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Bernardo Reyes

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Years of service
  
1865-1913

Role
  
Mexican Politician

Battles/wars
  
Mexican Revolution


Signature
  

Rank
  
General officer

Name
  
Bernardo Reyes

Children
  
Alfonso Reyes

Bernardo Reyes Memoria Poltica de Mxico

Died
  
February 9, 1913, Mexico City, Mexico

Similar People
  
Felix Diaz, Alfonso Reyes, Victoriano Huerta, Pascual Orozco, Francisco I Madero

Battles and wars
  
Mexican Revolution

Porfirio diaz y bernardo reyes las formas de gobernar


Bernardo Reyes (August 1850 – February 9, 1913) was a Mexican general and politician. Born in a prominent liberal family in the western state of Jalisco, he served in the army, rising to the rank of general. Like his political patron, General and then President Porfirio Díaz, Reyes was a military man who became an able administrator. Reyes was one of the state governors that Díaz appointed, serving as governor of the northern state of Nuevo León. He implemented Porfirian policy, particularly eliminating political rivals, but also building his own power base. He helped in the modernization of that state, enabling local industrialization, improving public education and health, and supporting improvements in the lives of workers. While governor of Nuevo León, Reyes approved a workers compensation law. Followers of Reyes were known as Reyistas.

Bernardo Reyes La obra literariomilitar del General Bernardo Reyes

Reyes served in the cabinet for two years as Minister of War, and there he created an expanded military force, the Second Reserve which had some 30,000 men and a significant budget. The force came to be considered Reyes's private army by the Cientificos. Reyes was emerging as a counterweight to the influence of the Científicos. As Díaz aged and the presidential succession became an open topic of discussion, he was emerging as a potential candidate. Díaz disbanded the Second Reserve and Reyes returned to Nuevo León as governor, and his popularity grew. A way to manage the presidential succession would have been to have a viable candidate run in the 1910 elections as Díaz's vice president. Clubs supporting Reyes were organized in a number of major cities, although Reyes himself did not openly court political power and actively supported Díaz's run for the presidency despite his published statement that he was not going to seek re-election.

Bernardo Reyes Historia de Nuevo Leon

The center of Reyes's political power was in his home state of Jalisco; Díaz's supporters closed Reyes clubs and jailed their leaders. His main support came from the middle class, many of whom had connections to the now disbanded Second Reserve. Reyes was seen as a reformer, anti-Científico, pro-business, with a strong following among professionals such as doctors and lawyers, and a viable candidate of the old order with both military and political experience who could manage a presidential transition. He was not an outsider or radical agitator.

Bernardo Reyes Mexicanos con mostacho Mexicans with moustache project

Together with José Yves Limantour, he was considered as one of the potential successors of Porfirio Díaz. With Francisco Madero's latter challenge to the dictator in the 1910 elections and, afterwards, initiation of the Mexican Revolution, previous notions of who should succeed Díaz were discarded.

Bernardo Reyes httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

For a time Reyes was a supporter of Madero, but he later led the first rebellion against Madero. After this rebellion failed, Reyes was imprisoned.

Bernardo Reyes Bernardo Reyes Wikiwand

On 9 February 1913, Manuel Mondragón's forces freed Reyes from prison. Then, they marched on to the National Palace in the beginning of the Decena trágica. Reyes was killed in the initial assault on the palace.

Bernardo Reyes FileBernardo Reyes2jpg Wikimedia Commons

He was the father of the writer Alfonso Reyes, and grandfather of the painter Aurora Reyes.

Bernardo Reyes breyes2jpg

Bernardo Reyes R Diaz Bernardo Reyes 1898 Flickr Photo Sharing

Bernardo Reyes El impacto de Bernardo Reyes en la ciudad Diario Culturamx

References

Bernardo Reyes Wikipedia