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cover of episode History Daily: The Battle of Puebla on Cinco de Mayo

History Daily: The Battle of Puebla on Cinco de Mayo

2025/5/5
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It's the morning of May 5th, 1862 in the town of Puebla in central Mexico. An army general named Ignacio Zaragoza strides along the ramparts of a stone fortress. Ignacio peers over the parapet into the valley below, where a force of almost 6,000 French soldiers march toward the fortress walls, their bayonets gleaming. As Ignacio turns to survey his own battalion, a force of only 2,000 men, a look of concern creeps across his face.

He's outnumbered by close to three to one. He knows defeat is all but certain, but he also knows his men are courageous patriots who will stop at nothing to defend Mexico from the invading French army, who are readying their cannons. The deafening blast shatters the morning tranquility. The air fills with smoke and debris as artillery shells rain down on the Mexican defenses. The sound of explosions and shrapnel and agonized screams reverberate around the fortress walls.

Amidst the chaos, Ignacio orders his men to return fire. But there are simply too many French soldiers. Before long, the invaders are at the fortress gates. Ignacio tries to rally his men, but morale is beginning to waver. But just when Ignacio himself is beginning to lose hope, a thunderclap echoes through the valley. A split second later, the heavens open, and torrential rain begins pouring from the sky.

Within minutes, the steep incline toward the fortress has turned into a muddy bog, and the French attackers cannot find purchase in the slippery wet earth. The Mexican gunners take advantage of the moment, firing into the French lines and inflicting a heavy toll. Soon, a bugle sounds. As the commander of the French army orders an urgent retreat, Ignacio seizes his opportunity.

At his signal, the fortress gates open and his Mexican soldiers charge, driving away the last of the French invaders. During the Battle of Puebla, as this bloody clash will come to be known, outnumbered Mexican forces will be victorious as General Ignacio Zaragoza leads his men in repelling a superior French force. But the Mexicans' heroics at Puebla will prove to be in vain.

Soon the French army will regroup and seize Mexico City, forcing the Mexican president into exile. But in the years that follow, the Mexicans launch a counterattack against their occupiers, and the victory of Puebla will provide a vital source of morale. The date of the battle, May 5th, or Cinco de Mayo in Spanish, will become a national holiday, a time to celebrate the heroic actions of the brave soldiers who fought and died for their freedom at the Battle of Puebla on May 5th, 1862.

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On its surface, the story of Whole Foods is about how an idealistic founder made good on his dream of changing American food culture. But it's also a case study about the conflict between ambition and idealism and what gets lost on the way to the top. Listen to Business Wars, The Whole Foods Rebellion, wherever you get your podcasts. From Noiser and Airship, I'm Lindsey Graham, and this is History Daily. History Daily

History is made every day. On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world. Today is May 5th, 1862, the Battle of Puebla on Cinco de Mayo. It's March 1st, 1854, eight years before the Battle of Puebla. In the town of Ayutla in southwest Mexico, a meeting of some of the country's keenest political minds is taking place.

tall man with wavy white hair stands to address the room. Juan Alvarez, a governor of the state of Guerrero, is an outspoken critic of Mexico's prime minister, the military general Antonio López de Santa Anna.

Ever since Mexico achieved independence from Spain in 1821, two political groups have been vying for control over the country, liberals and conservatives. When the conservative Santa Anna seized power in 1852, he established himself as a dictator, to the dismay of most Mexican liberals. By 1854, Juan Oliver as a state guerrero remains one of the few liberal strongholds left in Mexico, and the region has become the epicenter of a resistance to Santa Anna's regime.

Today, Juan Alvarez has assembled a meeting of prominent liberals to draft a plan to overthrow the dictator. Alvarez believes this plan will receive widespread support. He knows that many Mexican people resent Santa Anna, largely due to his mishandling of foreign affairs. Following its defeat in the Mexican-American War, Mexico faced bankruptcy.

Santa Anna sought to balance the books by selling Mexican territory to the United States, yielding vast swaths of what is now Arizona and New Mexico, a transaction known as the Gadsen Purchase. But this was seen by many Mexicans as a humiliating concession. In addition, Santa Anna increased taxes, putting further strain on the pockets of many ordinary Mexicans.

