Vicente Guerrero
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| Vicente Guerrero | |
![]() A half-length, posthumous portrait by Anacleto Escutia (1850) | |
| In office 1 April 1829. – 17 December 1829. | |
| Vice President | Anastasio Bustamante |
|---|---|
| Preceded by | Guadalupe Victoria |
| Succeeded by | José María Bocanegra |
| Born | 10 August 1782 Tixtla (modern-day Guerrero) |
| Died | 14 February 1831 (aged 48) Cuilapan, Oaxaca |
| This article does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (October 2009) |
Contents |
Early life
Guerrero was born in Tixtla, a town 100 kilometers inland from the port of Acapulco, in the Sierra Madre del Sur, son of Juan Pedro Guerrero and his wife, María Guadalupe Saldaña. Vicente Guerrero’s ancestry was of mixed Spanish, Amerindian and African descent. However, the Guerreros were accounted "españoles americanos" ("American Spaniards", i.e. criollos) in a contemporary census of Tixtla. His family consisted of landlords, rich farmers and traders with broad business connections in the south, members of the spanish militia and gun and canyon makers. Probably, these were the reasons why the criollo status of the Guerreros was respected, although Vicente was of mixed heritage on his mother side. [2] This fact would be used later by his enemies to attack him politically through ad hominem arguments. Vicente’s father, Pedro, supported Spanish rule, but Vicente himself was a patriot and opposed to the Spanish colonial government. When his father asked him for his sword in order to present it to the Viceroy of New Spain as a sign of goodwill and surrender, Vicente refused, saying, "The will of my father is for me sacred, but my Motherland is first." "My Motherland is first" is now the motto of the southern Mexican state of Guerrero, named in honor of the revolutionary.War of Independence
Guerrero joined in the early revolt against Spain in 1810, first fighting alongside José María Morelos. When the War of Independence began, Guerrero was working as a gunsmith in Tixtla. He joined the rebellion in November 1810 and enlisted in a division that independence leader José María Morelos had organized to fight in southern Mexico. Guerrero distinguished himself in the battle of Izúcar, in February 1812, and had achieved the rank of lieutenant colonel, when Oaxaca was claimed by rebels in November 1812.Following the capture and execution of Morelos in late 1815, Guerrero joined forces with Guadalupe Victoria and Isidoro Montes de Oca, taking command of the rebel troops. He remained the only major rebel leader still at large, keeping the rebellion going through an extensive campaign of guerrilla warfare. He won victories at Ajuchitán, Santa Fe, Tetela del Río, Huetamo, Tlalchapa and Cuautlotitlán, regions of southern Mexico that were very familiar to him.
Once Mexico achieved independence, he at first collaborated with Agustín de Iturbide, who proposed that the two join forces under what he referred to as the Three Guarantees. Iturbide's professed belief in these ideological mandates – that Mexico be made an independent constitutional monarchy, the abolition of class distinctions between Spaniards, creoles, mestizos and Indians, and that Catholicism be made the state religion – earned Guerrero's support, and, after marching into the capital on September 27, 1821,[3] Iturbide was proclaimed Emperor of Mexico by Congress. However, when Iturbide's policies supported the interests of Mexico's wealthy landowners through continued economic exploitation of the poor and working classes, Guerrero turned against him and came out in favor of a Republic with the Plan of Casa Mata.
When the general Manuel Gómez Pedraza won the election to succeed Guadalupe Victoria as president, Guerrero, with the aid of general Antonio López de Santa Anna and politician Lorenzo de Zavala,[4] staged a Coup d'état and took the presidency on April 1, 1829.[5] The most notable achievement of Guerrero's short term as president was ordering an immediate abolition of slavery[6] and emancipation of all slaves.

Guerrero was deposed in a rebellion under Vice-president Anastasio Bustamante that began on December 4, 1829. He left the capital to fight the rebels, but was deposed by the Mexico City garrison in his absence on December 17, 1829. Guerrero hoped to come back to power, but General Bustamante captured him through bribery and had him executed.
After his death, Mexicans loyal to Guerrero revolted, driving Bustamante from his presidency and forcing him to flee for his life. Picaluga, a former friend of Guerrero, who conspired with Bustamante to capture Guerrero, was executed.
Honors were conferred on surviving members of Guerrero's family, and a pension was paid to his widow. In 1842, Vicente Guerrero's body was returned to Mexico City and interred there.
