The
Plan of Agua Prieta was a political manifesto signed in the city of Agua Prieta on April 23, 1920, by the governor of Sonora,
Adolfo de la Huerta, and
Plutarco Elías Calles in support of
Álvaro Obregón, with the principal objective of bringing an end to the presidency of
Venustiano Carranza, who was forced to flee Mexico City and was killed a month later. The Plan of Agua Prieta used as its political banner the 1917 Constitution, with which Carranza had not complied. It also advocated the convening of elections, appointed Huerta as supreme commander of the Constitutionalist Army, and dictated the rules for electing a provisional president, resulting in Huerta being named president by Congress in June. Agua Prieta played an important role in the
Mexican Revolution.
Plutarco Elías Calles and
Lázaro Cárdenas, two future presidents of Mexico, both lived in the town during its early years. In 1914, the Hotel Central, a now-demolished hotel in the center of the city, was the seat of Carranza's constitutional government. In 1915,
Pancho Villa made a
night attack on Agua Prieta that was repelled by the forces of
Plutarco Elías Calles, assisted by large searchlights (possibly powered by American electricity). The
Plan de Agua Prieta, a manifesto which called for the rejection of the government headed by
Venustiano Carranza, was signed in a
curiosity shop near the international border in 1920. The army headed by Álvaro Obregón eventually deposed Carranza.
List of mayors • 1952–1954 Don Jesus Siqueiros
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