Miguel Barragán

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Miguel Barragán
Miguel Barragán (Joaquín Ramírez).jpg
9th President of Mexico
In office
28 January 1835 – 27 February 1836
Preceded byAntonio López de Santa Anna
Succeeded byJosé Justo Corro
1st Governor of Veracruz
In office
20 May 1825 – 5 January 1828
Preceded byoffice established
Succeeded byJosé María Tornel
Personal details
Born(1789-03-08)8 March 1789
Ciudad del Maíz, San Luis Potosí
Died1 March 1836(1836-03-01) (aged 46)
Mexico City
Resting placeMexico City Cathedral
NationalityMexican
Spouse(s)Manuela Trebesto y Casasola

Miguel Francisco Barragán Andrade (8 March 1789 – 1 March 1836) was a Mexican general and centralist politician who served as president of Mexico between 1835 and his death in 1836; he remains the youngest president to have died in office of natural causes.

Career[]

The War of Independence and the First Empire[]

Barragán fought with Ejército Trigarante in the Mexican War of Independence, rising to the rank of brigadier general. After independence, he joined a conspiracy against Emperor Agustín de Iturbide with other ex-insurgents. They met in the house of Miguel Domínguez, ex-corregidor of Querétaro. The conspirators wrote to Pedro Celestino Negrete in Guadalajara, expecting support. Instead, he denounced the conspiracy to Iturbide. Seventeen people were arrested, including Guadalupe Victoria, Brigadier Nicolás Bravo and Barragán. Barragán was not freed until after the fall of the empire.

On 20 June 1824, he was named commanding general of Veracruz, which was under bombardment from the Spanish in the fort of San Juan de Ulúa, the only position the Spanish still held in Mexico. While Pedro Sáinz de Baranda y Borreiro blockaded the fort with his newly built navy, Barragán invaded by land. After a prolonged siege, the Spanish garrison was suffering from hunger and illness, forcing the Spanish commander, José María Coppinger to surrender on 6 November 1825. The Spanish capitulation was ratified on 18 November, and Barragán occupied Ulúa on that day. All of Mexico was now free of Spanish control. In recognition of the results, Congress named Barragán political chief of the state of Veracruz in 1828.

First Mexican Republic[]

He was compromised in the 1827 Plan de Montaño, an armed uprising against President Guadalupe Victoria that aimed to prohibit secret Masonic lodge meetings of the Yorkinos and force the expulsion of Joel Roberts Poinsett, the diplomatic representative of the United States, who meddled in Mexican politics in the side of liberals. Colonel José Rincón, under Barragán's command in Veracruz, denounced the conspirators. Barragán was arrested at the hacienda of Santa Anna and confined in the jail formerly used by the Inquisition. Generals Guadalupe Victoria and Vicente Guerrero intervened on his behalf, and he was sentenced only to temporary exile. He lived in Ecuador, Guatemala and the United States.

Called back to Mexico by Santa Anna, he was Minister of War from 20 November 1833 to 13 February 1834 in the governments of Santa Anna and Valentín Gómez Farías. (He was a political supporter of Santa Anna.) During this period, Barragán and Quintanar were sent to suppress rebels in the state of Jalisco.

President of the Centralist Republic of Mexico[]

On 28 January 1835, Barragán replaced Santa Anna in the presidency on an interim basis. Legally, Santa Anna had to give up the presidency while he was acting as commander in chief of the armed forces. Barragán took measures to help widows and poor people, partly out of his own pocket. He also suppressed an anti-Santa Anna revolt in the current state of Guerrero. He served until 27 February 1836, when he resigned because of a grave illness. He died in the National Palace on 1 March 1836, a victim of a "putrid fever" (probably typhus). He was interred in the Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral, and his name was inscribed in letters of gold in the chamber where Congress met. José Justo Corro succeeded him in office.

See also[]

References[]

  • (in Spanish) "Barragán, Miguel", Enciclopedia de México, v. 2. Mexico City, 1996, ISBN 1-56409-016-7.
  • (in Spanish) García Puron, Manuel, México y sus gobernantes, v. 2. Mexico City: Joaquín Porrúa, 1984.
  • (in Spanish) Orozco Linares, Fernando, Gobernantes de México. Mexico City: Panorama Editorial, 1985, ISBN 968-38-0260-5.

External links[]

Political offices
Preceded by
Antonio López de Santa Anna
President of Mexico
28 January 1835 - 27 February 1836
Succeeded by
José Justo Corro
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