The '26th of July Movement' (
Spanish: ''Movimiento 26 de Julio''; 'M-26-7') was the revolutionary organization planned and led by
Fidel Castro that in 1959 overthrew the
Fulgencio Batista government in
Cuba. The 26th of July Movement fought Batista on both rural and urban fronts.
Origins
The 26th of July Movement's name originated from the failed attack on the
Moncada Barracks, an army facility in the city of
Santiago de Cuba, on July 26, 1953. The movement was reorganized in
Mexico in 1955 by a group of 82 exiled revolutionaries (including Fidel and his brother
Raúl Castro, as well as the
Argentinian Che Guevara). Their task was to form a disciplined
guerrilla force to overthrow Batista.

Flag of the 26th of July Movement
Role in the Cuban Revolution
On December 2, 1956, 82 men landed in Cuba, having sailed in the boat ''
Granma'' from
Tuxpan,
Veracruz, ready to organize and lead a revolution. The early signs were not good for the movement. They landed in daylight and were attacked by the
Cuban Air Force, killing most of those who landed. The landing party was split into two and wandered lost for two days, most of their supplies abandoned where they landed. Of the 82 who sailed aboard the ''Granma,'' only 12 eventually regrouped in the
Sierra Maestra mountain range. There they encountered the
Cuban Army. Guevara was shot in the neck and chest during the fighting, but was not severely injured. (Guevara, who had studied medicine, continued to give
first aid to other wounded guerrillas). This was the opening phase of the war of the
Cuban Revolution, which continued for the next two years. It ended in January 1959, after Batista fled Cuba on
New Year's Eve. The movement's forces marched into
Havana.
Post-1959
After Castro gained control of Cuba, the 26th of July Movement was joined with other bodies to form the United Party of the Cuban Socialist Revolution, which in turn became the
Communist Party of Cuba in 1965.
The flag of the 26th of July Movement is on the shoulder of the Cuban military uniform, and continues to be used as a symbol of the Cuban revolution.
See also
★
Political movement
External links
★
Guide to the Cuban Revolution Collection, Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library
★ Fidel Castro and the founding of the 26th of July Movement:
[1]. References to this article include(1) Robert E. Quirk. Fidel Castro. New York, WW Norton and Co. 1993, pp.3-30; (2)Carlos Alberto Montaner. Viaje al Corazon de Cuba. 1999, pp. 13-31.