With our free press under threat and federal funding for public media gone, your support matters more than ever. Help keep the LAist newsroom strong, become a monthly member or increase your support today.
How Mexico's Victory Over The French On Cinco de Mayo Aided The Union In The Civil War
Cinco de Mayo. It's not Mexican Independence Day, and it's not a widespread holiday in Mexico either. It marks the day the Mexican army defeated the French in the Battle of Puebla in 1862.
The backstory
After the Mexican–American War, Mexico was in debt to the many countries who had contributed to their unsuccessful effort, France included.
Marissa López, a UCLA professor of Chicano and Central American studies, said France was looking for any reason to invade Mexico. The French hoped, she said, to establish a military base in the Western Hemisphere during the U.S. Civil War to back the South.
"Supporting the South would mean potentially breaking up this increasingly powerful country," López said.
Miraculously, the unheralded Mexican Army defeated the French army. But if things had gone differently?
"The French could very well have set up a base of operations in Mexico and been able to aid the South, and the U.S. Civil War could have ended very differently," Lopez said.
So why isn't the holiday celebrated in Mexico?
López said the Victory in Puebla was a hollow one. The French came back a few years later and briefly established an empire. So no, Mexico does not celebrate Cinco De Mayo.
So why do Americans celebrate? Lopez says it's advantageous to drink and forget the actual history. "Because forgetting that history means forgetting our deep indebtedness to Mexico."
But if you want to enjoy a drink or two, keep in mind you're toasting to Mexico's brief victory over the French empire in 1862.
-
A day with the Save the Tiles volunteers as they work against time to preserve over 200 fireplaces in Altadena.
-
The ban on student cellphone use in the country’s second largest school district starts Tuesday.
-
Government documents show Va Lecia Adams Kellum, who leads an agency that manages over $700 million in homeless services contracts each year, inked deals with the nonprofit where her husband is a senior staffer.
-
All of the proceeds from the sales, which were finalized before the fires, go into a new South Pasadena affordable housing fund.
-
‘It was just a regular morning’: Californians picked up in recent ICE raids include kids, volunteersJob seekers, dedicated community members, green card holders among those hit by deportations, according to interviews.
-
During the latest round of layoffs, the tiny team was among the hundreds let go. And though some parts of the educational program remain, educators across the country mourn what was lost.