Magonista rebellion of 1911

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Magonista Rebellion
Part of the Mexican Revolution

Magonista guerrillas with the banner,
"Tierra y Libertad" in Tijuana, 1911.
DateJanuary 1911 – June 1911
Location
northern Baja California, Mexico
Result Government victory, Federal forces recapture Tijuana, Initial victory for insurgents, Federal forces loyal to Madero eventually drove them out, failure of the Libertarian insurrection.
Belligerents

Partido Liberal Mexicano

Cocopah
Paipai
Kumeyaay

Kiliwa
Mexico Porfirio Díaz, Mexico
Mexico Francisco I. Madero, Mexico
Commanders and leaders
Caryl ap Rhys Pryce
Francisco Quijada
Mexico Celso Vega
Mexico Guerrero
Strength
~220 militia 360 infantry
~200 militia
Casualties and losses
~20 killed
~10 wounded
12 killed
~10 wounded
1 captured

The Magonista rebellion of 1911 was an early uprising of the

Liberal Party of Mexico (Spanish: Partido Liberal Mexicano, PLM), which was only successful in northern Baja California. It is named after Ricardo Flores Magón, one of the leaders of the PLM. The Magonistas controlled Tijuana and Mexicali for about six months, beginning with the liberation of Mexicali on January 29, 1911.[1][2] The rebellion was launched against the rule of Porfirio Díaz but was put down by forces loyal to Francisco I. Madero. Acting on a tip from Madero's agents, leaders of the Magonista movement were arrested in the United States.[3]

The rebellion was planned and coordinated by the Organizing Board of the Mexican Liberal Party from Los Angeles, California, to create a

Baja peninsula
was part of a contingency plan in case of suffering defeats in the northern states, so as to gain time for reorganizing the Liberal Army to later move towards the south of the peninsula and go to Sonora and Sinaloa.

In the uprising of November 20, 1910, Magonist and Maderist groups combined their forces to occupy important places in the northern states. However, the ideological differences between the two groups caused confrontations between them to arise soon after. The Magonistas were losing presence in Chihuahua; furthermore, some of their guerrilla leaders were arrested by Madero when they refused to recognize him as provisional president. When some liberals managed to regroup in Baja California, a new campaign began with the capture of Mexicali.

Overview

The uprising took place within a general uprising against the dictatorship of the

bourgeois democratic revolution of Madero, seeking rather to abolish property and create an anarchist worker's commune. However, though several cities were held for around half a year, the attempted revolution of magonista rebels turned out quite unsuccessfully, "with the insurgents crippled by dissensions between Americans, Mexicans and Indians, and with opportunism and lack of political principle rife among some of its leading actors."[1] Compared to the agrarian revolution in Morelos, the Baja California revolt did not achieve much, but the PLM's influence on the outburst of revolution and its position as a revolutionary vanguard cannot be overlooked.[4] Thus, while the material realization of the PLM program did not attain any lasting results, the ideas for which the revolt in Baja California were fought for remained a powerful element in the social transformation of the Revolution. Opponents of the PLM tried to paint their movement as being controlled by American interests, which was probably not the case, but the accusation was effective at reducing their support.[3]

Background

The tensions that led to the rebellion was due in part to preexisting tensions between conservative and radical parties in Southern California and Northern Mexico. The PLM supported the Mexican Revolution, the overthrow of Porfirio Díaz's dictatorship, the liberation of Baja California, and the welfare of indigenous peoples.[5][2] They were also against American investment in Baja California, something they viewed as another form of imperialism.[5] The PLM received a wide range of support from radical groups based in Southern California.[6][2] Many American conservatives in California were alarmed at the amount of support the PLM and the Magón brothers received, as well as the possibility of losing their land should the anarchists rebel. This incited further racial, political, and social tensions, as the interests of both groups collided.

