This is a list of monuments and memorials that were established as public displays and symbols of the Mexican–American War of 1846–1848 and its veterans on both sides. One of the most significant is the Mexico City National Cemetery, one of the first U.S. national cemeteries. The U.S. did not start its official system of national cemeteries until an 1862 act of Congress authorized U.S. President Abraham Lincoln to proceed. However, on September 28, 1850, an American military cemetery was established in Mexico City in the aftermath of the Mexican–American War.[1]
In the United States, "conspicuously missing" is any memorial to the Mexican–American War on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.[2] But there are monuments in California, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Mississippi, New York, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Utah.
Helen Escobedo in the book Mexican Monuments: Strange Encounters notes:
Literally hundreds of monuments commemorate the Niños Héroes, the seven boys who defended the castle of Chapultepec alone against the American invasion in 1847. According to legend the last one alive wrapped himself in the Mexican flag and jumped off the parapet rather than surrender.[3]
Mexico City National Cemetery, a U.S. national cemetery located in Colonia San Rafael,[a] created by purchase of land in 1850, "still stands as the only significant effort made by the federal government to recover the remains of any soldiers who lost their lives during the war with Mexico and to memorialize them. Today, this cemetery (reduced in size to a single acre in 1976) forms a tiny oasis of calm in the heart of Mexico City."[5][6] The purchase was authorized by a September 28, 1850 act of the U.S. Congress, which led to actual purchase on June 21, 1851, of two acres for $3,000. An additional $1734.34 funding to add walls and ditching to the property was appropriated by U.S. Congress on July 21, 1852.[4] A white stone monument's inscription recognizes approximately 750 Americans there who died in the war, mostly nearby, whose bones were reinterred to there. Also in the cemetery are graves of veterans who died and were buried there later, up to 1923.[4] Dead were reinterred from shallow battlefield graves in the region.[7] The cemetery remains under responsibility of the American Battle Monuments Commission.[4]
Monuments to the Niños Héroes often consist of six pillars, representing the six cadets killed. Sometimes there is a statue in the middle. This is the case in this monument, where a statue of the Mexican eagle is placed with three pillars on each side.[14]
Bear Flag Monument, Sonoma, dedicated June 14, 1914, includes the inscription, "THIS MONUMENT WAS ERECTED BY THE NATIVE SONS OF THE GOLDEN WEST AND THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA TO COMMEMORATE THE RAISING OF THE BEAR FLAG ON THIS SPOT ON JUNE 14 1846 BY THE BEAR FLAG PARTY AND THEIR DECLARATION OF THE FREEDOM OF CALIFORNIA FROM MEXICAN RULE. ON JULY 9 1846."[16]
Colonel William R. McKee Monument, Main Street, Midway, Woodford County, Kentucky[25] The monument is a fluted column topped by an urn, with inscription written by Theodore O'Hara, author of The Bivouac of the Dead, famous poem written after the Battle of Buena Vista in which McKee was killed. Poem used in many U.S. Civil War memorials. Monument included in Midway Historic District.[26]
Mexican–American War Memorial, Texas State Capitol, Austin, Texas. Bronze plaque stating "In Memory of the Officers of the United States Army Who Fell in the War with Mexico", and listing 141 officers. Installed in 1910 by National Society of Colonial Dames in the south entrance foyer of the building. The Battle of Palo Alto is commemorated by letters in marble floor below.[41]
There are monuments to Mexican–Americans who served in World War II in various places, e.g. in Emporia, Kansas,[47] and in Sacramento, California (which was vandalized).[48] There are also monuments and memorials relating to the Texas Revolution (1835–36), which preceded the Mexican–American War by a decade.
^The creation of the Mexico City National Cemetery, approved by U.S. Congress (in acts of 1850 and 1852),[4] preceded the creation of an official system of national cemeteries in 1862 by act of Congress, during the American Civil War.[1] The cemeterywas declared to be a national cemetery in 1873, under responsibility of the War Department to operate and maintain.[4]
^ abEscobedo, Helen, ed., photographs Paolo Gori, essays by Nestor García Canclini, Rita Eder, Fernando González Gortázar, Jorge Ibargüengoitia, Jorge Alberto Manrique, and Carlos Monsivais, Mexican Monuments:Strange Encounters, Abbeville Press, New York, 1989 p. 158
^Steven R. Butler. "Burying the dead". Archived from the original on March 12, 2018. (See: Butler, Steven R. The Forgotten Soldiers: Deceased U.S. Military Personnel in the War with Mexico. Master's thesis, The University of Texas at Arlington, 1999.)
^Nishiura, Elizabeth, editor, American Battle Monuments: A guide to military cemeteries and monuments maintained by the American Battle Monuments Commission, Omnigraphics, Inc., Detroit, Michigan, 1989 p. 443
^California, California State Parks, State of. "San Pasqual Battlefield SHP". CA State Parks. Archived from the original on January 21, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)