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jennifer rose

Sep 28, 2003, 7:00 PM

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As we celebrate the birthday of Jose Ma. Morelos y Pavon.....

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....it's "betcha didn't know" time. What son of this famous priest went on to become "supreme chief" of Mexico?


(This post was edited by jennifer rose on Sep 28, 2003, 7:13 PM)



Rolly


Sep 29, 2003, 10:27 AM

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Re: [jennifer rose] As we celebrate the birthday of Jose Ma. Morelos y Pavon.....

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Jose M Morelos y Pavon was born on 30 September 1765 at Valladolid which is now called Morelia in his honor. He came from a very poor Afro-Mexican family. He became a priest, and later a revolutionary hero. He was executed by the Spanish in 1815 for his revolutionary activities. He had a number of children by a woman he could not marry because he was a priest.

His most famous son was Juan Nepomuceno Almonte. In 1834 Col Almonte was sent to Texas to find out what was going on and was the talk of secession serious. He traveled over most of the territory and wrote a very detailed report of conditions. The report is considered by historians today to be the most detailed description of the times.

During the battle of the Alamo, he was an advisor to Santa Anna as well as a troop commander. Survivors of the battle (women and children) credit him as being the most humane of the Mexican leaders.

He served a number of diplomatic missions for Mexico before and after the Texas uprising. Later he was a General and minister of war. He was President of the Regency while awaiting the arrival of Maximilian.

Rolly Pirate

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heathesq

Sep 29, 2003, 11:16 AM

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Re: [Rolly] As we celebrate the birthday of Jose Ma. Morelos y Pavon.....

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Hi Rolly

You should know that there is a nice town in Ontario named after General Almonte. Their web-site explains things thusly,

"In a region where the early settlers' Irish, English and Scottish origins are prominent in the names of the communities they founded -- Lanark, Corkery, Glen Isle, Scotch Corners, Tatlock and the like -- it seems more than a little odd that our town should be named for a now-forgotten Mexican general.

Almonte went through a number of name changes in the early days, from Shepherd's Falls to Shipman's Mills, Ramsayville, and by about 1855, Waterford; but the federal post office pointed out there was already a Waterford in the west of the province, and told townsfolk the name would have to change yet again.

At the time relations between Canada and the United States were at a low ebb, especially here in Ontario. The province's first major wave of settlers, after all, had been Loyalists, Americans whose sympathies for England prompted them to flee northward during and after the Revolution; and the suspicion lingered in many Canadian minds that the US still intended a settling of accounts.

American invasions of Canada around 1812 didn't help matters, nor did US military incursions into Mexico during the 1840s. Which is where General Juan Almonte enters the picture. The border skirmishes between Mexcio and America during this time were seen by Mexcians as a naked and unprovoked land-grab, and by worried Canadians as a cautionary tale -- proof positive that the American republic was ready and willing to use force against its neighbours to achieve its territorial aims.

General Almonte was primarily a diplomat, and was in fact Mexico's ambassador to the United States at the time that open warfare erupted between the two countries. He was hastily recalled to Mexico, and served with some distinction in the field against the invading US forces. He was taken prisoner, later released, and died in 1869, lauded by the English press at the time as "a kindly and accomplished gentleman." So in the political climate of the day, the loyal British citizens of our town apparently felt General Almonte was an admirable public figure, and agreed upon the new name of Almonte -- which we pronounce "AL-mont" rather than the Spanish "al-MON-tay." And thus it remains 140 years later.

Says something about the power of good deeds I would say.
 
 
 
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