Preceding the revolution, the Magón brothers, Ricardo and Enrique Magón, were exiled from Mexico due to their criticisms of Díaz as well as their calls for social reforms.[7] However, this did not stop their attempts to stir up a revolution against Díaz. The Magón brothers moved PLM's headquarters to Los Angeles, where many were "seething with social discontent," said Emma Goldman, fellow anarchist and social reformist.[7] Here, the PLM found allies in many other left-wing groups, such as the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), the Socialists, Chicanos, and trade unionists.[7][1][6][5] Through their many speeches and their general activism within the labor community, their philosophy of anarchism was widely spread. Due to their pro-union and pro-workers stance, the radicals received popular support from the majority of the labor force and from sympathetic members of their community.[5][8] The PLM especially appealed to migrant workers who have experienced the harsh working conditions in Northern Mexico.[5][8]

The PLM's main ally was the IWW of Los Angeles, particularly, those who worked in the docks or were migrant workers.[8] Those who worked on the docks were sympathetic to the cause as they approved of the militant organizing in PLM, and have consistently fought for control of the docks.[5] According to John H. M. Laslett, they were "linked by a common interest in anarcho-syndicalist doctrine, grassroots militancy, and working-class internationalism."[5] The IWW, as well as the Socialist Party, helped start the revolution by funding the PLM.[7]

California operated under the open shop policy, much to the dismay of workers and union groups. This created tension between the labor force and business owners and helped developed an atmosphere where social radicalism was encouraged amongst workers. Due to their high capital investments in Southern California and Baja California, the radicals' agenda and public support alarmed many conservatives.[5] They feared they would lose their land and property if the Magón brothers succeeded in inciting their revolution.[5] This prompted many conservatives to publicly decry their disapproval and fear of the insurgent population, which intensified the divide between the two parties.[5]

Media helped fuel this divide as well. The Los Angeles Times, one of the conservative papers during that time period, called supporters of Ricardo and Enrique Flores Magón, "greasers" and "wild-eyed-anarchists with smoking bombs in hand."[5] The Regeneración, a revolutionary newspaper, published left-wing philosophy, and asked the public for support during the Mexican Revolution.[5]

Since 1903 Colonel Celso Vega had been appointed governor of the northern district by

Liberal Party of Mexico in Baja California
, 1911.

Revolution in Baja

By 1906, the PLM had many operations in Mexico, the U.S. Southwest, as well as Southern California.

Los Angeles Police Department's preemptive arrests.[1][5] The Magón brothers were arrested under charges of treason and murder, but were released after a trial showed that the charges were unsubstantial.[5] The arrest however, stirred up local support in Los Angeles, and hundreds of protesters, including the leaders of many labor groups, rallied around the two brothers.[5] This wide support created backlash from American conservatives as well as right-winged newspapers, who shamed the public for their support.[5]

After their release, the Magón brothers and the PLM organized another rebellion. They planned to liberate Baja California from Díaz and California land owners, and return that land to the indigenous people who previously lived there.[6] However, despite the popular support the PLM received from either side of the border, the movement failed to recruit actual volunteers to fight in the revolution.[5] In addition to this, the rebels were armed with little ammunition and had little funding to buy ammunition with.[2][7]

In 1910, the Organizing Board of the PLM sent Fernando Palomares and Pedro Ramírez Caule, who had participated in

Cananea Strike, to get in touch with the indigenous[10] Camilo Jiménez and Antonio Cholay, with the objective of preparing maps of the land and organizing indigenous groups for armed struggle, gaining the support of the Cocopah, Paipai, Kumeyaay, and Kiliwa peoples. Since then the PLM's Organizing Board – which resided in Los Angeles – coordinated the propaganda, the provision of funds, the recruitment of volunteers and the general planning to attack Baja California.[11] In 1911 the number of inhabitants in the towns of northern Baja California was: 1027 in Ensenada, 300 in Mexicali, 100 in Tijuana, less than 100 in Los Algodones and less than 100 in Tecate.[12]

The Liberal Army had a few private soldiers who received a salary of 1 peso a day and the officers received a somewhat higher payment than their equivalent in the federal army. Given the low population in Baja California, the recruitment of foreigners resident in the United States was extensive. Some historians estimate that recruits were offered 100 to 600 US dollars in gold and farms of 160

acres each, although most likely the people who made these offers were the recruitment managers and not the PLM Board;[13] also during the Organizing Board's trial in Los Angeles for violating US laws of neutrality during the Baja rebellion, a smuggler stated that the US government had offered him and his companions exhoneration, in exchange for helping prosecute Flores Magón, Librado Rivera and Anselmo L. Figueroa, and mentioned that they then fabricated what they had been asked to by the Board in Los Angeles, and received 5 dollars and the promise of 160 acres of land.[14]

Taking Mexicali

William Stanley (light coat) and Simón Berthold (center right) in Mexicali, 1911.

