I
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INTRODUCTION
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Mexican
War, conflict between the United States and Mexico, lasting from
1846 to 1848. The war resulted in a decisive U.S. victory and forced Mexico to
relinquish all claims to approximately half its national territory. Mexico had
already lost control of much of its northeastern territory as a result of the
Texas Revolution (1835-1836). This land, combined with the territory Mexico
ceded at the end of the war, would form the future U.S. states of Arizona,
California, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, and Utah, as well as portions of the
states of Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma, and Wyoming. See United States (History): War with Mexico.
Mexico’s territorial losses
signified the end of any likelihood that Mexico, rather than the United States,
would become the predominant power in North America. As the first conflict in
which U.S. military forces fought almost exclusively outside of the country,
the Mexican War also marked the beginning of the rise of the United States as a
global military power.
Many Mexicans, meanwhile,
deeply resented their loss to the “Colossus of the North,” viewing the conflict
as an unnecessary war that had been thrust upon Mexico by a land-hungry United
States. This nurtured a fear of the United States—sometimes bordering on
hatred—among some Mexicans that has been kept alive and popularized through corridos, the folk ballads of Mexico.
More positively, the war also generated a new feeling of patriotism and
national pride in the young nation, evidenced today by the pilgrimages to
Chapultepec Park in Mexico City every September 13 to honor the young military
cadets (Niños Héroes) who chose
to die rather than surrender to U.S. troops at the end of the war.
II
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BACKGROUND
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The two major issues behind
the war were the inability of the Mexican government to establish political and
economic control over its vast northern frontier, including the Mexican state
of Tejas y Coahuila, and the westward movement and dynamic expansionism of the
United States during the 19th century.
A
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Lack of Mexican Control
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Under Mexico’s first national
charter, the constitution of 1824, the territories of Coahuila and Texas were
established as one Mexican state: Tejas
y Coahuila. However, the central government in Mexico City had enormous
difficulty exercising direct control over events in these northern regions of
the country, due to a variety of problems. The most important of these were
civil war and religious turmoil.
The 1820s and early 1830s
saw a number of military rebellions in Mexico in which federalists, who
supported constitutional democracy and wanted to limit the power of the Roman
Catholic Church, clashed with centralists, who wanted a centralized
dictatorship based in Mexico City and opposed reforms intended to weaken the
church. In 1835 the federal republic was overthrown by centralists. The next
year the 1824 constitution was replaced by laws which concentrated political
power in the capital and took power away from the states. For the next decade,
various competing factions of centralists controlled the Mexican government.
The political turmoil of this period, as well as the centralization of power in
Mexico City, made it difficult for the Mexican government to exercise its authority
in the northern frontier regions such as Texas.
This weak political control
was matched by the decline of Catholic religious authority in the region in the
late 1700s and early 1800s. In the 18th century, the Spanish Crown moved to
limit the wealth and power of Franciscan and Jesuit religious orders by taking
over much of their property. The Jesuits were expelled from the Spanish
colonies in 1767, and their buildings and property were auctioned off by the
Crown. The federalists who wanted to limit the power of the Catholic Church
were also hostile to the Franciscan order, which caused many Franciscans to
flee to Europe.
By the 1820s the number
of missionaries in the northern frontier regions had dropped off sharply. The
Catholic Church did not have the funds nor the clergy to fill the void after
the Jesuit and Franciscan missionaries left the frontier. By 1846 the church’s
presence on the Mexican frontier had diminished, with empty parishes in places
where friars once proudly served. Because one of the primary goals of the
missionaries was to convert Native Americans to Christianity and pressure them
to adopt Hispanic customs, the decline of the religious orders also meant a
decline in the influence of Hispanic culture and Catholicism in the region.
B
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U.S. Expansion
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After 1821 the northern
regions of Mexico became increasingly integrated with the United States. Before
Mexico won independence from Spain in 1821, Spain had forbidden trade between
Santa Fe, in the New Mexico territory, and the United States. After
independence, Mexico began to encourage trade. The inauguration of the Santa Fe
Trail in 1821 linked Independence, in western Missouri, to Santa Fe and
extended the Missouri trade into Chihuahua, a city in north central Mexico.
