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Topic: Henry Lane Wilson


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In the News (Sat 26 Dec 09)

  
  Henry Lane Wilson « The Mex Files
Wilson, pro-British, but desperate to keep the United States out of the coming war, hoped that if neither the German nor the British had the clear advantage, the war could be avoided.
What Wilson forgot was that Carranza was a very prickly nationalist and had never gotten over his boyhood meeting with Benito Juarez, who had struggled to keep all foreign governments out.
Wilson was furious, but Carranza had made his point.
mexfiles.wordpress.com /category/mexican-history-1910-20-revolution/henry-lane-wilson   (2285 words)

  
  Victoriano Huerta - Wikipedia
Wilson and Madero detested each other and the dislike had a strong personal basis.
Wilson, a lawyer and sometime publisher who represented big business, characterized the idealistic Madero as a "disorganized brain" and Madero, complaining of Wilson's "impertinences," said he would ask president-elect Woodrow Wilson to remove his obnoxious namesake because "this Henry Lane Wilson is an alcoholic."
Though Wilson loyally backed Huerta's version that Madero had died in a crossfire between his captors and would-be rescuers, it was a story about as believable as the "confessions" of defendants in the Stalin Purge Trials of the 1930s.
ms.wikipedia.org /wiki/Victoriano_Huerta   (1076 words)

  
 La Ciudadela - Centro Artesanal   (Site not responding. Last check: )
The North American ambassador, Henry Lane Wilson sends formless reinforcements to Washington, in those that it exaggerates the opposition to the régime of Timber.
Henry lane Wilson informs falsely to timber that to protect the properties of the North American residents in Mexico, they travel toward the country, wooden ships.
The ambassador Wilson protests in Palacio for the non execution from the ceasing to the fire.
www.laciudadela.com.mx /english/home.html   (1738 words)

  
 Victoriano Huerta - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
After Díaz went into exile Huerta initially pledged allegiance to the new administration of Francisco Madero, and he was retained by the Madero administration.
US President Woodrow Wilson became hostile to the Huerta administration, recalled ambassador Henry Lane Wilson, and demanded Huerta step aside for democratic elections.
When Huerta refused, and with the situation further exacerbated by the Tampico Affair, President Wilson landed US troops to take over Mexico's most important seaport, Veracruz.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Victoriano_Huerta   (453 words)

  
 HISTORY OF MEXICO - GLORIOUS INNOCENT: THE TRAGEDY AND TRIUMPH OF FRANCISCO MADERO - BY JIM TUCK IN MEXICO CONNECT
Admiration for Díaz was a common bond between Wilson and Huerta, the latter having wept when the old dictator was deposed and commanded the guard train that took him into exile.
Madero, infuriated by Henry Lane Wilson's arrogant and patronizing attitude, was delighted by the unrelated Woodrow Wilson's victory in the 1912 presidential race and looked forward to his becoming president in March 1913.
To lend credence to Huerta's fabrication, the faithful Henry Lane Wilson issued a statement insisting that it was the truth.
www.mexconnect.com /mex_/history/jtuck/jtmaderofi.html   (1855 words)

  
 The Mexican Revolution
U.S. ambassador, Henry Lane Wilson, became increasingly hostile to Madero and 100,000 troops were stationed along the border.
Wilson soon succeeds Taft as president and refuses to recognize the Huerta regime.
Wilson finds a pretext for intervention after a party of U.S. sailors on the cruiser Dolphin is arrested after landing in a restricted area of Mexico.
members.aol.com /mikesch/historyhatam1.html   (2747 words)

  
 Faces in the Street | A novel by Pip Wilson | Henry Lawson and Louisa Lawson Australian book | Boiling Billy Press ...
because they help people who, like Henry Lawson, are down on their luck.
Henry and his brother-in-law, Jack Lang (later twice Premier of New South Wales), dodging the police.
Henry's publisher JF Archibald, who also was committed to a mental asylum.
www.boilingbilly.com   (703 words)

  
 The National Palace   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Madero waited, hoping Woodrow Wilson would deal with this Ambassador, who was so obviously out of line, even after he was informed of Lane Wilson's conspiring with Bernardo Reyes.
Woodrow Wilson was indignant at the news of Huerta's behavior and sent arms to Carranza.
In yet another ill-fated intervention, Woodrow Wilson sent a punitive expedition, which won neither battles, nor the support of the people on both sides of the border, who attacked him for meddling.
zedilloworld.presidencia.gob.mx /PAGES/culture/note_20nov.html   (1946 words)

  
 The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Lane
Lane, Alvin H. — of Dallas, Dallas County, Tex. Republican.
Lane, Blanche — of Detroit, Wayne County, Mich. Democrat.
Lane, Julia — of Richland, Benton County, Wash. Democrat.
politicalgraveyard.com /bio/lane.html   (1279 words)

  
 Henry Lane Wilson
Description: Papers from the career of diplomat Wilson (1859-1932), with particular reference to U.S. relations with Mexico, including the "El Chamizal" border dispute.
Wilson was Ambassador to Mexico during the Theodore Roosevelt and Taft administrations.
Use of this collection is by appointment only.
www.usc.edu /libraries/archives/arc/libraries/collections/records/2home.html   (58 words)