The PLM campaign in the so-called Northern Territory of Baja California began on January 29, 1911, when about 30 rebels guided by

socialists and anarchists; mainly militants (wobblies) of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW). Later, on February 15 the PLM forces clashed with and defeated federal troops led by Porfirista Colonel Celso Vega. The victory increased the morale and number of the rebels; by the end of February there were already about 200 men (both Mexicans and foreigners) up in arms.[15] In total, the Magonista forces reached 500 men, of which approximately 100 were Americans, including the wobblies Frank Little and Joe Hill.[16] For its part, the US government in Calexico and Yuma had offered military support to the Mexican government[17] to protect the hydraulic works that American engineers had carried out in the Colorado River since December 1910 with the authorization of the Porfiriato.[18] The British sent HMS Shearwater and HMS Algerine to invade and occupy San Quintín to protect British interests and assets from the Magonistas.[19]

Magonistas in Tijuana after the first battle at the border town.

On February 21, 60 members of the Liberal Army led by William Stanley, a member of the IWW, took the customs house of Los Algodones

, without Leyva's consent. A few days later, another group of liberals, commanded by José María Cardoza, stormed the Colorado River construction camp, obtaining supplies, weapons, land and new recruits among the workers. In the month of March the liberals attacked
Carl Ap Rhys Pryce
and ordered him to fight the feds, but Pryce in early May set off with a column to Tijuana, considering that it would be a strategic place to later attack Ensenada, and left another to defend Mexicali.

In April, Mexican authorities reported a "sheaf of revolts" made up of approximately 400 men who were active in the Mexicali Valley. In the last days of April, 126 magonists led by John R. Mosby occupied Tecate without resistance. On May 2 the liberals camped at the El Carrizo ranch, south of Tecate; there they were attacked by feds and Mosby was wounded in a lung; he was transferred to the US side of Tecate to be treated.[21] Sam Wood, a wobbly, was elected as interim chief while Mosby was recovering and the group advanced to Tijuana to join Pryce's column.

Kropotkin, which the liberals regarded as a kind of anarchist bible, served as a theoretical basis for the ephemeral revolutionary communes.[22]

Porphyrist soldiers of the VIII Battalion of Mexicali who fought the Magonist rebellion.

Taking Tijuana and Ensenada

On May 8, 1911, the Second Division of the Mexican Liberal Army led by Pryce, took Tijuana and on the 13th, the town of San Quintín from the British.

On May 8,

Ciudad Juarez was attacked by Maderista forces. On May 10 the square was surrendered to the feds. The capture of Ciudad Juárez resulted in a representative of the Porfiriato and Francisco I. Madero signing an agreement on May 21, in which Díaz agreed to resign from the presidency, his secretary of foreign relations Francisco León de la Barra remaining as interim president; the ending of hostilities between the federal government and the Maderista revolution was agreed. The liberals called Madero a traitor and rejected the Treaty of Ciudad Juárez
. De la Barra, who as an ambassador to the United States two years ago had organized a spying network to pursue and sabotage the activities of the PLM, was given the task of disarming liberals who did not accept peace treaties.

