Francisco I. Madero and his Wife Sara Pérez
Francisco I. Madero y su esposa Sara Pérez

Francisco I. Madero and his Wife Sara Pérez

The image shows Francisco I. Madero and his wife Sara Pérez. Madero started the Mexican Revolution in 1910 in order to overthrow the dictatorial regime of President Porfirio Diaz. From 1911 to 1913 he served as Mexican President, before he was deposed and executed in 1913 by Victoriano Huerta, a general who had served under Díaz. Born into a very wealthy family, Madero was well educated and started to be politically active in 1903. He founded his own newspaper, in which he advocated social justice and democracy. In particular, he criticized the gap between the rich and the poor in Mexico and the repression of Diaz’s critics. For the presidential elections in 1910, Madero organized the “Anti-Reelectionist” party. His campaign became very popular, which is why Diaz arrested him and others on a falsified charge of plotting armed insurrection. Madero was bailed out of jail by his wealthy father, but Diaz had "won" the election. In response, Madero called for armed revolution. Pancho Villa and Pascual Orozco commanded Madero’s army in the Battle of Juarez in April/May 1911, which they won. Their victory led to Diaz’s resignation and to the election of Madero as Mexican President. Today, the people of Mexico see him as the father of revolution that eventually would do much to level the playing field between the rich and the poor. He married his wife Sara Pérez in 1903.

Area: Out of Area / Out of Area

Collection: Leigh W. Osborn Photograph Collection

Source: University of Texas at El Paso Library - Special Collections Department

Reference ID: PH026-1-1-017

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Report this entry

Choose the most important reason for this report

Your name

Your email address

Optional detail

Thank you for your report

More from the same community-collection

Road and creek

Possibly Cloudcroft.

Excursion railroad car

Possibly Cloudcroft.

Two women among the trees

Probably Cloudcroft. Note the sunbonnet.

Cabin

Probably Cloudcroft.

Cabin with big overhang

Probably Cloudcroft.

Group on hillside

Probably Cloudcroft.

Man holding coffee pot at picnic

Probably Cloudcroft.

Cabin porch, Cloudcroft

Cloudcroft New Mexico is a mountain community with a vast ...

Rustic shelter, Cloudcroft

Cloudcroft New Mexico is 110 year old, unique mountain ...

Summer hikers on railroad tracks, Cloudcroft

This family was one of many that spent their summers at ...

Unknown mainstreet

A community reached by one of the regular patrols along the ...

Engineer wagon

Contents of wagon are laid out for inspection.

Postcard sent from El Paso, 1902

This postcard shows Apache chief, "James A. Garfield," who had ...

Cowboy Ready To Go

A cowboy out on the range--area unknown. The identity of the ...

Cattle

These may possibly be dairy cattle and the animals in the corral ...

Car

These may be two of the newsmen who congregated in El Paso ...

Family Near the Rio Grande

Image of family living in poor conditions. Family posing between ...

Chuck Wagon and Cook

The Chuck wagon was the headquarters, rallying, eating, and ...

Classic Car - El Paso, Texas

Orange classic car still drives around areas in El Paso. ...

Pancho Villa

Images of the Mexican Revolution - 1910 - 1920. Image of Pancho ...

Bocho Mural

Bocho is slang for a Volkswagen Beetle (Bug).

Bocho Mural

Bocho is slang for a Volkswagen Beetle (Bug).

classic auto

Classic auto in El Paso, possibly on I-10.

home.search_collection