Remarkably Fertile Soil.—Valuable Native Woods.—Mexican Flora.—Coffee
and Tobacco.—Mineral Products.—Silver Mines.—Sugar Lands.—
Manufactories.—Cortez’s Presents to Charles V.—Water Power.—Coal
Measures.—Railroads.—Historic Locality.—Social Characteristics.—
People divided into Castes.—Peonage.—Radical Progress.—Education
and the Priesthood.—A Threshing Machine.—Social Etiquette.—
Political Organization of the Government.—Mexico the Synonym of
Barbarism.—Production and Business Handicapped by an Excessive
Tariff.
Mexico is remarkable for the fertility
and peculiar productiveness of her soil, both of a
vegetable and mineral character, though the former
is very largely dependent upon irrigation, and almost
everywhere suffers for want of intelligent treatment.
As a striking proof of the fertility of the soil,
an able writer upon the subject tells us, among other
statistical facts, that while wheat cultivated in France
and some other countries averages but six grains for
one planted, Mexican soil gives an average product
of twenty-two times the amount of seed which is sown.
Humboldt was surprised at this when it was reported
to him, and took pains to verify the fact, finding
the statement to be absolutely correct. Being
situated partly in the tropics and partly in the temperate
zone, its vegetable products partake of both regions,
and are varied in the extreme. In the hot lands
are dense forests of rosewood, mahogany, and ebony,
together with dyewoods of great commercial value,
while in the temperate and cooler districts the oak
and pine are reasonably abundant. It must be
admitted, however, that those districts situated near
populous neighborhoods have been nearly denuded of
their growth during centuries of waste and destruction
by the conquering Spaniards. From this scarcity
of commercial wood arises the absence of framed houses,
and the universal use of stone and clay, or adobe,
for building purposes. There is valuable wood
enough in certain districts, which is still being
wasted. The sleepers of the Monterey and Mexican
Gulf railway are nearly all of ebony. Attention
having been called to the fact, orders have been issued
to save this wood for shipment to our Northern furniture
manufacturers. Iron ties and sleepers are being
substituted on the trunk lines of the railways as fast
as the wooden ones decay, being found so much more
durable. Those used on the Vera Cruz line are
imported from England; on the Mexican Central, from
the United States. There is a low, scrubby growth
of wood on the table-lands and mountain sides, which
is converted by the péons into charcoal and transported
on the backs of the burros (jackasses) long distances
for economical use in the cities and villages.
All the delicious fruits of the West Indies are abundantly
produced in the southern section, and all the substantial
favorites of our Northern and Western States thrive
luxuriantly in her middle and northern divisions.
Some of the cultivated berries are remarkably developed;
the strawberry, for instance, thrives beyond all precedent
in central Mexico, and while larger, it is no less
delicately flavored than our own choice varieties.
The flora throughout Mexico is exceedingly rich and
varied, botanists having recognized over ten thousand
families of plants indigenous to the soil. It
appeared to the writer, however, that while the color
of the flowers was intensified above that of our Northern
States, their fragrance was not so well defined.
Even the soft green mosses threw out a star-like blossom
of tiny proportions, which seemed almost as full of
expression as human eyes, while they emitted a subdued
fragrance. The best-grown coffee of the country
is in our estimation equal to the best grades of Mocha
or Java, while the tobacco produced in several of
the states compares favorably with the much-lauded
brands of Cuba. The most fertile regions of Mexico
lie on the east and west, where the districts decline
abruptly from the great plateau, or table-land, towards
the coast.
The Monterey and Mexican Gulf railway
has lately opened access to most excellent land, suitable
for sugar plantations, equal to the best in Louisiana
devoted to this purpose, and which can be bought for
a mere song, as the saying is. These lands are
better adapted to sugar raising than those of the
State just named, because frost is here unknown.