This growing trade led the northern Mexican provinces to seek manufactured
goods from the United States rather than areas in southern Mexico.
At the same time, the
United States was expanding aggressively. President James K. Polk (1845-1849)
and his administrators sought trade outlets to the Pacific Ocean and had their
eyes on the coasts and bays of Texas, Oregon and California. Land-hungry
settlers were moving across the Mississippi River into the cotton fields and
cattle lands of Louisiana and East Texas. Fur trappers and New England
merchants were looking for pelts and hides along the Gila River—which runs
through the current U.S. states of Arizona and New Mexico—and moved from there
into southern California.
The westward migration
of U.S. citizens was encouraged by Manifest Destiny, a belief that territorial
expansion by the United States was both inevitable and divinely ordained. Those
who believed in Manifest Destiny also believed that the culture of the United
States was superior to other cultures and that republican forms of government
and democracy should be expanded in order to “civilize” other peoples. Although
Manifest Destiny was criticized by some people as blatantly racist, it enjoyed
support among U.S. citizens and politicians in the mid- and late 1800s.
III
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THE ROAD TO WAR
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Central to the events
leading up to war were the Fredonian Rebellion (1826), the Texas Revolution
(1835-1836), and the annexation of Texas by the United States in 1845.
A
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The Fredonian Rebellion
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In 1825 a group of Texas
colonists received permission from the Mexican government to colonize an area
in eastern Texas known as Nacogdoches. By the time they arrived, however, other
settlers had already claimed the region. The Texas colonists threatened to
expel anyone who could not produce a valid land title. After the original
settlers protested, the Mexican government denied the Texans permission to
colonize the region.
In December 1826 a group
of 16 Texas colonists went to Nacogdoches and proclaimed the region to be the
independent Republic of Fredonia. The next month about 60 men, mostly Mexicans,
rode to Nacogdoches to capture the rebellious Fredonians. The small garrison of
Fredonians soundly defeated their attackers in the only battle of the
rebellion. When Mexican troops arrived at Nacogdoches a short time later, the
republic had been dissolved and the leader of the colonists had fled to
Louisiana.
B
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The Texas Revolution
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Although the Fredonians
were not successful, by the 1830s the population of Mexican Texas included many
immigrants from the United States. These Anglo-American colonists were angry
over Mexican attempts to deny autonomy to Texas and were unhappy with a
colonization law that prevented immigration from the United States into Texas.
They were also wary of Catholic laws and customs. In 1835 they revolted and
established Texas as an independent republic. The Texas Revolution included the
battles of The Alamo, Goliad, and San Jacinto. When hostilities ceased, Mexican
General Antonio López de Santa Anna agreed to withdraw his troops across the
Río Grande and recognize the independence of Texas. The Mexican congress
rejected the agreement, and many Mexicans assumed the nation would regain
Texas. It soon became apparent, however, that Mexico was in no position to
retake Texas by force. The Lone Star Republic, as it was known, remained
independent from 1836 to 1845, when the United States Congress approved a joint
resolution annexing Texas. Mexico considered this annexation an act of
aggression, and the Mexican diplomat in Washington, D.C., broke off
negotiations and went home.
C
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Disputed Borders
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With diplomatic relations
broken, President Polk sent diplomat John Slidell as a special envoy to Mexico
to negotiate a dispute over the boundary between Texas and Mexico. Throughout
the colonial era the western boundary of Spanish “Tejas” had been the Nueces
River. During the Mexican period of Texas history, from 1821 to 1845, Spanish
and Mexican maps and documents reaffirmed the Nueces River as the boundary. But
the Anglos in Texas, and their backers in the United States, insisted that the
western boundary was the Río Grande. At stake were not merely the 150 miles
that separated the Nueces from the Río Grande in southern Texas, but the
thousands of square miles of territory to the northwest that also fell within
the claim (including half of New Mexico, several hundred miles west of the
headwaters of the Nueces River).