But even though Santa Anna's popularity is waning, he retains control over most of the country. Crucially, he still has the support of the army and the Catholic Church, two of Mexico's most powerful institutions. Only in Guerrero is Santa Anna's authority in question. And so, in April 1854, Santa Anna sends troops to Guerrero's largest city, Acapulco, hoping to extinguish the flames of dissent.

His troops arrive in Acapulco on April 19th, but a liberal force, commanded by Juan Alvarez's deputy, Ignacio Comanfort, has readied the town's defenses. A week-long siege begins, but Santa Anna's men cannot breach the battlements. Forced to retreat, the government's army returns to Mexico City in defeat.

But along the way, Santa Anna's soldiers burn down any villages they suspect are harboring liberal rebels. But this only serves to strengthen support for Alvarez's cause. By the summer of 1855, Santa Anna's authoritarian leadership has alienated many in his own army. And on August 12th, the dictator is forced to abdicate power and flee to Cuba.

With Santa Anna deposed, Juan Alvarez becomes president and appoints a cabinet of leading liberals, including Ignacio Comanfort, who becomes minister for war. Immediately, the new government begins dismantling the old conservative state. They introduce a series of reforms that seek to limit the power of the army and church by confiscating land and abolishing military courts.

The new regime also safeguards civil liberties, such as freedom of speech and freedom of the press. In 1857, they enshrined these laws in a brand new Mexican constitution. For many, Mexico has finally freed itself from a repressive conservative order and emerged as a modern, open-minded democracy. But not everybody approves of these reforms. Conservatives in the Catholic Church and the military fiercely opposed the new liberal government, which they believe came to power unlawfully.

But now Alvarez has been succeeded as president by his minister for war, Ignacio Comanfort. And as opposition to the 1857 Constitution grows, Comanfort tries to quell the fires of rebellion by appeasing angry conservatives. He orders a second constitution to be written by a conservative general named Felix Uluaga. This document, known as the Plan of Takubaya, renders the 1857 Constitution void and abolishes many of its democratic laws.

Comanfort hopes that the plan of Tucabaya will appease conservatives and stave off civil strife. But the gamble does not pay off. Instead, it polarizes the nation even further, splitting Mexico into those who support the plan and those who still support the 1857 Constitution. Unable to unite the nation, Comanfort resigns in January 1858. He is replaced by another of Juan Alvarez's original cabinet members, a prominent lawyer named Benito Juarez.

Juarez is a radical liberal, and his appointment deepens Mexico's divisions. Conservatives refuse to recognize him as president, and instead they swear allegiance to the general who drafted the plan of Takubaya, Felix Uluaga.

Soon, both sides assemble armies and prepare for war. Over the next two years, bloody skirmishes will break out between liberals and conservatives. Initially, the conservatives gain the upper hand by driving Benito Juarez out of Mexico City and into hiding in the port city of Veracruz. But after several failed attempts to capture the city, the conservative force is left weakened.

In late 1860, Benito Juarez launches a counterattack. On December 22nd, a force of 16,000 liberal troops marches on Mexico City, clashing with 8,000 conservative soldiers. The conservatives are vanquished, and the triumphant liberal army marches into Mexico City on January 1st, 1861.

The liberals have won the Reform War, as this conflict will come to be known, and Benito Juarez is recognized as the undisputed leader of Mexico. But it will be a hollow victory. During the war, both conservatives and liberals found themselves short of funds. They borrowed heavily from international creditors. And just as Benito Juarez begins settling into his presidency, those creditors will send fleets of ships to demand their money back.

Hey, I'm Mike Corey, the host of Wondery's podcast, Against the Odds. In each episode, we take you to the edge of some of the most incredible adventure and survival stories in history. In our next season, it's 1980, and in the Pacific Northwest, the long, dormant volcano Mount St. Helens is showing signs of life. Scientists warn that a big eruption is coming, but a restricted zone around the mountain is limited by politics.

On May 18th, hikers, loggers, reporters, and researchers are caught in the blast zone as the volcano erupts. They find themselves pummeled by a deadly combination of scorching heat, smothering ash, and massive mudslides. The survivors have to find their way to safety before they succumb to their injuries.