After this, the revolution stalled due to a lack of volunteers, a lack of ammunition and heavy weapons, and in part due to Berthold's death, which resulted in a leadership crisis.[7] The insurgents were pushed back after an engagement south of Tijuana, and the rebellion finally died out when Mexican Federal forces under Colonel Celso Vega retook the city.[6][23]

Consequences

Conservatives' growing distrust

The revolt failed to achieve its goal of liberating Baja California, but it showcased the popularity of radical groups. This was a great concern to Californian conservatives, who were still staunch supporters of the open shop policy, which suppressed unions and workers' rights in favor of business owners' rights.[5] The possibility of an insurgent movement occurring in California cemented conservative attitudes towards both the immigrant population and the working classes.[5] Faced with the threat of losing land investments, capital, as well as possible revenues, the conservatives only voiced their dismay louder. Following this episode, conservatives associated the Mexican insurgents with the many labor strikes in Los Angeles.[5] This contributed to the "brown scare" in Los Angeles, in which the immigrant population were discriminated against and mistreated.[5] Xenophobic and racial tensions rose in California.

This would also lead to the San Diego city council to pass an ordinance against any kind of public demonstration.

Magons' arrests

Following the invasion of these border towns, the Magón brothers were arrested again by the LAPD on the charge of failing to abide by United States neutrality laws.[5][1] They were convicted in July 1912 and were sentenced to twenty-three months in jail.[5][7] Despite many working for Ricardo Flores Magón's release, he died in jail on November 21, 1922.[7]

Fall of the leftists

After Díaz's fall from power, the rise of a new president, and increased suspicions from the conservatives, the radicals' power in Southern California diminished greatly.[5] The PLM split into factions following the arrest of the Magón brothers.[5] One faction still supported the Magón brothers, while the other faction supported the new president of Mexico.[5] In addition to this, the alliances the radicals had formed prior to the revolution fell apart, and many Los Angeles trade union movements disintegrated as well.[5]

Remnants of the IWW would stage a final stand in the San Diego free speech fight of 1912 in opposing the local ban on free speech and demonstration. The demonstration was dismantled by the police and reactionary vigilantes, extinguishing the remaining leftist movement in the region.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Uprising in Baja" (PDF). Organise!. No. 77. Anarchist Federation. 2011. pp. 44–45. Retrieved December 11, 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d Taylor, Lawrence D. (Winter 1999). "The Magonista Revolt in Baja California". The Journal of San Diego History. 45 (1).
  3. ^ a b Richard Griswold del Castillo (Fall 1980). "The Discredited Revolution: The Magonista Capture of Tijuana in 1911". The Journal of San Diego History. 26 (4).
  4. ^ Cockcroft, James (1992). Mexico: Class Formation, Capital Accumulation, & the State. Monthly Review Press.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa Laslett, John H. M. Sunshine Was Never Enough Los Angeles Workers, 1880–2010, 62–78. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2012.
  6. ^
    JSTOR 480336
    .
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Larralde, Carlos. Mexican Americans: Movements and Leaders. Los Alamitos: Hwong Publishing Co., 1976
  8. ^ a b c Tutino, John. Mexico and Mexicans in the Making of the United States, University of Texas Press, 2012.
  9. ^ Samaniego López, Marco Antonio, "The impact of trekking in Baja California, 1911". Studies of Modern and Contemporary History of Mexico, Vol. 18, 1999. p. 93.
  10. cucapá
    .
  11. ^ Ponce Aguilar, Antonio. Op. cit. p. 403.
  12. ^ Ponce Aguilar. Op. cit. p. 428.
  13. ^ Lawrence Douglas Taylor Hansen. Jack Mosby in the 1911 revolt in Baja California, Region and Society Magazine, No. 20, Colegio de Sonora, 2000.
  14. ^ For the freedom of the martyrs of McNeil Island, unmasked the crime, Regeneration Volume IV, No. 133, Los Angeles, California. March 8, 1913. p. 1.
  15. ^ Samaniego López. Op. cit. p. 94.
  16. ^ Wehling, Jason. Anarchist influences in the Mexican Revolution Archived April 9, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  17. . p. 72.
  18. ^ Hernández Padilla, Op. cit. p. 139.
  19. .
  20. ^ Trejo, op. cit. p. 80.
  21. ^ Taylor Hansen, Op. cit.
  22. . p. 208
  23. ^ David Gaddis Smith (June 26, 2011). "Centennial of Defense of Tijuana celebrated; museum exhibit opens". MexicoPerspective.com.

Further reading

External links

Media related to Rebelion of Baja California at Wikimedia Commons