LET'S FIGHT BACK

LET'S FIGHT BACK
GOD BLESS AMERICA

Thursday, December 1, 2022

CSI

12/1/2022
 
A publication of the Cuban Studies Institute
“Bits of Cuban History” is a new series of weekly publications highlighting historical events and information from Cuba’s colonial and national periods.
 
We hope you enjoy this new publication.
 
Following is the 46th in this new series.
 
 
BITS OF CUBAN HISTORY
 
 Machadato. The Presidential term of
Gerardo Machado y Morales

 


Gerardo Machado y Morales (1871-1919). President of Cuba, 1925-1933, was born in Santa Clara and spent his childhood in the family cattle estate, attended private schools and in his early 20s engaged in growing and selling tobacco.  His father fought for the rebels in the Ten Years’ War, becoming a major, and Gerardo joined them in the Independence War of 1895-1898, becoming a brigadier general.  Afterwards he turned to politics.
 
He became alcalde of Santa Clara and was made President Gómez’ inspector general of the armed forces and then his interior minister. Soon afterwards he engaged in farming and business, and, together with American capitalists, invested in public utilities.  Having grown wealthy, he returned to politics in the early 1920s.  He won control of the Partido Liberal, and, with his slogan “water, roads and schools,” won the election of 1924, his election costs apparently paid for by an American electricity company. 
 
His first administration coincided with a period of prosperity.  Sugar production expanded and America provided a close and ready market. He embarked on an ambitious public works program, including the Carretera Central, the National Capitol, the enlarging of the University of Havana, and the expansion of heath care facilities.  He also sponsored a tariff reform bill in 1927 providing protection to some branches of manufacturing industry.
 
But Cuba’s dependence on sugar continued, and American influence and investments increased.  Machado claimed that he alone could carry out his economic program and that, to do so, he needed six more years.  Controlling the Partido Conservador and the smaller Partido Popular (united in the Liga Nacional), the congress and the judiciary, he was able to prevent the growth of formal opposition and convoked the Constitutional Convention of 1928 which permitted his reelection that November with virtually no opposition, to an extended presidential term. But his administration soon faced the problems of the Depression of the 1930s.  Led principally by University students, many Cubans began organized opposition to the regime.  Machado replied with increasing repression. Ex-President Menocal’s “Revolution of 1931” was quickly crushed. In 1932 the underground ABC organization tried to assassinate Machado. Terror and bombings became widespread. US President Franklin Roosevelt sent envoy Sumner Welles to negotiate a peaceful agreement. “La Mediación” failed, but a general strike and the defection of the armed forces (the beginning of the Revolution of 1933) persuaded Machado to flee the country on August 12, 1933.  He settled in Florida and died in Miam Beach, March 29, 1939.
 
 
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