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Henry Lane Wilson

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Henry Lane Wilson
Wilson c. 1890
United States Ambassador to Mexico
In office
December 21, 1909 (1909-12-21) – July 17, 1913 (1913-07-17)[1]
PresidentWilliam Howard Taft
Woodrow Wilson
Preceded byDavid Eugene Thompson
Succeeded byHenry P. Fletcher
United States Minister to Belgium
In office
May 5, 1905 – December 25, 1909[1]
PresidentTheodore Roosevelt
William Howard Taft
Preceded byLawrence Townsend
Succeeded byCharles Page Bryan
United States Minister to Chile
In office
September 14, 1897 – July 18, 1904[1]
PresidentWilliam McKinley
Theodore Roosevelt
Preceded byEdward H. Strobel
Succeeded byJohn Hicks
Personal details
Born(1857-11-03)November 3, 1857
Crawfordsville, Indiana, U.S.
DiedDecember 22, 1932(1932-12-22) (aged 75)
Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S.
Resting placeCrown Hill Cemetery
Spouse
Alice Vajen
(m. 1885)
RelationsJohn L. Wilson (brother)
Parent
Alma materWabash College
Occupation
  • Attorney
  • journalist
Known forInvolvement in the assassination of Francisco I. Madero

Henry Lane Wilson (November 3, 1857 – December 22, 1932) was an American attorney, journalist, and diplomat who served successively as United States Minister to Chile (1897–1904), Minister to Belgium (1905–09), and Ambassador to Mexico (1909–13). He is best known to history for his involvement in the February 1913 coup d'etat which deposed and assassinated President of Mexico Francisco I. Madero, for which he remains controversial and "perhaps the most vilified United States official of [the 20th] century" in Mexico.[2][3]

Wilson was appointed by President William Howard Taft to the post of United States Ambassador to Mexico in 1910. He brought together opponents of Mexico's democratically-elected President Francisco I. Madero in the Pact of the Embassy, colluding with them to stage a coup d'etat in February 1913.[4][5] Soon after President Woodrow Wilson took office in March 1913, he was appalled to learn that the American ambassador was involved in the plot in which the president and vice president of Mexico were murdered. President Wilson recalled him from his post as ambassador.[6]

Biography

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Wilson was born in Crawfordsville, Indiana, to Congressman James Wilson and his wife, Emma Ingersoll. In 1866, his father was appointed to the position of Minister Resident to Venezuela by President Andrew Johnson and served in that role until his death in Caracas, Venezuela, on August 8, 1867. Henry Lane Wilson was a law graduate of Wabash College and practiced law and published a newspaper (the Lafayette Journal)[7] in Lafayette, Indiana. He married Alice Vajen in 1885,[8] and moved to Spokane, Washington, where he was in business until he was wiped out financially in the Panic of 1893.[9]

Diplomatic Service

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Wilson served in the U.S. Foreign Service during the presidencies of William McKinley (1897–1901), Theodore Roosevelt (1901–1909), and William Howard Taft (1909–1913), and briefly under Woodrow Wilson. He was appointed Minister to Chile in 1897, remaining in that capacity until 1904, when he was made Minister to Belgium, serving in Brussels during the height of the Congo Free State controversy.

Wilson was appointed Ambassador to Mexico by President Taft on December 21, 1909. At the time it was the only diplomatic post with the rank of ambassador.[10] He presented his credentials to President Porfirio Diaz on March 5, 1910.[11] Wilson arrived in Mexico following the fraudulent elections that kept Díaz in office; he had been continuously elected since 1884. A liberal general who came to power initially by coup in 1876, Díaz had opened Mexico to foreign investment and development of infrastructure, with U.S. business interests investing capital in the petroleum industry, mining, ranching and agriculture. From the U.S. government and business perspective, the stability of Díaz's authoritarian government brought stability and material progress to Mexico while generating huge profits to foreign interests. However, in 1910, there was a serious challenger to Díaz, now 80 years old. Francisco I. Madero, the scion of a rich, landowning family in northern Mexico, brought together a broad coalition of Mexicans opposed to Díaz. Rebels in northern Mexico and in the state of Morelos put pressure on Díaz, who resigned. An interim government was established, and Madero was elected president in November 1911. From the start, Ambassador Wilson was critical of President Madero and worked to promote U.S. interests, ultimately involving, or even spearheading, the coup that ousted Madero in February 1913.