In the opening of these tropical districts by railroad,
connected with our Southern system, we have offered
us the opportunity to secure all the products which
we now get from Cuba. These staples are equal
in quality, and can be landed at our principal commercial
centres at a much less cost than is paid for shipments
from that island. Such is the arbitrary rule
of Spain in Cuba, and the miserable political condition
of her people, that all business transacted in her
ports is handicapped by regulations calculated to
drive commerce away from her shores. The fact
should also be recalled that while Mexico produces
every article which we import from Cuba, she has over
five times the population to consume our manufactures
and products, rendering her commercial intercourse
with us just so much more important. At present,
or rather heretofore, she has sought to exchange her
native products almost wholly with Europe, through
the port of Vera Cruz; but on account of the excellent
facilities afforded by the Mexican Central Railroad
the volume of trade has already begun to set towards
the United States. While upon the subject it
may be mentioned incidentally that the way business
of this railroad has exceeded all calculations, and
yet it is but partially developed, the rolling stock
being quite inadequate to the demand for freight transportation.
In minerals it would seem as though
the list of products was unequaled. At present
the silver mines are undoubtedly the greatest source
of wealth to the country, though under proper conditions
the agricultural capacity of the land would doubtless
exceed all other interests in pecuniary value, as
indeed is the case in most other gold and silver producing
countries. The principal mineral products of Mexico
are iron, tin, cinnabar, silver, gold, alum, sulphur,
and lead. In the state of Durango, large masses
of the best magnetic iron ore are found, which at
some future day will supply the material for a great
and useful industry. Other iron mines exist,
and some have been utilized to a limited extent.
Coal is found in abundance, notably in the states of
Oaxaca, Sonora, Nuevo Leon, and Coahuila. These
coal measures are particularly valuable in a country
many parts of which are treeless and without economical
fuel. The total coinage of silver ore in the mints
of Mexico to this date, we were intelligently informed,
amount to the enormous aggregate of three thousand
millions of dollars, to which may be added, in arriving
at the total product of the mines, the amount exported
in bars and the total value consumed in manufactures.
This last item amounts to a much larger figure than
one who has not given the subject careful thought
would be prepared to admit.
Mexico can hardly be spoken of as
a manufacturing country, in the usual acceptation
of the term, though the Spaniards found that cotton
cloth had been made here long before their advent.
It is also a fact that such domestic goods as the
masses of her population absolutely require she produces
within her own limits by native industry, such as cotton
cloth, blankets, woollen cloth, cotton shawls, leather
goods, saddlery, boots, shoes, hats, and other articles
of personal wear. There are over twenty large
woollen mills in the country, several for the production
of carpeting, and many cotton mills, the product of
the latter being almost wholly the unbleached article,
which is universally worn by the masses. The
cotton mills are many of them large, and worthy of
special commendation for the healthful and beneficent
system adopted in them, as well as for the excellence
of their output. The number of factories of all
sorts in the country is estimated at about one hundred.
There is nearly enough sugar produced on the plantations
to satisfy the home demand, an industry which might
be indefinitely extended. Climate, soil, and
the rate of wages all favor such an idea. The
Sandwich Islands, which have been so largely resorted
to for the establishment of sugar plantations, cannot
show one half the advantages which lie unimproved on
the new lines of the Mexican railways. If a capitalist
were considering the purpose of establishing a large
sugar plantation, the fact of cheap and easy transportation
to market being here close at hand should alone settle
the question as between the islands referred to and
this locality. Hardware and cutlery, of excellent
quality and in large quantities, are manufactured.
The paper, household furniture, pottery, crockery,
and even glass generally in use, are of home production,
which will give the reader an idea of the present
native resources of the country, developed not by
fortuitous aid, but under the most depressing circumstances.
It will be remembered that Cortez,
soon after he landed in Mexico, sent to Charles V.
specimens of native cotton fabrics, so that probably
cotton was not only grown but manufactured here as
early as in any other country. The historians
tell us that the Aztecs made as large and as delicate
webs as those of Holland. Besides working in textile
fabrics, this ancient people wrought metals, hewed
stone, and manufactured pottery of delicate forms
and artistic finish. The misfortune of one country
is the gain of another. The paucity of fuel wherewith
to obtain steam power, and the lack of rivers capable
of giving water power, must always prevent Mexico
from being a competing country, as to manufactures,
with the United States, where these essentials abound.
She has, however, only to turn her attention to the
export of fruits, and other products which are indigenous
to her sunny land, to acquire ample means wherewith
to purchase from this country whatever she may desire
in the line of luxuries or necessities.
