Álvaro Obregón(1880-1928)
- Composer
Alvaro Obregon was born near Alamos, in the Mexican state of Sonora, to
a family of poor farmers (one story is that his grandfather was an
Irish immigrant railroad worker named O'Brien, which would account for
Obregon's pale complexion and reddish hair, traits uncommon in
Mexicans; supposedly, his father "Mexicanized" the family name to Obregon). In 1911 he was elected mayor of Huatabampo, as a
supporter of reformist President
Francisco I. Madero, who was engaged
in putting down a rebellion led by renegade Gen. Pascual Orozco. Later
Madero was overthrown and assassinated by Gen. Victoriano Huerta--who
had originally helped Madero put down Orozco's rebellion but who soon
turned against him--and Obregon joined such notable Mexican figures as
Gen. Venustiano Carranza and former
bandits Pancho Villa and
Emiliano Zapata in the fight to
overthrow Huerta, which was accomplished on July 24, 1914. Obregon was
appointed by Carranza to be Minister of War and Secretary of the Navy; when Villa and Zapata later rebelled against Carranza, Obregon
supported him and helped to lead Carranza's forces in putting down the
revolt. Although Villa had a reputation for daring and imaginative
tactics, Obregon was a trained soldier--which Villa wasn't--and that
paid off in two famous battles later to become landmarks in Mexican
history: the battle of Guanajuato and a week later the battle of
Celaya, both of which resulted in defeats for Villa's forces (and, in
the case of Celaya, very heavy casualties; he lost 3000 dead in one
day). Two weeks later Villa again attacked Obregon, this time at the
battle of Trinidad and Santa Ana del Conde, and was again soundly defeated (it
was in this battle that Obregon lost an arm). Villa waited until
mid-July to try another attack on Obregon, this time at Aguascalientes,
but was decisively defeated again (although these battles took place over
a period of four months and were fought at different locations, they
are known collectively as the Battle of Celaya). Obregon's foresight in
seeing the advantages of field artillery for offense and the use of
masses of machine guns and successive layers of heavily fortified
trenches for defense, and his skillful tactical use of them, was in
large part responsible for his victory and had the effect of turning
the battlefield advantage to the defenders. A good example of that
principle took place at the second battle at Celaya, in which Villa's
troops made a direct assault on Obregon's front line, which was
defended by ascending and interlaced rows of machine guns, resulting in
the loss of hundreds of Villa's men while Obregon's casualties were
minimal.
After helping to defeat the Villa/Zapata rebellion--Villa finally gave up the fight and returned home to Durango, while Zapata was assassinated by men looking to collect the bounty Carranza had placed on him--Obregon returned to political life. When it came time to pick a successor to Carranza, Obregon--who had wanted the job himself--discovered that Carranza had picked one of his own men rather than Obregon. This, in conjunction with many of Carranza's land and social reforms that had angered the powerful Catholic church and the country's wealthy landowners, resulted in Obregon organizing a revolt against Carranza (ironically, he found support among his old enemies when the remnants of Emiliano Zapata's forces joined him). Carranza's army was eventually defeated and in 1920 Carranza himself was ambushed and killed while trying to reorganize his forces in the state of Puebla. Gen. Rodolfo Herrera was appointed provisional president until elections could be held in December, which resulted in Obregon being elected as Mexico's president.
Obregon's four years as president were marked by widespread agrarian reforms and the resumption of good relations with the US, due in large part to Mexico's sale of oil to its giant neighbor to the north. He put down a revolt by Gen. Adolfo de la Herrera, who rebelled when he found that Obregon was going to pick Plutarco Elías Calles to succeed him as president, a job that Herrera believed should be his. Herrera's revolt was quickly put down, and soon afterward Obregon stepped down and Calles took office.
Calles' administration believed that the Catholic Church wielded far too much power in Mexico and had too much control over the people (the country was approximately 98% Catholic), and instituted policies designed to strip the Church of much of its power and influence. This resulted in what became known as the Cristero War, a period from 1926-929 marked by widespread revolts and rebellions by many of the country's Catholics, a revolt spurred on by the Church itself, which branded Calles and his administration as "atheistic" and "Communists". In 1928 Obregon ran for re-election and won; he returned to Mexico City to celebrate. On July 27 he was shot and killed in Mexico City by a Catholic fanatic who believed Obregon was trying to destroy the church.
After helping to defeat the Villa/Zapata rebellion--Villa finally gave up the fight and returned home to Durango, while Zapata was assassinated by men looking to collect the bounty Carranza had placed on him--Obregon returned to political life. When it came time to pick a successor to Carranza, Obregon--who had wanted the job himself--discovered that Carranza had picked one of his own men rather than Obregon. This, in conjunction with many of Carranza's land and social reforms that had angered the powerful Catholic church and the country's wealthy landowners, resulted in Obregon organizing a revolt against Carranza (ironically, he found support among his old enemies when the remnants of Emiliano Zapata's forces joined him). Carranza's army was eventually defeated and in 1920 Carranza himself was ambushed and killed while trying to reorganize his forces in the state of Puebla. Gen. Rodolfo Herrera was appointed provisional president until elections could be held in December, which resulted in Obregon being elected as Mexico's president.
Obregon's four years as president were marked by widespread agrarian reforms and the resumption of good relations with the US, due in large part to Mexico's sale of oil to its giant neighbor to the north. He put down a revolt by Gen. Adolfo de la Herrera, who rebelled when he found that Obregon was going to pick Plutarco Elías Calles to succeed him as president, a job that Herrera believed should be his. Herrera's revolt was quickly put down, and soon afterward Obregon stepped down and Calles took office.
Calles' administration believed that the Catholic Church wielded far too much power in Mexico and had too much control over the people (the country was approximately 98% Catholic), and instituted policies designed to strip the Church of much of its power and influence. This resulted in what became known as the Cristero War, a period from 1926-929 marked by widespread revolts and rebellions by many of the country's Catholics, a revolt spurred on by the Church itself, which branded Calles and his administration as "atheistic" and "Communists". In 1928 Obregon ran for re-election and won; he returned to Mexico City to celebrate. On July 27 he was shot and killed in Mexico City by a Catholic fanatic who believed Obregon was trying to destroy the church.