Coup against Madero

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When Díaz was forced to resign in 1911, his Mexican political supporters and the foreign powers and businesses that had benefited from his policies regarding investments saw that the new president was unable to effectively lead. Wilson was "a natural ally of reactionary elements including U.S. and Mexican business interests, the Catholic Church, and eventually high-ranking members of the federal army".[12] Wilson was a master manipulator of information and disinformation, which helped amplify the Mexican public's and foreign powers' perceptions that Madero was a naïve bungler, opposed to the interests of the U.S. He had direct contacts with the Associated Press, which conveyed news about Mexico to the U.S. and the English-language Mexico City Herald, whose American readership became increasingly unsettled by their coverage of the Madero government.

The coup d'état of General Victoriano Huerta, Felix Díaz, and General Bernardo Reyes against Madero was launched in February 1913, now known as the Ten Tragic Days. Mexico City was the site of armed violence between those supporting Madero and the rebels. The violence was the culmination of the psychological campaign that prepared those disposed to believe Madero an incapable leader to welcome his forced resignation. Although the Pact of the Embassy was to have a power-sharing arrangement between the leaders of the Mexican coup and the U.S., Huerta seized power once events were underway. The murders of Madero and his vice president were not explicitly part of the Pact of the Embassy. There was enough plausible deniability for Wilson and the Department of State to escape sanctions, but in Mexico, they are considered culpable for their deaths.[13] Wilson was purported to even have assisted in arranging the murder of Madero's brother, Gustavo A. Madero, all of which was later disputed by Wilson.[14][15]

In a 1916 interview with American journalist Robert Hammond Murray, Madero's widow, Sara Pérez Romero de Madero, described an audience she had with the U.S. ambassador during her husband's captivity. Wilson refused to use his influence to save the president's life, telling her, "I will be honest with you, Madam. Your husband's fall is because he never agreed to consult me. You know your husband had very peculiar ideas." According to Pérez, Wilson claimed that unlike Madero, Huerta did consult him as to what to do with the president and vice president, to which he answered to "do what is best for the interests of the nation".[16][17][18]

After the inauguration of President Woodrow Wilson on March 4, 1913, he was informed of events in Mexico by a special agent, William Bayard Hale. The new president was appalled by Henry Lane Wilson's role in the coup against Madero.[19] Hale reported that "Madero would never have been assassinated had the American Ambassador made it thoroughly understood that the plot must stop short of murder", and accused Henry Lane Wilson of "treason, perfidy and assassination in an assault on constitutional government".[20] The President sought information independent of that provided by Henry Lane Wilson by sending John Lind, the former governor of Minnesota, to Mexico as his personal envoy. On July 17, 1913,[11] the president dismissed Ambassador Wilson. The ambassador advocated for the diplomatic recognition of General Huerta's government, which the new U.S. president refused to do,[21] providing an opening for forces opposed to Huerta's government to rise in armed rebellion.

In his memoirs published in 1927, the former ambassador criticized Madero's character and intelligence, without making mention of his own role in the Pact of the Embassy and the coup against the Mexican president:

Madero was a person of unsound intellect, of imperfect education and vision. He was a disciple in the least the deep of the French school in politics and economics, but never gathered for the uses of practical application its threads of philosophy or comprehended the deep common sense which lies at the root of all French political opinion. He came into power as an apostle of liberty but he was simply a man of disoriented intellect who happened to be in the public eye at the psychological moment. the responsibilities of office and the disappointments growing out of rivalries and intrigues shattered his reason completely, and in the last days of his government, during the bombardment of the capital, his mental qualities always abnormal, developed into a homicidal, dangerous form of lunacy....[22]

Post-government activities

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During World War I, Wilson served on the Commission for Relief in Belgium and, in 1915, accepted the chairmanship of the Indiana State Chapter of the League to Enforce Peace, a position he held until his resignation over U.S. involvement in the League of Nations after the close of the war. Wilson was a member of Sons of the American Revolution, Society of Colonial Wars, and the Loyal Legion.[8] He published his memoir in 1927 and died in Indianapolis in 1932. He is buried in Crown Hill Cemetery, Indianapolis.