That a portion of Mexico is utterly
sterile and unavailable is just as much a fact as
that we have such regions in the western part of the
United States. There are large sections here which
suffer from annual droughts, but which might be redeemed
by irrigation, the facilities for which in most cases
are near enough at hand, only requiring to be properly
engineered. It is not correct to paint everything
of rose-color in the republic; it has its serious
drawbacks, like all other lands under the sun.
The want of water is the prevailing trouble, but, like
Australia, this country has enough of the precious
liquid if properly conserved and adapted. The
Rio Grande produces more water in a twelvemonth than
the great Murray River of Australia, which is flooded
at certain seasons and is a “dry run” at
others. As we have intimated, the absence of
available wood and coal will prevent the growth of
manufactures in Mexico, at least, until the coal deposits
are opened up by railroads. The coal measures
are not yet fully surveyed, or developed, but sufficient
has been shown to demonstrate their great extent and
valuable qualities. When these coal deposits shall
be brought by means of railroads, already projected
or in course of construction, within the reach of
the business centres, and deliverable to consumers
at reasonable prices, a great impetus to manufactures
will be realized through this article of prime necessity.
A company has lately been formed in England to explore
and develop these coal fields, for which purpose a
liberal concession has been obtained from the Mexican
government. This is only one more evidence of
the fact that foreign capital and foreign enterprise
are flowing towards the country. It will be observed
also that these new companies are mostly English; some
are German; but there are comparatively few Americans
engaged in these enterprises. We have seen it
in print that Mexico was fast becoming Americanized,
but this is a mistake; there are many more Europeans
than Americans in Mexico, as we use the word Americans,
that is, people of the United States.
Where water power is to be obtained,
it is improved to the utmost, as at Queretaro, where
a small river is made to turn the largest overshot
wheel which has ever been constructed, furnishing power
in the famous Hercules Cotton Factory of that city,
which gives regular employment to many hundred native
men and women.
An improved and stable system of government
and increased railroad facilities are doing wonders
for our neighbors across the Rio Grande. The
iron horse and steel rail are great promoters of civilization.
It would be impossible to overestimate the importance
of this branch of progress in the interests of both
Mexico and the United States, by which means we are
constantly becoming more and more intimately united.
The Mexican Central Railroad has lately completed
its connection with Tampico on the Gulf by a branch
road running almost due east from its main trunk,
starting near or at Aguas Calientes; another,
running about due west towards the port of San Blas
on the Pacific, has already been completed as far
as Guadalajara, starting from the main trunk at Irapuato.
The former city being the present terminus of the road,
is considered the second in importance in Mexico.
When the narrow space still remaining is opened by
rail, the continent will be crossed by railway trains
between the Atlantic and Pacific at a narrow and most
available point. The increase of way passengers
and freight upon this road during the past two years
is a source of surprise and of gratification to the
company. The rolling stock is being monthly increased,
having proved to be inadequate to the business.
The Tampico branch of this road passes
through scenery which experienced travelers pronounce
to be equal in grandeur to any on this continent.
Indeed, had the appalling engineering difficulties
to be encountered been fully realized before the road
was begun, it is doubtful if it would have been built.
The cost has slightly exceeded ten million dollars.
That which seemed easy enough, as designed upon paper,
proved to be a herculean task in the consummation.
It was a portion of the original plan, when the Mexican
Central Railroad was surveyed, to build this branch,
and six years after the completion of the main trunk
the Tampico road was duly opened. The distance
from this harbor on the Gulf of Mexico to Aguas
Calientes is a trifle over four hundred miles.
