Ramón Corral Explained

Ramón Corral
Office:6th Vice President of Mexico
Term Start:1 December 1904
Term End:25 May 1911
President:Porfirio Díaz
Predecessor:Valentín Gómez Farías (position reestablished)
Successor:José María Pino Suárez
Office2:Secretary of the Interior
Term Start2:16 January 1903
Term End2:25 May 1911
President2:Porfirio Díaz
Predecessor2:Manuel González Cossio
Successor2:Emilio Vázquez Gómez
Office3:Governor of the Federal District
Term Start3:8 December 1900
Term End3:2 January 1903
Predecessor3:Guillermo Landa y Escandón
Successor3:Guillermo Landa y Escandón
Birth Date:10 January 1854
Birth Place:Álamos, Sonora, Mexico
Death Place:Paris, France
Restingplace:Père Lachaise Cemetery
Birthname:Ramón Corral Verdugo
Nationality:Mexican
Occupation:Politician

Ramón Corral Verdugo (January 10, 1854 – November 10, 1912) was a Mexican politician who served as the Vice President of Mexico under President Porfirio Díaz from 1904 when it was reestablished until their resignations in May 1911, due to mounting pressure from Liberal forces during the Mexican Revolution. He previously served as Governor of the Federal District and Secretary of the Interior.

Early life

Corral was born Ramón Corral Verdugo on Hacienda Las Mercedes (where his father worked as an administrator),[1] near the city of Álamos, Sonora, on 10 January 1854 to Fulgencio Fabián Corral Rochín[2] (January, 1834–1868) and María Francisca Almada y Verdugo (1836-). He was christened on 21 January 1854 at the Purísima Concepción Roman Catholic Church in Mexico.[3] His recorded paternal baptismal surname was Corrales, however the surname Corral is commonly used.

Ramón Corral first gained public attention in 1872, when General Don Ignacio L. Pesqueira, Governor of the State of Sonora, an undefeated general who had provided many services to his state, created public outrage when he introduced state constitutional reforms.[4] To avoid compliance with a law, Pesqueira introduced, among other reforms, a ban on re-election governor. The young Corral vigorously fought against the Pesqueira administration through the press, founding the newspapers El Fantasma ("The Phantom"), and La Voz de Álamos ("The Voice of Álamos"). His writings in the papers exhibited civil valor, love for democracy, and power as a political adversary of the Pesqueira administration.[5] In the years that followed, Corral increasingly became involved in politics.

While General Secretary of the Government of Sonora, Corral was involved with the capture of the indigenous Yaqui military leader José Maria Leiva, known as Cajemé. In La Constitución (Periódico oficial del gobierno del estado libre y soberano de Sonora), beginning with the issue of April 22, 1887, and ending July 8, 1887, Corral published biographical notes about Cajemé, which were recorded only a few days earlier during personal talks with the captured Yaqui. Cajemé was being held at the time in the house of the military chief of the area, Angel Martínez, who had personally arrested him while Cajemé was hiding in San Jose de Guaymas.

Corral married Amparo V. Escalante on February 25, 1888. He had an affair with a woman named Guadalupe Mollinedo in 1905, who gave birth to his only daughter, Anita Corral. His wife was the daughter of Vicente Escalante, a well-known Mexican statesman of the time. The religious element of the twofold marriage ceremony was performed by Father Ortega of Hermosillo, with a civil ceremony performed by Civil Judge Bonito Méndez, of the Hermosillo District.[6] [7]

Political career

Corral was one of the científicos who advised Mexican President Porfirio Díaz. Corral served as Secretary of State from 1891 to 1895. He became Governor of the Federal District of Mexico in 1900 and was sworn in as Minister of the Interior in the cabinet of Díaz in 1903. He became vice-president in 1904 and was re-elected in 1910.[8]

Offices held

Later life

Corral traveled with his family to Paris for medical care, where he was diagnosed with cancer. After his operation, the cancer was found to be incurable. In light of his own deteriorating health and the increasing revolutionary opposition to the Díaz government, Corral submitted his resignation, dated May 10, 1911, to Francisco León de la Barra, Díaz’s foreign secretary, which de la Barra held until Díaz submitted his own "Renuncia" on May 25, 1911.[9]

Letter of Resignation

Corral's letter of resignation gave no doubt that he had foreknowledge of Díaz's intention to resign, and that the course of events would lead to a new government for Mexico:

On the two occasions that the national convention advanced my candidacy as Vice-President of the republic, to figure in the elections with Gen. Diaz as President, I stated that I was prepared to occupy any office in which compatriots considered that I would be of use, and that if the public vote conferred upon me a position so far above my merits, then my intention would be to second in all respects Gen. Diaz's policy, in order to co-operate with him, as far as it lay in my power, toward the aggrandizement of the nation, which had developed so notably under his administration.

Those who concern themselves with public affairs and have observed their progress during the last few years will be able to say whether I have complied with my intention.

For my part, I can say that I have never endeavored to bring about the least obstacle either in the President's policy or his manner of carrying it out even at the cost of sacrificing my convictions, both because this was the basis of my programme and because this corresponded to my position and my loyalty, as well as that I did not seek any prestige in the office of Vice-President, so useful in the United States and so discredited in Latin countries.

In the events which have shaken the country during these latter months, the President has been brought to consider that it is patriotic to resign from the high office that the almost unanimous vote of Mexicans had conferred upon him in the last election, and that it is advisable at the same time, in the interest of the country, that the Vice-President do likewise, so that new men and new energies should continue forwarding the prosperity of the nation.

Following my program of seconding Gen. Diaz's policy, I join my resignation with his and in the present note I retire from the office of Vice-President of the republic, begging the chamber to accept the same at the same time as that of the President.

I beg of you gentlemen to inform yourselves of the above, which I submit with the protests of my highest consideration.

Liberty and Constitution, Paris, May 4, 1911.

[Signed] "RAMON CORRAL."[10]

Death

Corral died of cancer in Paris on 10 November 1912, surrounded by family members.[11]

Selected works

Notes and References

  1. The American Review of Reviews. Vol. 42, No. 6, December, 1910, (Albert Shaw, Ed.), pp.730-731
  2. Fulgencio Corral's full name, documented at his christening. Registros parroquiales Bautismos 1829-1838. Alamos, Sonora, 1696-1968 Iglesia Católica. Purísima Concepción
  3. Registros parroquiales : Bautismos 1838-1856. Alamos, Sonora, 1696-1968 Iglesia Católica. Purísima Concepción
  4. Book: Bancroft, Hubert Howe . 1889 . History of the North Mexican States and Texas. San Francisco, California . The History Company . 702 . 2. Hubert Howe Bancroft . September 13, 2018 .
  5. . September 1904 . Ramon Corral: A President in Reserve for Mexico . The World To-day: A Monthly Record of Human Progress . 7 . 3 . 1222–1224 . September 13, 2018 .
  6. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1888/03/09/103166847.pdf A Wedding in Mexico. The New York Times, 1888
  7. La Constitucíon. March 2, 1888. p. 2
  8. Paul Garner, Porfirio Díaz. New York: Pearson 2001, pp. 253-54.
  9. O'Shaughnessy, Edith. (1920). Intimate pages of Mexican history. pp.101-102.
  10. "Mexico Enters New Regime Under de la Barra." Los Angeles Times, May 26, 1911
  11. https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1912/11/11/100380622.pdf Ramon Corral Dead from The New York Times, 1912
  12. http://cdigital.dgb.uanl.mx/la/1080044426/1080044426.html El General Ignacio Pesqueira: reseña histórica del Estado de Sonora