But when Mexican newspapers
discovered that Slidell also had secret instructions to negotiate for the
purchase of California and New Mexico, they threatened rebellion if Mexican
president José Joaquin de Herrera negotiated with the United States. The
president promptly informed Polk that he had nothing to discuss with Slidell.
Herrera was then overthrown by General Mariano Paredes, and Mexico prepared to
assert its authority over Texas by mobilizing an army of 5200 troops near the
mouth of the Río Grande under the command of General Mariano Arista.
On June 23, 1845, General
Zachary Taylor, in command of approximately 1500 regulars, was ordered to leave
Louisiana for Texas. By July he was in Corpus Christi, about 320 km (200 mi)
north of the Río Grande. That next year, on March 8, 1846, Polk ordered Taylor
and his troops to enter disputed territory between the Nueces and the Río
Grande. Another detachment was moved to Fort Texas (present-day Brownsville,
Texas), across the border from Matamoros, Mexico. By April 1846 the two nations
stood on the brink of war.
IV
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THE WAR
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On April 24 Taylor’s forces
clashed with Arista’s at Carricitos on the northern bank of the Río Grande.
Polk used this skirmish to justify his war message to Congress when he declared
that Mexico had “shed American blood on American soil.” Although a young
congressman from Illinois named Abraham Lincoln challenged Polk to show him the
spot where blood had been shed, a majority of the members of Congress were
ready to approve a bill authorizing war.
On May 8, before Polk
signed the declaration of war, the first major engagement of the Mexican War
began. This was the Battle of Palo Alto, which took place along the Gulf Coast
north of Matamoros and the Río Grande. Taylor pitted his approximately 2200 troops
against Arista’s 3200 Mexican soldiers. The U.S. artillery inflicted heavy
casualties on the Mexicans while Taylor reported only 16 men killed or wounded.
The next day another pre-war battle occurred south of Palo Alto at Resaca de la
Palma, sending the Mexicans reeling back to Matamoros. Finally, on May 13, Polk
signed a declaration of war, and five days later Matamoros fell to the United
States. Arista retreated and was relieved of his command.
The U.S. strategy called
for a three-pronged offense: The Army of the West would take New Mexico and
California; the Army of the Center would seize northern Mexico; and the Army of
Occupation would carry the war into Mexico City. The navy would provide
logistical support, escort the transport of troops to Mexico, guard the army’s
bases from the sea, and blockade the coasts along the Gulf of Mexico and the
Pacific. It would also aid the capture of Monterey, a key coastal port in
central California, and assist in the capture and occupation of Tampico and
Veracruz on Mexico’s Gulf Coast.
A
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California and New Mexico
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General Stephen W. Kearny,
commanding the Army of the West, was the first to mobilize, when his army of
1500 men departed Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, in June of 1846 and began the
900-mile trek to Santa Fe. With the Mexicans evacuating the town before the U.S.
troops arrived on August 19, Kearny was able to take Santa Fe without firing a
shot. Although the occupation was initially peaceful, U.S. troops were soon
harassed by Mexican and Native American (primarily Pueblo) attacks. After
August 19, Kearny divided his army into three groups in order to attack or
control various strategic locations simultaneously. One contingent would remain
to pacify Santa Fe, while another, under Colonel Alexander William Doniphan,
was dispatched south to Chihuahua in north central Mexico. The third group,
under Kearny’s command, was sent west to California to assist U.S. forces
already fighting there.
In the meantime, U.S.
settlers in northern California had revolted against Mexican rule in June of
1846, before news of the declaration of war had even reached them. Led by
Colonel John C. Frémont, the settlers captured a fort at Sonoma, north of San
Francisco, and proclaimed the establishment of the Bear Flag Republic. The
republic was shortlived, however. On July 7, 1846, naval commodore John D.