With the improvements already under way, it will be
rendered the best seaport on the Gulf, infinitely
superior, especially in point of safe anchorage, to
the open roadstead of Vera Cruz. Every ton of
freight is now landed at the latter port by lighters,
and must continue to be so from the nature of the
coast; while in a couple of years at farthest Tampico
will have a most excellent harbor, perfectly sheltered,
where the largest steamships can lie at the wharf
and discharge their cargoes. We are sorry to
say that San Blas, on the Pacific side, does not promise
to make so desirable a port. It is even suggested
that Mazatalan, further north, should be made the
terminus of this branch road. American enterprise
and progressive ideas are peacefully but surely revolutionizing
a country where all previous change has been accomplished
by the sword, and all advance has been from scaffold
to scaffold. It would seem as though political
convulsions formed one of the conditions of national
progress. In our own instance, through what seas
of blood had we to wade in abolishing that long standing
curse of this land, negro slavery. The Czar of
Russia freed the millions of serfs in his empire by
a bold and manly ukase; but the nobility, who
counted their wealth by the number of human beings
whom they held in thralldom, have not yet forgiven
the Czar for doing so. Revenge for that philanthropic
act is still the motive of the conspiracies which
occasionally come to the surface in that country.
“Every age has its problem,” says Heinrich
Heine, “by solving which humanity is helped
forward.”
The federal capital of Mexico is in
the centre of a country of surpassing richness and
beauty, but from the day of its foundation, between
seven and eight hundred years ago, it has been the
theatre of constant revolutions and bitter warfare,
where hecatombs of human beings have been sacrificed
upon idolatrous altars, where a foreign religion has
been established at the spear’s point, through
torture by fire and the rack, and where rivers of
blood have been ruthlessly spilled in battle, sometimes
in repelling a foreign foe, but only too often in
still more cruel civil wars. Some idea of the
chronic political upheavals of the country may be
had from the brief statement that there have been
fifty-four presidents, one regency, and one emperor
in the last sixty-two years, and nearly every change
of government has been effected by violence.
Between 1821 and 1868, the form of government was
changed ten times.
Politeness and courtesy are as a rule
characteristics of the intelligent and middle classes
of the people of Mexico, and are also observable in
intercourse with the humbler ranks of the masses.
They have heretofore looked upon Americans as being
hardly more than semi-civilized. Those with whom
they have been most brought in contact have been reckless
and adventurous frontiersmen, drovers, Texans, cow
boys, often individuals who have left their homes
in the Northern or Middle States with the stigma of
crime upon them. The inference they have drawn
from contact with such representatives of our population
has been but natural. If Mexicans travel abroad,
they generally do so in Europe, sailing from Vera
Cruz, and they know comparatively little of us socially.
It is equally true that we have been in the habit
of regarding the Mexicans in much the same light.
This mutual feeling is born of ignorance, and the
nearer relation into which the two countries are now
brought by means of the excellent system of railroads
is rapidly dispelling the misconception on both sides
of the Rio Grande. The masses, especially the
péons, are far more illiterate than in this country,
and are easily led by the higher intelligence of the
few; nor have the Mexicans yet shown much real progress
in the purpose of promoting general education, though
incipient steps have been taken in that direction in
most of their cities, affording substantial proof
of the progressive tendencies of the nation.
We heard in the city of Mexico of free night schools
being organized, designed for the improvement of adults.
A division of the populace into castes
rules here almost as imperiously as it does in India,
and it will require generations of close contact with
a more cultured and democratic people before these
servile ideas can be obliterated. Though we hear
little or nothing said about this matter, yet to an
observant eye it has daily and hourly demonstration.
The native Indians of Mexico are of a different race
from their employers. Originally conquered and
enslaved by the Spaniards, though they have since
been emancipated by law, they are still kept in a quasi
condition of peonage by superior wit and finesse.
The proprietor of a large hacienda, who owns land,
say ten miles square, manages, by advancing money
to them, to keep the neighboring people in his debt.
They are compelled by necessity to purchase their domestic
articles of consumption from the nearest available
supply, which is the storehouse of the hacienda.
Here they must pay the price which is demanded, let
it be never so unreasonable. This arrangement
is all against the peon, and all in favor of the employer.
The lesser party to such a system is pretty sure to
be cheated right and left, especially as the estate
is nearly always administered by an agent and not
by the owner himself. There are some notable
exceptions to this, but these only prove the rule.
So long as the employes owe the proprietor money, they
are bound by law to remain in his service. Wages
are so low—say from twenty-five to thirty-five
cents per day—that were the natives of a
thrifty, ambitious, and provident disposition, which
is by no means the case, they could not save a dollar
towards their pecuniary emancipation. The laboring
classes seem to have no idea of economy or of providing
for the morrow. Food, coarse food, and amusement
for the present hour, that is all they desire, and
is all about which they seriously concern themselves.
