Revolutionary paper currency in Morelos and Guerrero Morelos

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Revolutionary paper currency in Morelos and Morelos As for other areas supposedly under Conventionist control the people of Morelos preferred Zapata s coinage to the dubious Chihuahua notes and refused to accept the latter, whilst hoarding the former. As early as 2 February 1915 González Garza found it necessary to decree that Chihuahua paper currency was to be accepted in Morelos by force, if necessary, through only the notes revalidated by his government in Mexico City would be valid. In the next five days González Garza received numerous queries from the Zapatista commanders of various towns about the forced circulation of the Conventionist currency - a niece of Zapata was among those reported to have refused to accept the paper money{footnote}agn, Archives RGG. González Garza to Presidente Municipal, Jojutla, 17 February 1915{/footnote}. On 12 February the Comandante Militar in Cuernavaca listed as of compulsory acceptance the issues of the states of Durango, Chihuahua and Sonora, the Monclova, the so-called Villista, the Gobierno Provisional, the Gobierno Constitucionalista and Carbajal "Bonos". In the first week of February 1915, Zapata left Mexico City to bolster the revolutionary movement in. A Banco Revolucionario in that state had issued more than a million pesos in paper currency, of such poor quality that they were popularly known as tordillos (dapple-greys). Zapata had wrung an agreement from González Garza to provide him with eight hundred thousand pesos from the Convention s fast dwindling store to take the notes out of circulation. On 9 February Zapata wrote to González Garza from Iguala complaining that, though a commission had arrived from Cuernavaca with the money, more than five hundred thousand pesos were unstamped. The people of, said Zapata, would no more accept these s ábanas blancas than their own tordillos. He asked that González Garza send an equal quantity of good currency immediately to replace the unstamped notes and, in addition, to make available the machine with which to revalidate the sábanas blancas already in circulation{footnote}agn, Archives RGG. Zapata to González Garza, 9 February 1915{/footnote}. González Garza replied the next day the money had been sent though he insisted that all the sábanas were valid, even though some might be inconvenientes 1 / 5

{footnote}agn, Archives RGG. González Garza to Zapata, 10 February 1915{/footnote}. Sábanas-style notes of the Ejército Libertador The title Ejército Libertador was used by the Zapatistas in Morelos and and these states will have been the source of three notes with designs based on the $10 sábanas. These $1, $2 and $10 values with a blue underprint have several distinctive features: they have continuous border frames; there are no commas following Tesorero General del Estado and Interventor ; there are no abbreviations ( Num. or No. ) before the serial numbers; there is no dot before Vargas signature, and no printer s imprint at the bottom, which suggest that they were issued somewhere other than Chihuahua. The notes have three violet overprints on their backs all applied in one pass, a central circular Tesorería General seal, which differs from the original Chihuahua seal in size, font and details, and two Ejército Libertador resellos. The $2 note is also known with an additional Brigada Malpica resello. 2 / 5

Ejército Libertador: a 49.5mm violet oval with REPUBLICA MEXICANA - EJERCITO LIBERTADOR - COMANDANCIA Brigada Pacheco: a 49.5mm violet oval with 'REPUBLICA MEXICANA - EJERCITO LIBERTADOR - BRIGADA PACHECO-DETALL' The Brigada Pacheco was commanded by General Francisco V. Pacheco of Huitzilac, Morelos. When the Convention named Villa as Commander in Chief of the Conventionalist Army he was nominally commander of Zapata s Ejército Libertador though he went to great lengths when he met Zapata to assure him that he would continue to command. Their subordinates, however, immediately began to manoeuvre for individual power, destroying the co-operation between the two armies within only a few months. In May 1915 Roque González Garza appointed Pacheco Minister of War, indicating his trust in Pacheco and by extension the trust of Villa. By late 1915 Pacheco was feeling Zapata s lack of confidence in him and insisted that he was still a loyal member of the Ejército Libertador, thus making Zapata even more suspicious. On 13 March 1916 Pacheco withdrew his forces from Huitzilac and Cuernavaca leaving the area open to occupation by Carranza s forces. Zapata was appalled and went, personally, to see what Pacheco was doing. On 27 March Pacheco presented Zapata with a written description of his plan: he would take a strong column to the north, encircle Carranza s army and attack it from the rear. Zapata presumed that Pacheco was either crazy or intended to defect, either to Villa or 3 / 5

to Carranza, and had him taken prisoner and shot. Brigada Malpica: the blue text BRIGADA MALPICA within an ornate design In February 1914 the Tampico, one of the three gunboats that comprised the Guaymas squadron, under the urging of Primer Teniente Hilario Rodríguez Malpica defected to the revolution in Topolobampo. Malpica was put in command. The T ampico was blockaded in Topolobampo by the federals and Morelos and during one encounter almost destroyed. After repairs it put to sea at the beginning of June to attack Mazatlán buts its boilers failed. In the morning of 16 June the sighted it adrift and sunk it. Malpica took his own life and went down with the ship. There might have been a brigade named in Malpica s honour or in honour of his father of the same name who was Madero s Jefe de Estado Mayor and with him when he was arrested. So these notes were probably produced in Cuernavaca, Morelos at the request of Pacheco and with González Garza s (and by implication Villa s) knowledge and approval, for use by Pacheco s troops. On 10 October 1915 the Ministerio de Hacienda y Crédito Publico authorised an issue of vales of one and five pesos and on 10 January 1916 the Consejo Ejecutivo in Cuernavaca ratified this decree and authorised the ministry to issue $2 and $10 notes{footnote}agn, Colección Cuartel General del Sur, vol. 1, exp. 2.25. An undated note records that the Ministero de Hacienda was unwilling to send the clichés for the $2 and $10 notes (AGN, Fondo Emiliano Zapata, caja 20, exp. 9){/footnote}. These pronouncements might be connected with this issue. 4 / 5

All three values are very rare, as they were produced for a short time and became worthless once Carranza s forces took over. 5 / 5