Legacy
Guerrero is a Mexican national Hero. The state of Guerrero is named ln his honour.In 1821, Mexico accepted Americans to settle the Texas territory under the conditions that the settlers convert to Catholicism and observe Mexican laws, including the abolition of slavery. On September 15 1829 President Vicente Ramon Guerrero, emancipated all slaves within the Republic of Mexico:[7][8]
- The President of the United States of Mexico, know ye: That desiring to celebrate in the year of 1829 the anniversary of our independence with an act of justice and national beneficence, which might result in the benefit and support of a good, so highly to be appreciated, which might cement more and more the public tranquility, which might reinstate an unfortunate part of its inhabitants in the sacred rights which nature gave them, and which the nation protects by wise and just laws, in conformance with the 30th article of the constitutive act, in which the use of extraordinary powers are ceded to me, I have thought it proper to decree:
- 1st. Slavery is abolished in the republic.
- 2nd. Consequently, those who have been until now considered slaves are free.
- 3rd. When the circumstances of the treasury may permit, the owners of the slaves will be indemnified in the mode that the laws may provide.
- And in order that every part of this decree may be fully complied with, let it be printed, published, and circulated. Given at the Federal Palace of Mexico, the 15th of September, 1829. Vicente Guerrero To José María Bocanegra.
Several towns in Mexico are named in honor of this famous General, including Col. Vicente Guerrero in Baja California Norte, Guerrero Negro, on the border of Baja California Norte and Baja California Sur, and the Mexican State of Guerrero, on the mainland of Mexico.
See also
Bibliography
- Vincent, Theodore G (2001). The Legacy of Vicente Guerrero, Mexico's First Black Indian President. University Press of Florida . ISBN 978-0813024226.
- Alfredo Avila, “La presidencia de Vicente Guerrero”, in Will Fowler, ed., Gobernantes mexicanos, Mexico City, Fondo de Cultura Económica, 2008, t. I, p. 27-49. ISBN 978-968-16-8369-6.
- Raquel Huerta-Nava, "El Guerrero del Alba. La vide de Vicente Guerrero", Mexico City, Grijalbo, 2007, ISBN 978-970-780-929-1.
References
- ^ "Mexico's Independence Bicentennial Celebration". RentalsInVallarta Brief history of Mexico's Independence with video and additional readings. Referencing US related events such as Texas, Abraham Lincoln and the emmancipation. http://rentalsinvallarta.com/40puerto-vallarta-articles-news/2010/mexicos-bicentenario. Retrieved 21 July 2010.
- ^ HUERTA-NAVA, Raquel (2007) El Guerrero del Alba. La vida de Vicente Guerrero, México, Random House Mondadori, ISBN: 978-970-780-929-1
- ^ Henderson, Timothy J (2009). The Mexican Wars for Independence. Hill and Wang . p. 178. ISBN 978-0809069231.
- ^ Henderson, Timothy J (2008). A Glorious Defeat: Mexico and Its War with the United States. Hill and Wang . p. 62. ISBN 978-0809049677.
- ^ Katz, William Loren. "The Majestic Life of President Vicente Ramon Guerrero". William Loren Katz . http://www.cwo.com/~lucumi/guerrero.html. Retrieved 6 June 2010.
- ^ Sprague, William Forrest. "Coahuila y Texas Under President Vicente Guerrero". TAMU . http://www.tamu.edu/ccbn/dewitt/chieftains.htm#guerrero. Retrieved 6 June 2010.
- ^ The Magnificent Life of Vicente Ramon Guerrero [1]
- ^ TAMU Chieftans of Mexican Independence [2]
- ^ TAMU Chieftans of Mexican Independence [3]
- ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_slavery_in_Texas#Slavery_in_colonial_times Wikipedia: History of slavery in Texas / Slavery in colonial times
External links
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Vicente Guerrero |
| Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Vicente Guerrero |
- Vicente Guerrero: An Inventory of His Collection at the Benson Latin American Collection
- Vicente Guerrero on Mexconnect.com
- Guerrero on gob.mex/kids
- Guerrero on Creole Culture site
- Letters about Vicente Guerrero hosted by the Portal to Texas History.
| Political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Guadalupe Victoria | President of Mexico 1829 | Succeeded by José María Bocanegra |