References

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  1. ^ a b c "Henry Lane Wilson - People - Department History - Office of the Historian". history.state.gov. Office of the Historian of the United States State Department. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
  2. ^ Grieb, Kenneth. "Henry Lane Wilson". Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture, v. 5, 460
  3. ^ Zolov, Eric. "Henry Lane Wilson". Encyclopedia of Mexico, 1607.
  4. ^ Holden, Robert H. and Eric Zolov, eds. Latin America and the United States: A Documentary History. Document No. 38. 1913. "Pact of the Embassy". New York: Oxford University Press 2010,2011, 101-103.
  5. ^ Katz, Friedrich. The Secret War in Mexico: Europe, the United States, and the Mexican Revolution. Chicago: University of Chicago Press 1981, 100-12
  6. ^ Schoultz, Lars. Beneath the United States: A History of U.S. Policy toward Latin America. Cambridge: Harvard University Press 1998, 240
  7. ^ Marquis Who's Who in America, 1901 edition, via Archive.org
  8. ^ a b [1] Archived September 25, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ "Inventory of the Henry Lane Wilson Papers, 1910-40". Oac.cdlib.org. Retrieved December 7, 2014.
  10. ^ Grieb, "Henry Lane Wilson", 460
  11. ^ a b "HENRY LANE WILSON : 1857 - 1932 : Conservative Republican Ambassador plots against Mexican President". Emersonkent.com. Retrieved December 7, 2014.
  12. ^ Zolov, "Henry Lane Wilson", 1608.
  13. ^ Zolov, "Henry Lane Wilson", 1608
  14. ^ McLynn, Frank (2002). Villa and Zapata. Carroll & Graf. ISBN 0-7867-1088-8.
  15. ^ "Henry Lane Wilson Sues. Asks $350,000 from Norman Hapgood for Alleged Libel" (PDF). New York Times. 11 May 1916. Retrieved December 7, 2014.
  16. ^ "REVOLUCIÓN MEXICANA E INTERVENCIÓN NORTEAMERICANA". 21 November 2019. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  17. ^ Isidro Fabela, Historia diplomática de la Revolución Mexicana, I. (1912-1917), México, Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1958, pp. 175-183;
  18. ^ Breve historia de la Revolución Mexicana. Los antecedentes y la etapa maderista, México, Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1986,(Colección Popular, 17), pp. 364-375.
  19. ^ "Yahoo". Archived from the original on September 24, 2012. Retrieved December 7, 2014.
  20. ^ Schoultz, Lars (1998). Beneath the United States: a history of U.S. policy toward Latin America ([Fourth printing]. ed.). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University: Harvard University Press. p. 240. ISBN 0-674-92276-X.
  21. ^ Grieb, "Henry Lane Wilson", 460
  22. ^ excerpt reproduced in Robert H. Holden and Eric Zolov, eds. Latin America and the United States: A Documentary History. Document No. 38. 1913. "Pact of the Embassy". New York: Oxford University Press 2010, 2011, p. 103.

Further reading

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  • Blaisdell, Lowell L. “Henry Lane Wilson and the Overthrow of Madero.” Southwestern Social Science Quarterly 43#2 (1962), pp. 126–35, online
  • Shoemaker, Raymond L. “Henry Lane Wilson and Republican Policy toward Mexico, 1913-1920.” Indiana Magazine of History 76#2 (1980), pp. 103–22, online.
  • Woodbury, Ronald G. “Wilson y La Intervención de Veracruz: Análisis Historiográfico.” Historia Mexicana 17#2 (1967), pp. 263–92, online in Spanish.

Primary sources

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  • Wilson, Henry Lane. “Errors with Reference to Mexico and Events That Have Occurred There.” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science vol. 54, (1914), pp. 148–61, online.
  • Wilson, Henry Lane. “How to Restore Peace in Mexico.” Journal of International Relations 11#2 (1920), pp. 181–89, online.


Diplomatic posts
Preceded by Ambassador to Chile
1897–1904
Succeeded by
John Hicks
Preceded by Ambassador to Belgium
1905–1909
Succeeded by
Preceded by Ambassador to Mexico
1909–1913
Succeeded by