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Manuel de la Peña y Peña

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Preceded by
  
Pedro Maria de Anaya


Name
  
Manuel la

Role
  
Politician

Manuel de la Peña y Peña Memoria Poltica de Mxico


Preceded by
  
Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna

Succeeded by
  
Jose Joaquin de Herrera

Born
  
10 March 1789Tacubaya, New Spain (
1789-03-10
)

Died
  
January 2, 1850, Mexico City, Mexico

Succeeded by
  
Pedro Maria de Anaya

José Manuel de la Peña y Peña (10 March 1789 – 2 January 1850) was a Mexican politician and lawyer, interim president of Mexico from 26 September 1847 to 13 November 1847 and president from 8 January 1848 to 3 June 1848.

Contents

Manuel de la Peña y Peña httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Early life and education

Manuel de la Peña y Peña was born in the Viceroyalty of New Spain (colonial México). He was a scholarship student at Seminario Conciliar. He graduated in civil and ecclesiastical jurisprudence on 16 December 1811 as valedictorian of his class.

Mexico

Manuel de la Peña y Peña Manuel de la Pea y Pea 10 de marzo de 1789 2 de enero de 1850

On 26 December 1813, he was named a trustee of the Mexico City government. On 23 February 1820, he was named by the Crown to the Audiencia of Quito, a position he was unable to fill because of the 1821 independence of Mexico.

Manuel de la Peña y Peña The Treaty Of Guadalupe Hidalgo ThingLink

From 10 April 1822, he was a public prosecutor, at a very young age for this position. On 21 October 1822, Emperor Agustín de Iturbide named him minister plenipotentiary to Colombia, but he was unable to occupy this position either, because of the fall of the empire. After the promulgation of the federal constitution, which created the Mexican Supreme Court, he was named to a seat in that body (25 December 1824). Except for a few short gaps, he retained this position until his death.

Manuel de la Peña y Peña Manuel de la Pena

On 22 April 1837, he was named Minister of the Interior, and on 16 November 1838 he was appointed to the Supremo Poder Conservador. He was also a law professor at Universidad Nacional de México, president of the Academy of Jurisprudence, and rector of the College of Lawyers. On 4 December 1841, he was named to edit the Civil Code.

On 3 October 1843, he was designated a senator of the Republic, and he was reelected to that position on 19 November 1845. In 1845, he was also Minister of Foreign Affairs and Minister of the Interior, and plenipotentiary to negotiate an extradition treaty with the Spanish envoy.

Presidency

In 1847, because of the governmental chaos after the United States occupation of the capital, Peña y Peña assumed the interim presidency of the country in his capacity as president of the Supreme Court and by act of Congress. He served from 26 September to 13 November 1847, when he was replaced by Pedro María Anaya. The government was at that time in Querétaro. He was later named president in his own right (not interim) from 8 January to 3 June 1848. The state of Yucatán had seceded from the federation, Michoacán declared sovereignty, and many other states were ignoring the federal government.

During his term of office, the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which ended the war with the United States, was negotiated and signed. Negotiations began on 2 January 1848 and concluded on 2 February. Mexico ceded Texas, New Mexico and Alta California to the United States and received a payment of 15 million dollars.

The treaty had much opposition in Congress, which was meeting in Querétaro, but considering the state of the country and the inability to continue the war, Congress ratified it on 13 May 1848. With the conclusion of the treaty, Peña y Peña resigned the presidency and returned to the Supreme Court. Congress elected General José Joaquín de Herrera president.

References

Manuel de la Peña y Peña Wikipedia