The Road to Mexican Independence

  • Napoleon's Involvement in Spain

    Napoleon's Involvement in Spain

    Napoleon Bonaparte's usurpation and installment of Joseph Bonaparte as King of Spain 1808 contributed to the political instability that reached the nation's American colonies. Napoleon's actions led Spaniards to revolt against French invasion, starting the War of Spanish Independence. The turmoil increased conspiracies in New Spain to overthrow the peninsulares' government, starting the War of Mexican Independence.
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  • Grito de Dolores

    Grito de Dolores

    The political instability in New Spain eventually led to Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla's famous cry from his church in the town of Dolores. His grito did not directly declare Mexican independence, but it is recognized as a key event in the war, as it encouraged Mexicans to revolt and increased support of the insurrection. The words "Long live Ferdinand VII and death to bad government!" voiced what many Mexicans at the time felt (117).
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  • Antonio Cordero Against Rebel Forces

    Antonio Cordero Against Rebel Forces

    In the northeastern provinces of New Spain, troops' loyalties remained conflicted. This changed in early January of 1811 when Antonio Cordero's command defected and his province faced 7,000-8,000 rebels. With royalist Cordero removed, his province allied with the insurgents, and more military units in the area revolting, Texas became the only northeastern Interior Province still under royal control (117).
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  • The Casas Revolt

    The Casas Revolt

    On this day, Juan Bautista de las Casas led the first Texan revolt against Spain in modern-day San Antonio. He helped depose Governor Salcedo, showed his support for King Ferdinand VII, sympathized with Hidalgo, and maintained communication with the insurgency. Although Casas was quickly overthrown himself, his actions contributed to tensions in Texas during the Mexican fight for independence.
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  • Miguel Hidalgo is Captured

    Miguel Hidalgo is Captured

    After a defeat, Hidalgo and his troops fled north to Texas in search of aid in the U.S. Hidalgo was then captured by royalists on March 21, 1811, marking a turning point in the war. After Hidalgo's execution, Father José María Morelos took the leadership role, helping the revolution with his realistic and better organized approach. Morelos officially declared independence and drafted Mexico's constitution, while also abolishing slavery (119).
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    Battle of Rosillo and Salcedo's Surrender

    This day marked a success for the insurgency, as the Republican Army of the North—led by José Bernardo Maximiliano Gutiérrez de Lara—took San Antonio. The event began on March 29, 1813 about 9 miles southeast of San Antonio with the Battle of Rosillo, in which 1,200 men led by Colonel Simon Herrera fought 800 of Gutiérrez de Lara's men. Because Salcedo had lost many supplies and men, he surrendered to the Republican Army of the North, a group supporting Mexico's freedom (120).
  • Battle of Medina

    Battle of Medina

    This daylong battle involved royalist General Joaquín de Arredondo's army and 1,400 men of the Republican Army of the North. José Álvarez de Toledo's army were defeated and the battle is known now as a significant loss for the insurgents. This bloody event led royalists Colonel Ignacio Elizondo and Arredondo north, allowing Arredondo to execute hundreds and even impose martial law in San Antonio (122).
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  • Father Morelos is Captured

    Father Morelos is Captured

    Father Morelos had been accomplishing great things for the cause of Mexican Independence, using superior military tactics and organizing a Congress. Despite his successes, he was eventually captured and executed in November of 1815 in Mexico after failing to gain the support of enough criollos (American-born Spaniards (505)). This meant that Texas had now been involved in two failed insurrections (122).
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  • The Plan of Iguala

    The Plan of Iguala

    Because many criollos were beginning to lose faith in the Spanish Crown, negotiation between Spanish forces and rebel armies became possible. Criollo and royalist officer Agustín de Iturbide was ordered to fight rebel Vicente Guerrero, but instead they created and signed the Plan of Iguala, which established the Catholic church's importance in Mexico, Mexico's independence, and equality between criollos and peninsulares (129).
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  • Agustín I of Mexico Abdicates

    Agustín I of Mexico Abdicates

    Former royalist and officer in the Spanish army, Iturbide then made himself emperor of the new Mexican nation. Conspirators made a plan to end his reign, leading to Agustín I abdication of the throne. This was an important event in Mexican history because it caused a shift from a centralized monarchy to a federal republic. Mexicans realized they did not want an empire and changed their government accordingly.
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