  
 Huerta, Victoriano on Encyclopedia.com   (Site not responding. Last check: )
After the revolution of Francisco I. Madero (1911) he aided the new president, who, reluctantly, made him (1912) commander of the federal forces.
In 1913 he plotted secretly with Madero's enemies, including U.S. ambassador Henry Lane Wilson, and overthrew the president.
U.S. President Woodrow Wilson was openly hostile to Huerta, and unpleasant international incidents occurred at Tampico and Veracruz.
www.encyclopedia.com /html/h/huerta-v1.asp   (415 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - William Bayard Hale (Journalism And Publishing, Biography) - Encyclopedia
He wrote (1912) the campaign biography of Woodrow Wilson and helped in the publicity campaign to elect him president.
His report (1913) as confidential agent in Mexico implicated ambassador Henry Lane Wilson in the murder of Francisco Madero by Victoriano Huerta.
The report influenced the president to recall Wilson and initiate a campaign to drive Huerta from Mexico.
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/H/Hale-Wil.html   (258 words)

  
 Henry's Family Web Site - Hosting a family reunion everyday!
There's no better place to stay connected with Henry family and Henry family friends and no easier way to have a reunion then right here at the FREE Henry family web site for sharing.
See who s online when you are and communicate in a private one-on-one chat or a group discussion.
Only you and those you invite are able to share it at the Henry family Web Site.
henry.familysitenetwork.com   (302 words)

  
 Guide to the Jacob Gould Schurman Papers,1867-1942 [1986]
His active interest in politics, the problems of peace and the League of Nations, and his diplomatic activities are discussed in correspondence with William Howard Taft, Charles Evans Hughes, Elihu Root, Henry Lane Wilson, Henry Cabot Lodge, James Wadsworth, Joseph Foraker, and Frank Kellogg, including comments on Gustav Stresemann, German politics, and the German economy.
Wilson, Henry Lane; Slaton, John M.; Frank, Leo.
Wilson, Henry Lane; Borah, William E.; Scott, James Brown; Adamson, Ethel M.; Hammond, William A.; Betts, Charles H.; Elliott, John Lovejoy; Wilson, Henry Lane.
rmc.library.cornell.edu /EAD/htmldocs/RMA00006.html   (4861 words)

  
 Henry Lane Kendrick
You are in: Museum of History >> Hall of North and South Americans >> Henry Lane Kendrick
Appleton's Cyclopedia of American Biography, edited by James Grant Wilson, John Fiske and Stanley L. Klos.
KENDRICK, Henry Lane, educator, born in Lebanon, New Hampshire, 20 January, 1811.
www.famousamericans.net /henrylanekendrick   (478 words)

  
 University of Missouri Special Collections   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Reels 45 through 51 focus on the ministry of Henry Lane Wilson from 1897 to 1905.
During this period, the war between the United States and Spain was a particularly important topic.
This collection includes letters from President Wilson to Secretary of State William J. Bryan and copies and/or drafts of letters from the secretary to the president.
mulibraries.missouri.edu /specialcollections/natarchmf5.htm   (2704 words)

  
 HENRY JAMES LANE WILSON was born in Gloucester in 1871 and died in London on the 8th of January 1915   (Site not responding. Last check: )
HENRY JAMES LANE WILSON was born in Gloucester in 1871 and died in London on the 8th of January 1915
The outstanding, and possibly the most beautiful song is My Lovely Celia.This is an arrangement of George Monro’s Celia the Fair, in which Wilson uses only two of Monro’s three verses with a slight alteration of the words.
Until now, less than a third of the songs which constitute the collection, have been recorded.
www.btinternet.com /~J.Benton/OldEnglishMelodies.htm   (236 words)

  
 History 4698   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Wilson and Mexico (Mexico, $Diplomacy, and the 1912 election; historiographical debate: Clements vs. Smith—what was WW’s attitude toward international revolution?; determining the US interest in the revolutionary environment; Huerta’s political and economic choices; the US and the Constitutionalists—internal divisions Mexico, Wilson’s diplomatic strategy)
Latin America and the Contradictions of Wilsonianism (the Pan-American Pact and the promise of internationalism; the Mobile address and Wilsonianism; the strategic realities of the Caribbean Basin; Wilson, the Navy, and race; intervention; Dominican Republic and the breakdown of customs receivership; origins of Dominican nationalism; intervention and US public opinion)
Reminder that M-Z have the caucus question for next class, when we continue our examination of Wilson.
academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu /history/johnson/4698131.htm   (268 words)

  
 United States Chronology, 1913-1914
Feb.09-19 > Without authorization, US Ambassador to Mexico Henry Lane Wilson energetically assists a bloody conservative revolt that overthrows the legally elected Madero government, sponsors talks between rebel factions that lead to the establishment of the Huerta regime, and tacitly consents to Huerta's stated intention to execute Madero.
May.26 > Wilson blasts lobbyists for seeking to sabotage tariff reform - ~in the subsequent investigation, Senators are compelled for the first time to publicly reveal their financial holdings (see Oct.03)
Jan.20 > Wilson proposes moderate antitrust legislation to a joint session of Congress, announcing that “the antagonism between business and government is over.” - ~the administration is loosing its reform impulse due to the worsening economic situation - increasingly friendly overtures to business
cnparm.home.texas.net /Nat/USA/USA05.htm   (3509 words)

  
 Taft & Wilson   (Site not responding. Last check: )
•Madero could not control the forces he unleashed and soon found himself captured by group under Victoriano Huerta who had been heavily backed by U.S. ambassador Henry Lane Wilson
•H.L. Wilson claimed shock when Huerta killed Madero and his brother in 1913
•Woodrow Wilson then refused to recognize Huerta—until that point, US policy had been that it would recognize any government that maintained internal order and agreed to meet its foreign obligations (debts), now Wilson claimed had to come to power by democratic means
www.humboldt.edu /~ap23/372/lecture21_files/slide0043.htm   (84 words)

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