pass significant reforms On November 23 1855 the Juarez Law named after the Minister of Justice substantially reduced the jurisdiction of military and ecclesiastical courts which existed for soldiers and clergy 12 Further dissension within liberal ranks led to Alvarez s resignation and the more moderate Comonfort becoming president on December 11 who chose a new cabinet A constituent congress began meeting on February 14 1856 and ratified the Juarez law In June another major controversy emerged over the promulgation of the Lerdo law named after the secretary of the treasury Miguel Lerdo de Tejada The law aimed at disentailing the collective ownership of real estate by the Roman Catholic Church and indigenous communities It forced civil or ecclesiastical institutions to sell any land that they owned with the tenants receiving priority and generous terms for purchasing the community held land they cultivated The law sought to undermine the economic power of the Church and to force create a class of yeoman farmers of indigenous community members 13 14 The law was envisioned as a way to develop Mexico s economy by increasing the number of indigenous private property owners 15 but in practice the land was bought up by rich speculators Most of the lost indigenous lands community lands increased the size of large landed estates haciendas 16 17 The Constitution of 1857 was promulgated on February 5 1857 and it integrated both the Juarez and the Lerdo Laws It was meant to take into effect on September 16 18 On March 17 it was decreed that all civil servants had to publicly swear and sign and oath to it 19 The Catholic Church decreed excommunication for anyone that took the oath and subsequently many Catholics in the Mexican government lost their jobs for refusing the oath 5 Controversy over the constitution continued to rage and Comonfort himself was rumored to be conspiring to form a new government On December 17 1857 General Felix Zuloaga proclaimed the Plan of Tacubaya declaring the Constitution of 1857 nullified and offered supreme power to President Comonfort who was to convoke a new constitutional convention to produce a new document more in accord with Mexican interests In response congress deposed President Comonfort but Zuloaga s troops entered the capital on the 18th and dissolved congress The following day Comonfort accepted the Plan of Tacubaya and released a manifesto making the case that more moderate reforms were needed under the current circumstances 20 The Plan of Tacubaya did not lead to a national reconciliation and as Comonfort realized this he began to back away from Zuloaga and the conservatives He resigned from the presidency and even began to lead skirmishes against the Zuloaga government but after he was abandoned by most of his loyal troops Comonfort left the capital on January 11 1858 with the constitutional presidency having passed to the President of the Supreme Court Benito Juarez The Conservative government in the capital summoned a council of representatives that elected Zuloaga as president and the states of Mexico proclaimed their loyalties to either the conservative Zuloaga or liberal Juarez governments The Reform War had now begun 21 The War editFlight of the Liberal Government edit nbsp Sculpture portraying Guillermo Prieto saving the life of President JuarezPresident Juarez and his ministers fled from Mexico City to Queretaro General Zuloaga knowing the strategic importance of the Gulf Coast state of Veracruz tried to win over its governor Gutierrez Zamora who however affirmed his support for the government of Juarez Santiago Vidaurri and Manuel Doblado organized Liberal forces in the north and led a liberal coalition in the interior headquartered in the town of Celaya On March 10 1858 liberal forces under Anastasio Parrodi governor of Jalisco and Leandro Valle lost the Battle of Salamanca which opened up the interior of the country to the conservatives 22 Juarez was in Jalisco s capital Guadalajara at this time when on 13 15 March part of the army there mutinied and imprisoned him threatening his life Liberal minister and fellow prisoner Guillermo Prieto dissuaded the hostile soldiers from shooting Juarez an event now memorialized by a statue As rival factions struggled to control the city Juarez and other liberal prisoners were released on agreement after which Guadalajara was fully captured by conservatives by the end of March Conservatives took the silver mining center of Zacatecas on 12 April Juarez reconstituted his regime in Veracruz embarking from the west coast port of Manzanillo crossing Panama and arriving in Veracruz on May 4 1858 making it the liberal capital 23 Conservative Advances edit Juarez made Santos Degollado the head of the Liberal armies who went on to defeat upon defeat Miramon defeated him in the Battle of Atenquique on 2 July On 24 July Miramon captured Guanajuato and San Luis Potosi was captured by the conservatives on 12 September Vidaurri was defeated at the Battle of Ahualulco on 29 September By October the conservatives were at the height of their strength 24 The liberals failed to take Mexico City on 14 October but Santos Degollado captured Guadalajara on 27 October after a thirty days siege that left a third of the city in ruins This victory caused consternation at the conservative capital but Guadalajara was taken back by Marquez on 14 December 25 The failure of Zuloaga s government to produce a constitution actually led to a conservative revolt against him