Everything about Jos Joaqu N De Herrera totally explained
José Joaquín de Herrera (
Xalapa,
Veracruz,
February 23,
1792 –
February 10,
1854 in
Tacubaya,
Distrito Federal) was a moderate Mexican politician and president of the Republic three times (1844, 1844-45 and 1848-51), as well as a general in the Mexican Army during the
Mexican-American War.
Military career
Herrera was born in Jalapa, Veracruz, but grew up in
Perote, where his father was a postal administrator. He entered the royalist army in
1809, as a cadet in the Regiment of La Corona. By 1811 he was a captain. He fought the insurgents in
Aculco,
Guanajuato,
Calderón,
Acatlán,
Veledero and other places. Later he was part of the Spanish expedition to retake
Acapulco from the rebels, and he was given the military and civil command of the region.
He retired from the army in
1820 as a lieutenant colonel and moved back to
Perote. There he opened a shop. In retirement, he established contacts with some of the insurgent leaders, among them
Guadalupe Victoria. Shortly after the
Plan de Iguala was proclaimed, a contingent of infantry moving from Veracruz to Puebla declared in favor of
Agustín de Iturbide. The officers offered command to Lieutenant Colonel Herrera. He accepted and added the garrison of the Fort of San Carlos. This force marched to
Orizaba, then in command of the royalists under Lieutenant Colonel
Antonio López de Santa Anna. These forces also joined the Plan de Iguala.
At the time of the entrance of the
Ejército Trigarante into
Mexico City in 1821, Herrera was a brigadier general. However, he distanced himself from Iturbide when the latter declared himself emperor, and was arrested for conspiracy. He was freed and took part in the revolution that led to Iturbide's fall in 1823. In the new government he received the portfolio of war (1823-24). He improved the arms of the infantry and ordered a new model saddle for the cavalry. He again held the post of minister of war in 1833 (under Santa Anna).
He held many other military positions. He was consistently loyal to the legally constituted authorities and opposed to the absolutism and arbitrariness of Santa Anna's administrations. He was never an ally of Santa Anna.
First and second terms as president
..In 1844 he was president of the Council of State when General
Valentín Canalizo was named interim president to replace Santa Anna. Canalizo, however, wasn't in the capital (he was in
San Luis Potosí), and Herrera was named as a substitute for the substitute, pending Canalizo's arrival in Mexico City. He served from
September 12,
1844 to
September 21,
1844, but he was president in name only. He officiated at the Independence Day celebrations.
He turned over the office to Canalizo and retired, but on the fall of Santa Anna, he was elected by the Senate to be interim president. He held the presidency from
December 7,
1844 to
December 30,
1845. He named both federalists and centralists to important positions.
During this term, the
Republic of Texas was annexed by the United States. The Mexican Senate broke relations with the United States on
March 28,
1845 and gave Herrera authority to raise troops and prepare for war. Herrera preferred peaceful negotiations. When he didn't go to war, followers of Santa Anna rioted on
July 7,
1845. Herrera and three members of his cabinet were seized by rebellious soldiers. Nevertheless, Herrera was able to impose his authority, and was freed. He won the subsequent elections, becoming constitutional president on
September 15,
1845.
The United States, on the basis of the Republic of Texas's prior claims, now claimed parts of Mexico that were not in the Mexican entity of Texas, for example parts of
Tamaulipas,
Coahuila,
Chihuahua and
Nuevo México across the
Rio Grande. When the United States sent troops to this disputed territory, a detachment was captured by the Mexican army (
March 29,
1846). On
May 13,
1846 the U.S. Congress declared that a state of war existed with Mexico.
Herrera, with much difficulty, was able to assemble a force of 6,000 men. This was put under the command of General
Mariano Paredes y Arrillaga and sent to the north to fight the Americans. Paredes got as far as
San Luis Potosí, but instead of marching north against the invaders, in December he turned back to the capital and overthrew President Herrera.
Mexican-American War
In the
Mexican-American War Herrera replaced
Antonio López de Santa Anna as commander of the army, following the
Battle of Huamantla (
October 9,
1847). Three days after Huamantla, U.S. General
Joseph Lane fought his way through Herrera's troops into
Puebla and raised the Mexican siege of the city.
Third term as president
On
May 30,
1848, after the end of the Mexican-American War, Herrera was again elected to the presidency, but he declined the office. A commission from Congress visited him, begging him to accept the presidency, arguing that civil war would result if he declined. He did accept, and since Mexico City was still in the hands of the United States, he established his government in
Mixcoac on
June 3,
1848. He served until
January 15,
1851.
He faced many problems during this term. The country was in a miserable condition, with bandits controlling the highways. There was a
cholera epidemic and there were Indigenous uprisings in
Misantla and
Yucatán (the
Caste War). Mariano Paredes led an armed uprising against the peace treaty of
Guadalupe Hidalgo. In 1849
Leonardo Márquez revolted in favor of Santa Anna, claiming that the latter's resignation was invalid because Congress hadn't been in session.
Juan de Dios Cañedo was murdered, and the followers of Santa Anna blamed Herrera, claiming that Dios Cañedo had been in possession of secret documents showing that he'd been sent to the United States in 1844 to negotiate a cash settlement for the loss of Texas. The Texas charge wasn't denied, and may have been true.
President Herrera gave a concession for construction of the Mexico City-Veracruz railway, the first in Mexico, and another for a telegraph line between Mexico City and Puebla.
Herrera turned over the office to General
Mariano Arista on
January 15,
1851 and retired to private life. Evidence of his honorable character is provided by the following account: the day he resigned the presidency, he was forced to pawn a jewel to alleviate his economic situation. President Arista named him director of the Monte de Piedad (national pawnshop), a position which he held until 1853. He died on
February 10,
1854 in his modest house in Tacubaya. He was buried without pomp in the cemetery of San Fernando.
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