'Vicente Ramón Guerrero Saldaña' (
August 10 1782 –
February 14 1831) was a
Mexican revolutionary leader and president. He was one of the main rebel leaders of the
Mexican Revolution who fought against
Spain for independence in the early 19th century; and an early
President of Mexico. Guerrero was born in the town of
Tixtla, some 100 km inland from the port of
Acapulco, in the
Sierra Madre del Sur. He was from a poor
zambo (mixed Amerindian, Spanish, and African descent) family. (See historian
William Loren Katz.)
Guerrero joined in the early revolt against Spain in 1810, first fighting alongside
José María Morelos and later with
Isidoro Montes de Oca (a Mexican General of
Filipino origin) then taking command over those troops after Morelos's death. The valiant resistance he displayed against the Spanish armies and the fact that he himself was a
Mestizo of Amerindian, Spanish, and African descent made him a hero among Mexicans who would rather place their trust in a fellow of the same "race" than in other "white"
Criollo revolutionaries such as Agustín de Iturbide or
Simón Bolívar.
Once Mexico achieved independence, he at first collaborated with
Agustín de Iturbide (he even accepted his ''Grand Cross of the Order of Guadalupe'' and the rank of General in his Imperial Army). After Iturbide was proclaimed Emperor of Mexico by the Congress, Guerrero later turned against him and came out in favor of a
Republic with the ''
Plan of Casa Mata''.
When the conservative
Manuel Gómez Pedraza won the election to succeed
Guadalupe Victoria as president of Mexico, Guerrero, with the aid of General
Antonio López de Santa Anna, staged a
coup and took the presidency on
April 1 1829. (The violent nature of the coup displeased some Latin American liberals of the time who otherwise sympathised with Guerrero's goals, and his actions were condemned by
Simón Bolívar.) The most notable achievement of Guerrero's short term as president was ordering an immediate abolition of
slavery 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
17 December 1829. He hoped to come back to power, but conservative General Bustamante captured him through bribery and had him executed.
The
state of
Guerrero is named after him, and his birthplace was renamed
Tixtla de Guerrero in his honor.
See also
★
History of Mexico
★
List of Presidents of Mexico
External links
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Vicente Guerrero: An Inventory of His Collection at the Benson Latin American Collection
★
Alfredo Ávila: ''Vicente Guerrero, un presidente republicano''
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Vicente Guerrero on Mexconnect.com
★
Guerrero on gob.mex/kids
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Guerrero on Creole Culture site
★
Letters about Vicente Guerrero hosted by the
Portal to Texas History.
★
The Majestic Life of President Vicente Ramón Guerrero by William Loren Katz
★
The Legacy of Vicente Guerrero, Mexico's First Black Indian President by Theodore G. Vincent