led by General Echegaray He resigned in favor of Manuel Robles Pezuela on 23 December On 30 December a conservative junta in Mexico City elected General Miguel Miramon as president 26 First Veracruz Offensive edit nbsp Conservative President Miguel Miramon nbsp Constitutional President Benito JuarezPresident Miramon s most important military priority was now the capture of Veracruz the liberals stronghold He left the capital on February 16 leading the troops in person along with his minister of war Aguascalientes and Guanajuato had fallen to the liberals Liberal troops in the West were led by Degollado and headquartered in Morelia which now served as a liberal arsenal The conservatives fell ill with malaria endemic in the Gulf Coast and abandoned the siege of Veracruz by March 29 27 Liberal General Degollado made another attempt on Mexico City in early April and was routed in the Battle of Tacubaya by Leonardo Marquez Marquez captured a large amount of war materiel and gained infamy for including medics among those executed in the aftermath of the battle citation needed On April 6 the Juarez government was recognized by the United States during the Buchanan administration Miramon unsuccessfully attempted to besiege Veracruz in June and July On July 12 the liberal government nationalized the property of the Catholic church and suppressed the monasteries and convents the sale of which provided the liberal war effort with new funds though not as much as had been hoped for since speculators were waiting for more stable times to make purchases 28 Miramon met the liberal forces in November at which a truce was declared and a conference was held on the matter of the Constitution of 1857 and the possibility of a constituent congress Negotiations broke down and hostilities resumed on the 12th after which Degollado was routed at the Battle of Las Vacas 29 Second Veracruz Offensive edit On December 14 1859 Melchor Ocampo signed the McLane Ocampo Treaty which granted the United States perpetual rights to transport goods and troops across three key trade routes in Mexico and granted Americans an element of extraterritoriality The treaty caused consternation among the conservatives and some liberals the European press and even members of Juarez s cabinet The issue was rendered moot when the U S Senate failed to approve the treaty 30 nbsp U S S Saratoga which helped defeat a conservative squadron at the Battle of Anton Lizardo nbsp Battle of Calpulalpan the last battle of the war ending with the liberals prevailingMiramon was preparing another siege of Veracruz leaving the conservative capital of Mexico City on February 8 leading his troops in person along with his war minister hoping to rendezvous with a small naval squadron led by the Mexican General Marin who was disembarking from Havana The United States Navy however had orders to intercept it 31 Miramon arrived at Medellin on the 2nd of March and awaited Marin s attack in order to begin the siege The U S steamer Indianola had been anchored near the fortress of San Juan de Ulua to defend Veracruz from attack 32 On March 6 Marin s squadron arrived in Veracruz and was captured by U S Navy Captain Joseph R Jarvis in the Battle of Anton Lizardo The ships were sent to New Orleans along with the now imprisoned General Marin depriving the conservatives of an attack force and the substantial artillery guns and rations that they were carrying onboard for delivery to Miramon 33 Miramon s effort to besiege Veracruz was abandoned on the 20th of March and he arrived back in Mexico City on April 7 Liberal Triumph edit The conservatives also suffered defeats in the interior losing Aguascalientes and San Luis Potosi before the end of April Degollado was sent into the interior to lead the liberal campaign since their enemies had now exhausted their resources He appointed Jose Lopez Uraga as Quartermaster General 34 Uraga split his troops and attempted to lure out Miramon to isolate him but in late May Uraga then committed the strategic blunder of attempting to assault Guadalajara with Miramon s troops behind him The assault failed and Uraga was taken prisoner 35 Miramon was routed on August 10 in Silao which resulted in his commander Tomas Mejia being taken prisoner and Miramon retreated to Mexico City In response to the disaster Miramon resigned as president to seek a vote of confidence The conservative junta elected him president again after a two days interregnum 36 By the end of August liberals were preparing for a decisive final battle The Mexico City was cut off from the rest of the country Guadalajara was surrounded by 17 000 liberal troops while the conservatives in the city only had 7000 The conservative commander Castillo surrendered without firing a shot and was allowed to leave the city with his troops General Leonardo Marquez was routed on the 10th of November attempting to reinforce General Castillo without being aware of his surrender 37 Miramon on November 3 convoked a war council including in it prominent citizens to meet the crisis and by November 5 it was resolved to fight until the end The conservatives were not struggling with a shortage of funds and increasing defections Nonetheless Miramon gained a victory when he attacked the liberal headquarters of Toluca on the 9th of December in which almost all of their forces were captured 38 With the tide turning to liberal victories Juarez rejected the McLane Ocampo Treaty in November while the treaty had previously been rejected in