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Whole Foods started in the counterculture city of Austin, Texas, and it took pride in being anti-corporate and outside the mainstream. But like the city itself, Whole Foods has morphed over the years, for better and perhaps for worse, and is now a multi-billion dollar brand. In the latest season of Business Wars, we explore the meteoric rise of the Whole Foods brand. On its surface, it's a story of how an idealistic founder made good on his dream of changing American food culture.

But it's also a case study in the conflict between ambition and idealism, how lofty goals can wilt under the harsh light of financial realities, and what gets lost on the way to the top. Follow Business Wars on the Wondery app or wherever you get your podcasts. You can binge Business Wars, The Whole Foods Rebellion, early and ad-free right now on Wondery+. It's October 31st, 1861, seven months before the Battle of Puebla.

On a cold autumn day in London, delegates from Britain, France and Spain are meeting to sign a military alliance.

During the Mexican Reform War, in which the liberal forces of Benito Juarez defeated the conservative army of Felix Zuluaga, large sums of money were provided to both sides by creditors in Britain, France, and Spain. But following his victory, Benito Juarez decided to delay debt repayments until the Mexican economy recovered. This was not acceptable to the European powers. So today, their delegates are in London to decide how to get their money back.

As part of this new alliance, these three nations agree to send battleships to take control of Mexico's ports, where they will seize customs income on imported goods. The purpose of the alliance is to get their money, not to topple the Mexican government. And in fact, one term of the pact forbids any of the signatories from attempting to overthrow the Mexican government. Delegates from all three countries sign the agreement, but only Britain and Spain will stick to the terms of the deal.

For many years, France's leader, Napoleon III, has nursed a secret ambition to restore France to its former imperial glory. Political instability in Mexico has made the country vulnerable and an obvious target for French expansionism. Napoleon also wants to limit the growing power of the United States and to establish a French puppet regime in the Americas.

But despite his desire to conquer Mexico, Napoleon has not been able to invade, knowing the inevitable opposition he would face. The U.S. is committed to actively resisting any European colonialism in the Western Hemisphere, a policy called the Monroe Doctrine, espoused by America's fifth president and a founding father, James Monroe. But earlier this year, in April 1861, America was plunged into a civil war.

And with the U.S. government preoccupied with domestic turmoil, France was finally free to pursue its imperial designs on Mexico. All Napoleon needed was an excuse. And when Mexican President Benito Juarez refused to repay the wartime loans, Napoleon leapt at the opportunity to join the alliance, knowing full well he intended to violate its terms. In December 1861, France, Britain, and Spain deploy a fleet to seize control of Veracruz on the eastern coast of Mexico.

According to their pact, these three countries are supposed to leave Mexico after they've recouped their loans. But it quickly becomes clear that France's ambitions go far beyond debt repayment, and the alliance fractures. By April 1862, British and Spanish troops have withdrawn from Mexico, but the French remain.

Then, on April 20th, France declares war on Mexico, and the French army begins a march towards Mexico City. The first major town the French troops reach is Puebla, a hundred miles south of the capital, and on May 5th, the invading force launches an attack.

But the French artillery bombardment and their superior numbers are unable to break down the stout Mexican defenses. Under the courageous leadership of Ignacio Zaragoza, the Mexican soldiers keep the invaders at bay. Their cause is further aided when heavy rainfall turns the ground around the fortress into a muddy swamp, slowing the French advance. The invaders are forced to disperse under heavy musket fire, and Mexico claims its first victory against the French.

Soon, President Juarez declares the anniversary of the Battle of Puebla a national holiday, known throughout the country as Cinco de Mayo. But the morale boost following the Battle of Puebla will not last. Five months later, in October 1862, 30,000 French reinforcements arrive in Mexico. The newly strengthened French army proceeds to sweep through the country, capturing town after town until the invading force enters Mexico City on June 10, 1863.

President Juarez is forced to flee north to the city of Monterey, where he sets up a government in exile. The French military declares Mexico a client state of the French Empire. All that's left to do is install a monarch, and Napoleon III believes he's found a perfect candidate. The Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian of Austria is an ambitious European aristocrat and an ally of Napoleon.