The next score of years, while they will probably do
much for the country as regards commercial and intellectual
improvement, will prove fatal in a degree to the picturesqueness
which now renders Mexico so attractive. Radical
progress in one direction must needs be destructive
in another, and while some of the allurements of her
strong individuality will disappear, her moral and
physical status will be greatly improved. Her
ragged, half-naked people will don proper attire,
sacrificing the gaudy colors which now make every out-door
scene kaleidoscopic; a modern grain thresher will
take the place of weary animals plodding in a circle,
treading out the grain; half-clad women at the fountains
will disappear, and iron pipes will convey water for
domestic use to the place of consumption. The
awkward branch of crooked wood now used to turn the
soil will be replaced by the modern plough, and reaping
machines will relieve the weary backs of men, women,
and children, who slowly grub beneath a burning sun
through the broad grain fields. Irrigating streams
will be made to flow by their own gravitation, while
the wooden bucket and well-sweep will become idle and
useless. Still, we are not among those who see
only a bright side for the future of the republic,
nor do we believe so confidently as some writers in
her great natural resources. They are abundant,
but not so very exceptional as enthusiasts would have
us believe. Aside from the production of silver,
which all must admit to be inexhaustible, she has
very little to boast of. It is doubtful if any
other equal area in the world possesses larger deposits
of the precious metals, or has already yielded to
man more bountifully of them. We have seen it
asserted by careful and experienced writers, that
one half of all the silver now in use among the nations
originally came from Mexico. Her real and permanent
progress is inevitable; but it will be very gradual,
coming not through her rich mines of gold and silver,
but by the growth of her agricultural and manufacturing
interests; and if in a score of years she can assume
a position of respect and importance in the line of
nations, it is all that can reasonably be expected.
If Mexico can but advance in progressive ideas as
rapidly during the next ten years as she has done
during the decade just past, the period we have named
will be abbreviated, and her condition will amount
to a moral revolution.
Our sister republic has yet to accomplish
two special and important objects: first, the
suppression of the secret and malign influence of
the Roman Catholic priesthood; and, secondly, the promotion
of education among the masses. Since the separation
of church and state, in 1857, education has made slow
but steady advances. Most of the states have
adopted the system of compulsory education, penalties
being affixed to non-compliance with the law, and
rewards decreed for those who voluntarily observe
the same. Though shorn of so large a degree of
its temporal powers, the church is still secretly
active in its machinations for evil. The vast
army of non-producing, indolent priests is active in
one direction, namely, that for the suppression of
all intelligent progress, and the complete subjugation
of the common people through superstition and ignorance.
A realization of the condition of affairs may be had
from the following circumstance related to us by a
responsible American resident. It must be remembered
that the wheat, which in some well-irrigated districts
is the principal product, is threshed by means of
piling it up on the hard clay soil, and driving goats,
sheep, and burros over it. These animals trudge
round and round, with weary limbs, knee deep in the
straw, for hours together, urged forward by whips
in the hands of men and boys, and thus the grain is
separated from the stalks. Of course the product
threshed out in this manner is contaminated with animal
filth of all sorts. An enterprising American
witnessed this primitive process not long since, and
on returning to his northern home resolved to take
back with him to Mexico a modern threshing machine;
and being more desirous to introduce it for the benefit
of the people than to make any money out of the operation,
he offered the machine at cost price. A native
farmer was induced to put one on trial, when it was
at once found that it not only took the place of a
dozen men and boys, but also of twice that number of
animals. This was not all; the machine performed
the work in less than one quarter of the time required
to do the same amount of work by the old method, besides
rendering the grain in a perfectly clear condition.
This would seem to be entirely satisfactory, and was
so until it got to the ears of the priests. They
came upon the ground to see the machine work, and
were amazed. This would not answer, according
to their ideas; from their standpoint it was a dangerous
innovation. What might it not lead to! They
therefore declared that the devil was in the machine,
and absolutely forbade the péons to work with
it! Their threats and warnings frightened their
ignorant, servile parishioners out of their wits.