the U S Senate May 31 and not ratified Juarez had secured recognition from the U S government with the opening of negotiations with the United States rejected outright sale of Mexican territory to the United States and received aid from the U S Navy in the end securing benefits to Mexico without actually concluding the treaty In early December as the tide of war had clearly turned to the liberals Juarez signed the Law for the Liberty of Religious Worship on December 4 the final step in the liberals program to disempower the Roman Catholic Church by allowing religious tolerance in Mexico 39 General Gonzalez Ortega approached Mexico City with reinforcements The decisive battle took place on December 22 at Calpulalpan The conservatives had 8 000 troops and the liberals 16 000 Miramon lost and retreated back towards the capital 40 Another conservative war council agreed to surrender The conservative government fled the city and Miramon himself escaped to European exile Marquez escaped to the mountains of Michoacan The triumphant liberals entered the city with 25 000 troops on January 1 1861 and Juarez entered the capital on January 11 41 Foreign owers editAfter Zuloaga s coup the conservative government was recognized swiftly by Spain and France Neither conservatives nor liberals ever had official foreign troops as part of their respective armed forces The conservative government signed the Mon Almonte Treaty with Spain that promised to pay the Spanish government indemnities in exchange for aid The liberals also sought foreign support from the United States Mexico signed the McLane Ocampo Treaty which would have granted to the United States perpetual transit and extraterritorial rights in Mexico This treaty was denounced by conservatives and some liberals with Juarez countering that the territorial losses to the United States had occurred under the conservatives 42 With the liberal victory Juarez s government was unable to meet foreign debt obligations some of which stemmed from the Mon Almonte Treaty When Juarez s government suspended payments the pretext was used to inaugurate the Second French Intervention in Mexico During the Reform War as the military stalemate continued some liberals considered the idea of foreign intervention The brothers Miguel Lerdo de Tejada and Sebastian were liberal politicians from Veracruz and had commercial connections with the United States Miguel Lerdo Juarez s Minister of Finance attempted to negotiate a loan with the United States He was reported to despair of Mexico s situation and saw some form of protection from the United States as the way forward and the way to prevent a resurgence of Spanish colonialism Correspondence between Melchor Ocampo and Santos Degollado discussing Lerdo s attempt to negotiate a loan was captured and published by conservatives 43 Degollado was later to advocate mediation through the diplomatic corps in Mexico to end the conflict Juarez flatly refused Degollado s call to resign since Juarez saw that as turning over Mexico s future to European powers 44 Aftermath editMain articles Second French intervention in Mexico Second Mexican Empire and Restored Republic Mexico A French invasion and the establishment of the Second Mexican Empire followed almost immediately after the end of the Reform War and key figures of the Reform War would continue to play roles during the rise and fall of the Empire While the main fighting in the Reform War was over by the end of 1860 guerilla conflict continued to be waged in the countryside After the fall of the conservative government General Leonardo Marquez remained at large and in June 1861 he succeeded in assassinating Melchor Ocampo President Juarez sent the former head of his troops during the Reform War Santos Degollado after Marquez only for Marquez to succeed in killing Degollado as well Having been influenced by Mexican monarchist exiles and using Juarez s suspension of foreign debts as a pretext and with the American Civil War preventing the enforcement of the Monroe Doctrine Napoleon III invaded Mexico in 1862 and sought local help in setting up a monarchical client state Former liberal president Ignacio Comonfort who had played such a key role in the outbreak of the Reform War was killed in action that year having returned to the country to fight the French and having been given a military command Former conservative president during the Reform War Manuel Robles Pezuela was also executed in 1862 by the Juarez government for attempting to help the French Seeing the intervention as an opportunity to undo the Reform conservative generals and statesmen who had played a role during the War of the Reform joined the French and a conservative assembly voted in 1863 to invite Habsburg Archduke Maximilian to become Emperor of Mexico The Emperor however proved to be of liberal inclinations and ended up ratifying the Reform laws Regardless the liberal government of Benito Juarez still resisted and fought the French and Mexican Imperial forces with the backing of the United States which since the end of the Amerivan Civil War could now once again enforce the Monroe Doctrine The French eventually withdrew in 1866 which led the monarchy to collapse in 1867 Former President Miguel Miramon and the conservative general Tomas Mejia would die alongside the Emperor and be executed by firing squad on June 19 1867 Santiago Vidaurri once Juarez s commander in the north during the Reform War had actually joined the imperialists but he was