ONE OF THE MOST REMARKABLE ENCOUNTERS EVER.
April 1, 1536. Pánfilo Narváez's expedition had been shipwrecked off the
Florida coast in 1518. After 18 years of traversing the continent, on foot, four survivors,
including Alvaro Nuñez Cabeza de Vaca and Alonso del Castillo Maldonado finally
make contact with other Spaniards near the Pacific Ocean in San Miguel de Culiacán.
1, 1895 The signing of the definitive agreement defining the frontier with
Guatemala.
2, 1844 The National Library is inaugurated. In 1929, its administration was handed
over to the National University, UNAM.
3, 1854 The National Medical School opens its doors.
6, 1857 In Caborca, Sonora, the forces of Lorenzo Rodríguez defeat a group of
filibusters led by Henry A. Crabb after six days of fighting. Crabb, who wanted to claim
Sonora for himself, is killed, alongside 84 of his followers.
6, 1929 Pianist and composer Carlos J. Meneses dies in Mexico City, at the age of 66.
Meneses was the first conductor of a symphony orchestra in Mexico.
9, 1779 The death of the 46th Viceroy of New Spain, Antonio María de Bucareli y
Ursúa, occurs in Mexico City. Bucareli promoted various important scientific
commissions studying the country's natural resources.
9, 1914 Nine U.S. sailors from the battleship Dolphin, berthed off Tampico, come ashore
carrying weapons and are detained (for about thirty minutes) by federal authorities. The
"Tampico incident" is subsequently used by the U.S. government as a pretext to invade
Mexico on April 21 (see below).
ZAPATA MURDERED AFTER MOCK BATTLE
9, 1919. A federal colonel, Jesús M. Guajardo, manages to convince Revolutionary
leader Emiliano Zapata that he is actually his ally by agreeing to Zapata's request to
attack the plaza of Jonacatepec. Unknown to Zapata, Guajardo agrees with Antonio Ríos Zertuche, the commander of the federal troops protecting the plaza, to stage
only a mock battle. The next day (April 10) Zapata accepts an invitation to visit
Guajardo's HQ, the hacienda of San Juan Chinameca, Morelos. Even before the Honor Guard
has finished playing the Arrival March, Zapata is shot to death in a hail of bullets.
MAXIMILIAN ACCEPTS THE CROWN OF MEXICO
10, 1864 In Miramar Castle, near Trieste, Maximilian of Hapsburg, Archduke of Austria,
is offered the Imperial Crown of Mexico by a commission sent from Mexico City. Maximilian
accepts, beginning an ill-fated three years of power before his execution in 1867.
11, 1861 Francisco González Bocanegra, who wrote the words of the Mexican
National Anthem in 1854, dies in Mexico City. He was born in the city of San Luis Potosí in 1824. The music to the anthem was composed by Spanish-born Jaime Nunó.
14, 1811 In the War of Independence, an heroic feat of strength and bravery is
performed by Juan Valdivia near the city of Zacatecas. He dies in agony after allowing his
body to be used as a gun carriage to direct a captured cannon barrel accurately against
the hacienda of San Eustaquio.
15, 1535 Hernán Cortés sets sail from Acapulco in charge of three ships
to explore the Pacific coast. The Pacific Ocean was known as the Southern Sea at that
time. His voyage took him to Baja California and the Sea of Cortés (Gulf of
California).
15, 1928 The first fixed route airmail service is inaugurated, linking Mexico City to
Tuxpan and Tampico. The company responsible, Compañia Mexicana de Transportación Aérea, is now known as Mexicana.
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16, 1838 The Pastry War begins with the blockade of the port of Veracruz by the French
navy. The French government demands excessive compensation for damages allegedly suffered
during a riot in Mexico City ten years earlier. The Mexican government refuses to pay. In
November, the French fleet bombards the port. Eventually the Mexican government
capitulates and the French fleet sails off.
EPIDEMIC KILLS EARLY FEMINIST
17, 1695 The revered poetess Sister Juana Inés de la Cruz dies in a typhoid
epidemic in Mexico City, at the tragically young age of 43. After learning to read at the
age of three and attending University classes at the age of eight, she became one of
Mexico's greatest poets. Historians now regard her as one of the pioneers of the women's
liberation movement, since she was an active participant in discussions (previously
dominated by men) concerning theological matters.
17, 1902 Jaime Torres Bodet is born in Mexico City. Torres Bodet becomes a
distinguished educator, poet and diplomat, holding the cabinet position of Education
Secretary on two occasions and representing Mexico in the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization, UNESCO.
19, 1940 The first Panamerican Indigenous Congress is held in the city of Pátzcuaro, Michoacán. Delegates approve the designation of this day each year
as Panamerican Indian Day.
20, 1853 General Antonio López de Santa Anna begins his 11th (and final) term of
office as President. He resigns two years later.
20, 1970 The construction begins of the planned tourist resort of Cancún,
originally Can Cún.
21, 1519 On orders from Diego de Velázquez, Hernán Cortés arrives
at the islet of San Juan de Ulúa, where he makes contact with the emissaries of
Moctezuma. They give Cortés lavish gifts and request that he returns home. The
Spaniards listen politely but hatch their own plans. The next day (April 22) they camp on
the mainland, founding the village which would later be known as Villa Rica de la
Vera-Cruz.
21, 1836 Texan troops, commanded by General Samuel Houston, take Mexican leader (and
president on leave) General López de Santa Anna prisoner. Fearing for his life,
Santa Anna orders his troops to retreat. This ends thewar against Texas and the following
month (May 14) Santa Anna signs the Velasco treaty, effectively giving the "Republic of
Texas" independence.
MASSACRE AT VERACRUZ AS U.S. TRIES TO INVADE!
21, 1914 The U.S., already at war with Germany, and citing the Tampico incident of
April 9 and the fact that German munitions are being supplied to Huerta's forces via the
port of Veracruz, tries to invade Mexico. The local people, aided by the cadets from the
city's Naval College, repel the invaders, but only after suffering heavy losses: 193 dead
and 600 wounded.
23, 1930 Mexico's first Pediatric Society is founded in Mexico City.
24, 1985 Dr. Wigberto Jiménez Moreno dies in Mexico City. Jiménez Moreno
was a distinguished geographer, historian, anthropologist and archeologist who held
various positions in the National Museum of Archaeology, History and Ethnology.
25, 1528 King Charles V of Spain awards the title of "city" to Gran Tenochtitlan, known
today as Mexico City. Four years to the day later, city status is awarded to Oaxaca.
30, 1916 The distinguished doctor and historian, Francisco del Paso y Troncoso, born in
Veracruz in 1842, dies in Florence, Italy. Among his published works was a compilation of
documents relating to Mexican history in European museums and libraries.
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