Sloat, commander of U.S. naval forces along the Pacific Coast, ordered the U.S.
flag raised at Monterey, about 140 km (87 mi) south of San Francisco, and
formally claimed California for the United States. A few days later, U.S.
forces occupied the port of San Francisco. Sloat, in poor health, transferred
his command of the naval forces to Commodore Robert Stockton in late July.
When Kearny and his troops
finally arrived in southern California in December, U.S. forces had already
captured Los Angeles, but had been driven out a short time later. On December
6, Kearny’s army fought Mexican troops under Captain Andrés Pico. Kearny was
wounded and his troops almost annihilated. In January U.S. forces attacked and
recaptured Los Angeles, forcing the surrender of hundreds of Mexicans and
effectively ending Mexican resistance in California.
B
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Northern Mexico
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Meanwhile, in August 1846,
Taylor’s Army of the Center, now 6000 strong (half of whom were Texas
volunteers) had moved through Camargo toward the city of Monterrey in
northwestern Mexico. General Pedro Ampudia commanded the troops protecting
Monterrey. While he was preparing the defenses of the city, centralist
President Paredes was overthrown in Mexico City by federalist forces, including
General Santa Anna, who had returned from exile in Cuba. The federalists
promptly restored the 1824 constitution. General Ampudia, evidently influenced
by the fall of Paredes, became indecisive and added to the confusion and
demoralization of his troops. The battle began in September, and after three
days of fierce fighting, Taylor was able to outflank the Mexicans and begin
closing in on the city. On September 25 the fighting was over, and General
Ampudia asked for a truce. Taylor agreed to permit the Mexican army to withdraw
from the city and an eight-week truce began. The arrival of Doniphan, whose
forces had attacked and occupied Chihuahua, fortified Taylor’s base and made
most of northern Mexico secure for U.S. forces. After President Polk criticized
the leniency of the truce, Taylor informed General Santa Anna that he would end
the agreement before the eight weeks were up.
In early 1847 about half
of Taylor’s troops were reassigned to General Scott to help in the attack on
Veracruz. Santa Anna learned of Taylor’s weakened position and immediately
began marching an army of 18,000 to 20,000 men north from San Luis Potosí in
central Mexico in hopes of catching him by surprise. Taylor was alerted of the
march, however, and prepared his defenses at Buena Vista, about 70 km (45 mi)
west of Monterrey. Only about 15,000 of Santa Anna’s troops completed the
march; the rest had died, been abandoned, or deserted along the way. The two
armies met in February 1847, with the Mexican forces outnumbering U.S. troops three
to one. Although Santa Anna’s assaults on Taylor’s defenses did much damage and
Mexican troops almost overran the U.S. positions, Taylor’s artillery performed
well and the attack was eventually repulsed. Although both sides would claim
victory, the battle ended in a stalemate. Santa Anna, with a few war trophies
in hand (some flags and three cannons), withdrew from the battlefield to
resolve a dispute in Mexico City, leaving northern Mexico to the invaders.
C
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Mexico City
|
Despite defeat in the
north and constant political bickering in Mexico City, the Mexicans were still
unwilling to sue for peace. Believing it impractical to march across the desert
south of Monterrey, the U.S. military command ordered Taylor to reassign the
best half of his troops (the regulars) to General Winfield Scott, the man
selected to occupy Veracruz on the Gulf Coast.
In March 1847 Scott’s
Army of the Occupation, with some 10,000 men, landed on the Mexican coast south
of the harbor of Veracruz. The invasion was accompanied by a bombardment that
launched approximately 6700 shells at the city. Hundreds of Mexican civilians
were killed. Civilian corpses piled up in the streets; buildings, including
hospitals, were gutted by fire; and a yellow-fever epidemic raged. After two
days, the siege was over, and the Stars and Stripes replaced the Eagle and
Serpent of the Mexican flag. While 67 Americans had been killed or wounded, the
Mexican civilian and military dead numbered between 1000 and 1500. Civilian
casualties outnumbered their military counterparts 2 to 1.