He is the younger brother of the Austrian emperor, Franz Josef, and a member of the illustrious Habsburg dynasty. With few career prospects in Europe, Maximilian is eager for the chance to rule Mexico and extend the Habsburg Empire to the Americas. So in May 1864, Maximilian and his wife Carlotta arrive in Mexico City.

There, they are lavished with decadent banquets and extravagant exhibitions, celebrating the glory of their new Mexican kingdom. But far from the opulence of the capital, a campaign of terror is being waged in the countryside. As the French army seeks to stamp out any opposition to the new imperial regime, they often torture and execute suspected dissidents.

And by 1865, President Benito Juarez and the remaining liberals have been pushed further north to the far-flung city of Chihuahua, where they lacked the resources to mount a challenge to Emperor Maximilian. Soon, however, events in the United States will ripple south across the border and spell the beginning of the end of French intervention in Mexico.

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In the early hours of December 4th, 2024, CEO Brian Thompson stepped out onto the streets of Midtown Manhattan. This assailant starts firing at him. And the suspect... He has been identified as Luigi Nicholas Mangione. ...became one of the most divisive figures in modern criminal history.

It was meant to sow terror. He's awoken the people to a true issue. Listen to Law and Crime's Luigi exclusively on Wondery Plus. You can join Wondery Plus in the Wondery app, Spotify, or Apple Podcasts. It's April 1865 in Mexico City, three years after the Battle of Puebla. Inside the Imperial Palace, the Empress Carlotta of Mexico writes a letter to her husband, the Emperor Maximilian, who is away on administrative duty.

The Smiling Empress writes, The mood here in the palace is excellent, before going on to describe an incredible event that occurred just days earlier in Washington, D.C. While attending the performance of a play at Ford's Theater in Washington, American President Abraham Lincoln was shot and killed by a well-known stage actor named John Wilkes Booth. The news of Lincoln's assassination is welcome in the Mexican imperial household because Lincoln was a vocal critic of the Habsburg Empire in Mexico.

For a time, Lincoln was unable to provide military support to Benito Juarez and the liberals due to the ongoing civil war in America. But then, earlier this month, the years-long conflict came to an end with a Union victory. And with the Confederate rebels defeated, many in the Maximilian regime feared Lincoln might turn his sights south. But with Lincoln now dead, Emperor Maximilian promptly sends envoys to Washington to seek an alliance with the new president, Andrew Johnson.

But Johnson, like his predecessor, resents European colonialism in Mexico. He has no intention of recognizing the legitimacy of Maximilian's kingdom. He ignores the envoys and instead pledges his support for Benito Juarez.

Soon, American weapons and soldiers begin pouring over the southern border, equipping Benito Juarez and the liberals with the resources they need to oppose the French army. President Johnson also sends a threat to France's leader, Napoleon III, telling him that unless France leaves Mexico, there can be no friendship between the two nations.

And by now, the cost of maintaining a military presence in Mexico has become too much for Napoleon to bear. In 1866, he writes to Maximilian to inform him that all men, money, and supplies from France will be cut off. One year later, following an effective guerrilla campaign by Benito Juarez and his army, Maximilian is captured and forced to surrender.

On June 19, 1867, Emperor Maximilian is executed by firing squad. Benito Juarez will be reinstated as president, and Mexico will finally enjoy a period of political stability. In a letter to an American officer who fought for the liberal army against the French, Juarez will express his gratitude, writing, "...to make every sacrifice and to suffer every privation for the Mexican Republic was a spirit so noble that it could not be put into language."

Today, many who celebrate Cinco de Mayo outside of Mexico have forgotten or never knew the true history behind the day. But in Mexico, it is a prideful remembrance of some of the nation's greatest heroes, Ignacio Zaragoza and the patriotic men who bravely defended their country from tyranny on May 5th, 1862. Next on History Daily, May 6th, 1983, an explosive diary supposedly written by Adolf Hitler is revealed to be a hoax.

From Noiser and Airship, this is History Daily. Hosted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsey Graham. Audio editing and sound design by Molly Bond. Music by Lindsey Graham. This episode is written and researched by Joe Viner. Executive producers are Stephen Walters for Airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser. ♪

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