The machine was accordingly shipped north of the Rio
Grande, whence it came, to prevent the natives from
destroying it, and cattle still tread out the grain,
which they render dirty and unfit for food, except
in the most populous centres, where modern machinery
is being gradually introduced.
“The clogging influence of the
Romish Church,” says Hon. John H. Rice, “upon
civilization and progress are seen in its opposition
to the education and elevation of the common people;
in its intolerant warfare against freedom of conscience,
and all other forms of religious worship, frequently
displayed in persécutions, and sometimes in personal
injuries; and in its stolid opposition to the onward
march of development and improvement, unless directed
to its own advantage.”
The stranger who comes to Mexico with
the expectation of enjoying his visit must bring with
him a liberal and tolerant spirit. He must be
prepared to encounter a marked difference of race,
of social and business life, together with the absence
of many of such domestic comforts as habit has rendered
almost necessities. The exercise of a little
philosophy will reconcile him to the exigencies of
the case, and render endurable here what would be
inadmissible at home. A coarse, ill-cooked dinner,
untidy service, and an unappeased appetite must be
compensated by active interest in grand and peculiar
scenery; a hard bed and a sleepless night, by the
intelligent enjoyment of famous places clothed with
historic interest; foul smells and rank odors, by the
charming study of a unique people, extraordinarily
interesting in their wretched squalor and nakedness.
Though the stranger is brought but little in contact
therewith, owing to the briefness of his visit to the
country, quite enough is casually seen and experienced
to show that there is no lack of culture and refinement,
no absence of warmth of heart and gracious hospitality,
among the more favored classes of Mexico, both in
the northern and southern sections of the country.
Underneath the exaggerated expressions so common to
Spanish etiquette, there is yet a real cordiality
which the discriminating visitor will not fail to
recognize. If, on a first introduction and visit,
he is told that the house and all it contains is his
own, and that the proprietor is entirely at his service,
he will neither take this literally nor as a burlesque,
but will receive the assurance for what it really signifies,
that is, as conveying a spirit of cordiality.
These expressions are as purely conventional as though
the host asked simply and pleasantly after his guest’s
health, and mean no more.
If progress is and has been slow in
Mexico, it must be remembered that every advance has
been consummated under most discouraging circumstances,
and yet that the charitable, educational, artistic,
and technological institutions already firmly established,
are quietly revolutionizing the people through the
most peaceful but effective agencies.
As to government organization, the
several states are represented in congress by two
senators each, with one representative to the lower
house from each section comprising a population of
forty thousand. The federal district is under
the exclusive jurisdiction of congress. The division
of power as accorded to the several states is almost
precisely like that of our own government. The
federal authority is administered by a president,
aided by six cabinet ministers at the head of the
several departments of state, such as the minister
of foreign affairs, of the treasury, secretary of
war, and so on. Thus it will be seen that the
republic of Mexico has adopted our own constitution
as her model throughout.
As long as heavy and almost prohibitory
duties exist in Mexico, and are exacted on nearly
everything except the production of the precious metals,
the development of her other resources must be circumscribed.
With a rich soil and plenty of cheap labor, she ought
to be able to export many staples which would command
our markets, especially as regards coffee, cotton,
and wool. If the custom-houses on each side of
the boundary between this country and Mexico could
be abolished, both would reap an immense pecuniary
benefit, while the sister republic would realize an
impetus in every desirable respect which nothing else
could so quickly bring about. Wealth and population
would rapidly flow into this southern land, whose
agriculture would thrive as it has never yet done,
and its manufactories would double in number as well
as in pecuniary gain. It requires no argument
to show that our neighbors could not be thus largely
benefited without our own country also reaping an
equivalent advantage.
The very name of Mexico has been for
years the synonym of barbarism; but the traveled and
reading public have gradually come to realize that
it is a country embracing many large and populous
cities, where the amenities of modern civilization
abound, where elegance and culture are freely manifested,
and where great wealth has been accumulated in the
pursuit of legitimate business by the leading citizens.
The national capital will ere-long contain a population
of half a million, while the many new and costly edifices
now erecting in the immediate environs are of a spacious
and elegant character, adapted, of course, to the climate,
but yet combining many European and American elements
of advanced domestic architecture.