Santa Anna had just arrived
in Mexico City when news of the Veracruz defeat arrived. He secured from the
Catholic Church a promise of a loan to finance the army and then rushed off
toward Veracruz to meet the U.S. troops that were heading west to Mexico City.
The opposing forces met in mid-April at a mountain pass near Cerro Gordo, about
80 km (about 50 mi) northwest of Veracruz. Scott outflanked the Mexicans and
attacked from the rear. The Mexican defense soon disintegrated, and Santa Anna
barely escaped capture. He fled west to Puebla, but the citizens there would
not cooperate with him. When Santa Anna went on to Mexico City, Scott and his
army took Puebla unopposed.
While Scott’s troops rested
for the summer in Puebla, Santa Anna went about preparing the defenses of
Mexico City. With the Mexican states refusing to lend money to the federal
government, and the city government uncooperative, the capital was placed under
martial law. To combat the U.S. forces, the Mexican army organized several
companies of foreign residents and deserters from the U.S. Army into units that
were known as San Patricios (Saint Patricks).
In August the war came
to the outskirts of Mexico City, with engagements at Contreras and Churubusco.
In both instances the U.S. forces were superior in leadership, tactics, and
technology. At Churubusco, in late August, the Mexicans fought bravely and
refused to yield ground to the better-equipped Americans. The battle was won
with hand-to-hand combat.
One of the final battles
of the war began early on September 8 when Scott’s artillery began bombarding
fortifications at Molino del Rey and Casa Mata in Mexico City. Cavalry and
infantry charges soon followed and U.S. forces captured the positions before
mid-morning. This left Chapultepec Castle, just east of Molino del Rey, as the
only fortified position that remained in the city. At the crest of a 60-meter
(200-foot) hill and surrounded by a huge wall, the castle included the
buildings of the National Military Academy. A handful of cadets was among the
more than 800 Mexican defenders at the castle. Six of the young cadets—who
would come to be known as the Niños
Heroes—chose to die fighting rather than surrender to the U.S. troops.
After a mortar attack on the morning of September 13 failed to breach the
fortification, Scott ordered his troops to storm the castle with pickaxes and
crowbars. After a bloody assault, U.S. troops prevailed and raised their flag
over the castle. The war was over. On September 14, Scott entered the center of
the capital and the United States prepared to negotiate peace. The U.S. losses
at Molino del Rey, Casa Mata, and Chapultepec included 130 killed and 703
wounded; Mexican losses are unknown, but it is estimated that nearly 3000 died
in the Mexico City battles.
V
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TREATY OF GUADALUPE
HIDALGO
|
During the next few months
negotiations continually broke down. Mexico, although decisively defeated,
refused to negotiate a peace treaty. Polk became convinced that the Mexicans
were stalling. He was also being pressured to acquire more territory from the
vanquished Mexico. Consequently, he ordered the U.S. negotiator, Nicholas
Trist, to return to the United States. Knowing that his departure would mean an
end to negotiations, and possibly more problems for Mexico, Trist persevered.
Eventually, on February 2, 1848, a treaty was signed at the village of
Guadalupe Hidalgo, a few miles outside of Mexico City.
The Treaty of Guadalupe
Hidalgo ended the war, set the southern boundary of Texas, and ceded the Mexican
territories of New Mexico and California to the United States. The United
States paid Mexico an indemnity of $15 million and assumed over $3 million in
claims that U.S. citizens had against the Mexican government. Although Mexico
lost half of its territory, it did manage to save Baja California and have it
linked by land to Sonora to the east. The treaty was ratified on March 10,
1848, by the United States and on May 19, 1848, by Mexico.
VI
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CONSEQUENCES OF THE WAR
|
Although the United States
won the war, it was less than a total victory. The U.S. forces suffered a
mortality rate of 153.5 per 1000, compared to 98 per 1000 that the Union forces
lost during the American Civil War (1861-1865). The high mortality rate
included deaths from accidents, executions, and plagues of smallpox and
syphilis. At least 12,000 U.S. lives were lost during the war, but fewer than
1800 were battle deaths.