captured and executed for his betrayal on July 8 1867 Leonardo Marquez would once again escape this time to Cuba and live until 1913 and publishing a defense of his role in the empire See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Reform War nbsp Conservatism portalCristero War Carlist Wars Second French Intervention in MexicoReferences edit Juarez es apoyado por tropas de EU en Guerra de Reforma Juarez is aided by U S troops in the War of Reform in Spanish Mexico El Dictamen 2012 10 08 Archived from the original on 2014 02 02 Will Fowler The Grammar of Civil War A Mexican Case Study 1857 61 Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 2022 Fowler The Grammar of Civil War p 43 Sinkin The Mexican Reform 169 a b Bancroft Hubert Howe 1886 History of Mexico Volume V The Bancroft Company p 710 Fowler The Grammar of Civil War p 43 Hamnett Brian Juarez New York Longman 1994 255 Sinkin The Mexican Reform 177 Meyer Michael 1979 The Course of Mexican History Oxford University Press p 327 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1886 History of Mexico Volume V The Bancroft Company p 668 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1886 History of Mexico Volume V The Bancroft Company p 669 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1886 History of Mexico Volume V The Bancroft Company p 669 Fehrenbach T R 1995 Fire and Blood A History of Mexico Da Capo Press p 413 Kirkwood Burton 2000 The History of Mexico Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press p 101 ISBN 9780313303517 OCLC 1035597669 Retrieved 4 July 2022 Hamnett Brian 2006 1999 A Concise History of Mexico 2nd ed Cambridge University Press p 159 ISBN 978 0 521 85284 5 Fehrenbach T R 1995 Fire and Blood A History of Mexico Da Capo Press p 414 Nutini Hugo 1995 The Wages of Conquest The Mexican Aristocracy in the Context of Western Aristocracies University of Michigan p 294 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1886 History of Mexico Volume V The Bancroft Company p 696 Fehrenbach T R 1995 Fire and Blood A History of Mexico Da Capo Press p 416 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1886 History of Mexico Volume V The Bancroft Company p 725 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1886 History of Mexico Volume V The Bancroft Company pp 729 730 Hamnett Wars of Reform 1601 Hamnett Wars of Reform 1602 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1885 History of Mexico Volume V 1824 1861 The Bancroft Company pp 747 748 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1885 History of Mexico Volume V 1824 1861 The Bancroft Company pp 748 749 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1885 History of Mexico Volume V 1824 1861 The Bancroft Company pp 750 753 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1885 History of Mexico Volume V 1824 1861 The Bancroft Company pp 757 759 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1885 History of Mexico Volume V 1824 1861 The Bancroft Company pp 768 769 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1885 History of Mexico Volume V 1824 1861 The Bancroft Company p 771 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1885 History of Mexico Volume V 1824 1861 The Bancroft Company pp 774 775 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1886 History of Mexico Volume V The Bancroft Company p 776 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1886 History of Mexico Volume V The Bancroft Company p 777 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1886 History of Mexico Volume V The Bancroft Company pp 778 779 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1886 History of Mexico Volume V The Bancroft Company pp 780 781 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1886 History of Mexico Volume V The Bancroft Company p 782 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1886 History of Mexico Volume V The Bancroft Company p 785 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1886 History of Mexico Volume V The Bancroft Company p 790 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1886 History of Mexico Volume V The Bancroft Company p 792 Hamnett Juarez 255 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1886 History of Mexico Volume V The Bancroft Company p 793 Bancroft Hubert Howe 1886 History of Mexico Volume V The Bancroft Company p 795 Sinkin The Mexican Reform 151 54 Hamnett Juarez 121 22 Hamnett Juarez 124 Further reading editConnaughton Brian coord Mexico durante la Guerra de Reforma tomo I Iglesia religion y leyes de reforma Xalapa Universidad Veracruzana 2011 Fowler Will La Guerra de Tres Anos 1857 1861 El conflicto del que nacio el Estado laico mexicano Mexico City Critica 2020 Fowler Will The Grammar of Civil War A Mexican Case Study 1857 1861 Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 2022 ISBN 9781496230461 Hamnett Brian Juarez London Longman 1994 Olliff Donathan Reforma Mexico and the United States A Search for Alternatives to Annexation 1854 1861 Tuscaloosa University of Alabama Press 1981 Powell T G Priests and Peasants in Central Mexico Social Conflict during La Reforma Hispanic American Historical Review 57 1997 296 313 Sinkin Richard The Mexican Reform 1855 1876 A Study in Liberal Nation Building Austin Institute of Latin American Studies 1979 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reform War amp oldid 1191315578, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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