Matías Romero Explained

Matías Romero
Office:Mexican Secretary of Finance
Term Start:26 March 1892
Term End:31 December 1892
President:Porfirio Díaz
Predecessor:Benito Gómez Farías
Successor:José Yves Limantour
Term Start2:24 May 1877
Term End2:4 April 1879
President2:Porfirio Díaz
Predecessor2:Francisco Landero y Cos
Successor2:José Hipólito Ramírez
Term Start3:16 January 1868
Term End3:12 June 1872
President3:Benito Juárez
Predecessor3:José María Garmendia
Successor3:Francisco Mejía Escalona
Office4:Ambassador of Mexico to the United States
Term Start4:15 February 1893[1]
Term End4:30 December 1898
Predecessor4:Manuel María de Zamacona
Successor4:Manuel Azpíroz
Term Start5:2 September 1863
Term End5:13 July 1868
Predecessor5:Luis de la Rosa
Successor5:Ignacio Mariscal
Birth Date:24 February 1837
Birth Place:Oaxaca, Oaxaca
Death Place:New York City, New York
Birthname:Matías Romero Avendaño
Nationality:Mexican
Education:Institute of Sciences and Arts of Oaxaca

Matías Romero Avendaño (24 February 1837 – 30 December 1898) was a Mexican politician and diplomat who served three times as Secretary of Finance and twice as ambassador of Mexico to the United States during the 19th century.[2] [3]

Early life

Romero began preparatory courses in Law while still living in Oaxaca. In 1855 he moved to Mexico City, and he received his law degree on 12 October 1857.[4] He joined the liberals under command of General Ignacio Zaragoza, and traveled to Guanajuato to join the Army. However, he was instead commissioned into the Ministry of Relations. He accompanied Juárez to Guadalajara, but was briefly imprisoned by Commander Landa. After being freed, he followed Juárez to Veracruz via Panamá. He served as Melchor Ocampo's private secretary in Veracruz, and as official in various secretariats.

Diplomatic career

In 1859, Romero published a work on Mexican foreign treaties. In December of that year he was named Secretary of the Mexican Legation in Washington, D.C. By December of the following year he was directed by President Juárez to approach Abraham Lincoln, who had recently won election as US President, but had not yet assumed the Presidency.

During the French Invasion of Mexico, Romero played a key role in lobbying the United States to oppose the French-backed Second Mexican Empire. When Abraham Lincoln and Secretary of State Seward appeared ambivalent on the matter, Romero supported the presidential campaign of John C. Frémont in 1864. Romero also supported mediation between the United States and the Confederacy in order that the United States could focus more on opposing the Mexican Empire.[5] When the Civil War ended, he proposed direct military intervention under the leadership of either General Grant or General Sherman.[6]

The Instituto Matías Romero (Matías Romero Institute) established in 1974 was named for Romero.[7]

Later Government career

After the restoration of the Mexican Republic, Romero served in the government of Porfirio Díaz and was a proponent of foreign investment in Mexico.[8]

On 15 January 1868, Romero was named Minister of the Treasury by President Benito Juárez. In May of that year, he was returned to Washington to complete the treaties which he had initiated in his previous assignment. Treaties signed pertain to claims of Mexican citizens against the U.S. and vice versa, citizenship, and consular matters. By 1 August his work on those treaties was concluded, and he returned to Mexico, as Secretary of Hacienda.

On 15 May 1872, Romero resigned from the Ministry (deteriorating health). By September 1875, he entered government service again, as substitute senator for Chiapas. By the following autumn he was named Deputy to the Congress of the Union for the fifth district of Oaxaca.

In May 1877 he was charged again, with the office of the Minister of Treasury, but resigned in 1879 from government service for health reasons.

Return to Diplomacy

By 1879 he again returned to Washington, to establish a company to oversee construction of a railway between Mexico City to Oaxaca. He was named manager of the company.

On 15 May 1882, he was again called to service, to represent his country to USA. He was named ambassador extraordinaire and minister plenipotentiary, and in that capacity he signed a preliminary agreement on borders with Guatemala.

In Washington he was with his wife, Lucretia Allen,[9] one of the most popular ladies in the diplomatic circle. She was born in Philadelphia and was educated partly in New York City.[10]

From May to October 1883, Romero traveled across Europe as Mexican representative.

Romero died in New York City in 1898.

Works

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Manual de organización de la Embajada de México en Estados Unidos. Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores. Mexico City, Mexico. 25 September 2014. es. March 2009. 6–7.
  2. Book: Jaffary. Nora E. Osowski. Edward. Porter. Susie S. Mexican History: A Primary Source Reader. 2009. Westview Press. Boulder, Colorado. 9780813343341. 256–257. 144217762. 24 September 2014.
  3. Book: Monroy Huitrón. Guadalupe. Archivo histórico de Matías Romero: catálogo descriptivo. Matías Romero Historical Archive: Descriptive Catalog. 1965. Banco de México. Mexico City, Mexico. 359968. es.
  4. http://socialarchive.iath.virginia.edu/ark:/99166/w6b2848w Romero, Matías, 1837-1898, Social Networks & Archival Content (website)
  5. Book: Schoonover, Thomas. 2014. Mexican Lobby Matias Romero in Washington . University Press of Kentucky . 31.
  6. Wooster . Robert . 2006. John M. Schofield and the 'Multipurpose' Army . American Nineteenth Century History . 7. 2 . 173–191 . 10.1080/14664650600809305 . 143091703 .
  7. https://www.gob.mx/imr/es/que-hacemos ¿Qué hacemos?, Instituto Matías Romero (website)
  8. Jürgen Buchenau, "Foreign Policy, 1876-1910," in Encyclopedia of Mexico, vol. 1, p. 503. Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn 1997.
  9. Web site: Romero, Matías (1837–1898) Encyclopedia.com.
  10. Book: Hinman. Ida. The Washington Sketch Book. 1895.