The war’s conclusion indicated
how ill-prepared Mexico had been for the conflict. Although Mexico had the
numerical advantage in troops, and Mexican forces fought bravely and with
resolve, U.S. forces beat them decisively in battle after battle. Mexico’s
internal political battles and the refusal of the Mexican states to help
finance the war effort seriously undermined Mexico’s numerical advantages. In
addition, Mexican troops that were lucky to be armed with muskets were no match
for trained U.S. soldiers with breech-loading rifled guns. Compared to the U.S.
military, the Mexican forces were plagued by outmoded artillery, corrupt
officers, and poorly trained men. Although no reliable records were kept of
Mexican casualties, they outnumbered those of the U.S. forces in most major
battles of the war.
A
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Effects on the United
States
|
The Mexican War added
substantial territory to the United States. Not counting Texas, which had been
annexed by the United States prior to the war, the victory increased the area
of the country by approximately 66 percent. The West, including the Southwest,
would become a source of basic resources and a market for industrial goods from
the industrialized northeast.
In 1848 gold was discovered
at Sutter’s Mill in northern California, launching the California gold rush.
Silver mines were opened in Nevada, while copper began to be mined in Arizona
and Utah at the turn of the century. In the mid-20th century New Mexico’s
uranium mines became important for the production of atomic power. San Diego
and San Francisco, blessed with two of the best natural harbors in the world,
would soon host major U.S. naval facilities. These lands, plus investments in
health, education, and machines, helped sustain U.S. economic growth between
the American Civil War and World War I (1914-1918).
But there were hidden
costs to this territorial bounty. John C. Calhoun, the seventh vice president
of the United States (1825-1832), had earlier warned about territorial
conquests and their potential disastrous results. The expansion of slavery in
the newly acquired Mexican territories became the major constitutional and
political issue that led to the Civil War.
The Mexican War was also
a proving ground for many Americans who fought in the Civil War. The names of
those who fought for Taylor and Scott amounted to a roll call to military
greatness: William Tecumseh Sherman, Stonewall Jackson, George Meade, Franklin
Pierce, Ulysses S. Grant, and Robert E. Lee, to name a few. From the U.S. Navy
came David G. Farragut and Franklin Buchanan. And the inclination Americans
have for electing military heroes to the presidency was exercised when Taylor,
Grant, and Pierce were elected to that high office. A fourth, Jefferson Davis,
who also fought in the Mexican War, was chosen president of the Confederacy.
B
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Effects on Mexico
|
The Mexican heritage was
more tragic. Mexicans mourned the loss of so much territory and many developed
a profound distrust of U.S. citizens, as well as a fear of further “Yankee”
imperialism. The chaos of war unleashed several political revolts and Native
American rebellions in Mexico, including the Caste War of the Yucatán
(1846-1853), in which Maya peasants overran and briefly controlled almost all
of the Yucatán Peninsula.
The United States also
continued to intervene in Mexican affairs, both economically and militarily.
United States investors sought rights-of-way for railroads, and U.S. miners and
oil men fought for Mexico’s natural resources throughout the 19th and early
20th centuries. American filibusters—military adventurers who were not part of
a regular army—and U.S. soldiers and sailors intervened in Mexico several times
over the next 70 years. During the Mexican Revolution (1910-1920), the United
States sent 11,000 troops into the state of Chihuahua to pursue forces under
the command of Pancho Villa, a Mexican revolutionary general. United States
forces also occupied Mexico’s two major ports, Tampico and Veracruz, for several
months in 1914.
The Mexican War and continued
U.S. intervention threw a shadow over U.S.-Mexico relations until after World
War II (1939-1945). Although relations between the two countries have improved,
the conflict still burns brightly in Mexico’s collective memory, as
demonstrated by the annual September 13 commemoration of the war and the tragic
deaths of Mexico’s Niños Héroes.
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