Everything about La Decena Tr Gica totally explained
La decena trágica ("The Ten Tragic Days") was a series of events that transpired in
Mexico City between
February 9 and
February 22,
1913, during the
Mexican Revolution. They culminated in a
coup d'état and the assassination of
President Francisco I. Madero and his vice president,
José María Pino Suárez.
Rise and tribulations of Madero
Madero and his supporters deposed the regime of
dictator Porfirio Díaz in
1911. While Madero succeeded in becoming president, his accommodating stance to others of his high social standing led him to allow many of the officials of the previous regime remain in office rather than make a wholesale purge of potential opponents. Many Mexicans had expected widespread changes in government and a clean sweep of
cientifico bureaucrats of the old regime, and were surprised and disappointed to find Madero following many of the same policies and employing the same personnel as the Díaz government. Many therefore accused Madero of abandoning his Revolutionary principles. This resulted in widespead discontent, as evidenced by
Emiliano Zapata's issuance of the
Plan of Ayala, and an outbreak of revolts against the Madero regime ensued. Meanwhile, Madero had allowed himself to be surrounded by old-school bureaucrats who not only disliked Madero, but had little compunction about manipulating the President and taking advantage of his naivete.
Madero's fear of public revolts led him to commission
Victoriano Huerta as chief general of the
Federal Armies. Huerta was effective in crushing rebellions, but the same cunning and ambitious nature that made Huerta effective at suppressing discontent, made him a threat that the trusting Madero was blind to.
Beginning of La decena trágica
After smashing a rebellion by
Pascual Orozco, Huerta with the
federal army he commanded, held the majority of military power in the country. Huerta saw an opportunity to make himself
dictator and began to conspire with cronies such as
Bernardo Reyes,
Félix Díaz (nephew of
Porfirio Díaz) and
US Ambassador Henry Lane Wilson. Reyes and Díaz were imprisoned at the time, having been captured by Huerta during an earlier failed revolt.
This conspiracy resulted in
La decena trágica, which began when military academy cadets quartered in
Tacubaya revolted (under the leadership of Porfirista generals Gregorio Ruiz and Manuel Mondragón), released Reyes and Díaz from prison, then began an attack against the
National Palace, on the
Zócalo in downtown
Mexico City.
Machine guns mounted on the top of the Palace kept the attackers at bay, and killed Reyes. The attackers then retreated to the Citadel
(La Ciudadela), a building approximately a kilometer west of the
Zócalo. Madero and Pino Suárez hastily returned to the National Palace to address the crisis, and called in reserves from the military academies of
Tlalpan,
San Juan Teotihuacán,
Chalco and
Toluca, and the forces of
Felipe Ángeles in
Cuernavaca to assist in defense. Meanwhile, Huerta convinced Madero to allow him to take over defense of the National Palace in place of wounded general Lauro Villar. The attack thus had its desired effect, to force Madero to hole up in the palace and trick Madero into accepting Huerta's "protection".
The Embassy Pact: Betrayal and murder
Eight days of street battles back and forth between the National Palace and the Citadel had the desired dual effects of maintaining Huerta's façade as defender of the government and cowing the population and the press. Huerta then felt that he'd Madero and Pino Suárez isolated well
enough to make his move. He was encouraged in this by Ambassador Wilson, who made ominous
suggestions that armed US intervention might follow if Madero wasn't deposed. Huerta thus
expected his plot to receive the blessings of the US government. On
February 17, Huerta
had Madero and Pino Suárez arrested and locked up in a room inside the National Palace. Meanwhile,
Madero's brother
Gustavo A. Madero, who had been invited to the Citadel building by offers to make peace entreaties, instead had his remaining eye poked out and was beaten to death in broad
daylight while he staggered blindly around a plaza outside the building.
While Madero and Pino Suárez were sequestered in the Palace, Huerta and Díaz met at the US
Embassy where Ambassador Wilson presided over the signing of what became known as "The
Embassy Pact", which provided for Huerta to assume office within 72 hours, send Madero into
exile, and for the replacing of
maderistas in the government with pro-Huerta and
pro-Díaz elements. Huerta forced Madero and Pino Suárez to sign resignations, offering them safe
passage to exile in
Cuba if they complied, then presented the resignations to a forced meeting of
Congress, and named
Pedro Lascuráin temporary president. The next day Huerta asked Ambassador Wilson what he should do with Madero: exile him or put him in an asylum. Wilson replied that Huerta "ought to do what is best for the country.", which Huerta saw as a US endorsement of his disposing of Madero as he felt like - in those days, summary executions were commonplace, so the implications of Ambassador Wilson's comment were obvious. Madero's wife's appeals to the Ambassador and
President Taft to intervene on her husband's behalf came to naught.
On the night of
February 22, Huerta ordered Madero and Pino Suárez to be transferred to the
Lecumberri penetentiary, ostensibly to be held for transfer to exile. Before the car reached the prison, it was pulled over by armed men (reportedly
Rurales policemen in
mufti ) and Madero and Pino Suárez were shot and killed. That same night, Huerta attended a dinner at the Embassy where he and the Ambassdor toasted
George Washington's birthday.
The Huerta government claimed that bodyguards were forced to shoot Madero and Pino Suárez, during a failed rescue attempt by Madero's supporters. This story was met with general incredulity, but it was endorsed by the US Ambassador himself. The reaction of most European powers to all this was to reflexively recognize Huerta's government, it took another month for the outrage to build and for
Venustiano Carranza to issue his
Plan of Guadalupe, the aim of which was deposing Huerta as an unconstitutional usurper of the presidency. New US President
Woodrow Wilson and Secretary of State
William Jennings Bryan were shocked and horrified by the murder of Madero, the Huerta coup, and the Ambassador's complicity, and subsequently withdrew
Henry Lane Wilson as ambassador almost as soon as Woodrow Wilson assumed office on
March 15,
1913. Effective support, but not official recognition, by the US government for the
Constitutional Army forces of Carranza and
Pancho Villa followed soon after. President Wilson didn't appoint a new ambassador, but appointed ex-
Minnesota governor John Lind as his personal envoy for Mexican affairs.
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