1926 in Mexico
The following lists events that have happened in 1926 in the United Mexican States.
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Decades: |
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See also: | Other events of 1926 List of years in Mexico |
Incumbents
Federal government
- President: Plutarco Elías Calles
- Interior Secretary (SEGOB):
- Secretary of Foreign Affairs (SRE):
- Communications Secretary (SCT):
- Education Secretary (SEP):
Supreme Court
- President of the Supreme Court:
Governors
Events
August
- August 3 – Some 400 armed Catholics barricaded themselves in the Church of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Guadalajara, Jalisco and exchanged gunfire with federal troops until they ran out of ammunition and surrendered. According to U.S. consular sources, 18 were killed and 40 wounded.[1]
Births
- January 24 — Alejandro Cervantes Delgado, economist and politician (PRI); Governor of Guerrero 1981–1987 (d. 2000)
- February 10 — Carmen Romano de Lopez, First Lady of Mexico (1976-1982) (d. 2000).
- March 20 — Marcela Lombardo Otero, daughter of Vicente Lombardo Toledano, politician (Popular Socialist Party (PPS), (d. 2018).
- April 7 – Julio Scherer García, journalist (Excélsior and Proceso) (d. January 7, 2015).
- April 15 — Manuel Capetillo, bullfighter, actor, singer, and songwriter (d. 2009).
- May 29 – Teodoro González de León, architect ("Ciudad Universitaria" of the U.N.A.M.); (d. September 16, 2016).
- August 8 – Arturo García Bustos, painter (d. 2017)
- September 4 — Ivan Illich, Austrian philosopher and Catholic priest who founded the Centro Intercultural de Documentación in Cuernavaca, Morelos (d. 2002).
- October 1 − Miguel León-Portilla, anthropologist and historian (d. 2019).
- November 11 — Cardinal Juan Jesús Posadas Ocampo, archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Guadalajara 1987-1993 (assassinated May 24, 1993)
- December 23 — Leticia Palma, (Zoyla Gloria Ruiz Moscoso) actress (En la palma de tu mano), (d. 2009)[2]
- Date unknown:
- Valdemar Jiménez Solís, poet, académic, and cultural journalist (d. August 20, 2017).
- Antonio Riva Palacio, governor of Morelos 1988-1994 (d. 2014)
References
- Tuck, Jim (1997). "Cristero Rebellion: part 1 – toward the abyss". Mexconnect.
- "LETICIA PALMA", Sensacine (in Spanish), retrieved August 23, 2019
- "Vicente Aranda (militar)". Durango Mas. 2013-11-12. Retrieved Feb 14, 2019.
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