Pedro de la Portilla, a Criollo employee…
November 1799 CE
Pedro de la Portilla, a Criollo employee in the New Spain tax collectors' office in the Plazuela de Santa Catarina, is poor, with no important connections
In 1799, he arranges a meeting with about twenty other powerless youths in a house at Alley of the Gachupines No. 7, Mexico City.
Some of the men in attendance are guards in the plazas of the city; others are low officials in the clock-making or silver industries.
All of them are relatives or friends of Portilla.
The meeting discusses the situation in which Criollos find themselves, in relation to Peninsulares (Criollos are "Europeans" born in America; Peninsulares are Europeans born in Spain. Gachupines has become an insulting term for the latter).
Those present agree to rise in arms to rid the country of Peninsulares.
The plan agreed on is to free prisoners, and with them storm the viceroy's palace, thus capturing high officials and funds.
The conspirators then intend to proclaim the independence of Mexico, declare war on Spain, and kill or expel the Peninsulares.
To accomplish this, they are counting on one thousand pesos of silver, two pistols, and some fifty cutlasses and machetes to initiate a popular uprising under the patronage of the Virgin of Guadalupe.
Because of its modest armament, the conspiracy becomes known as the Conspiracy of the Machetes.
After the successful outcome of the rebellion, the plan is to appeal to the people to decide what form of government should be established in Mexico.
The conspirators apparently favor a Congress based on that recently established in the United States.
At the second meeting, Isidoro Francisco de Aguirre, a cousin of Portilla, becomes alarmed at the preparations, and goes to the authorities to denounce the conspiracy on November 10, 1799.
Viceroy Miguel José de Azanza gives orders that they be arrested, but without revealing the motives of their conspiracy in order to avoid excitement among the populace.
All the conspirators are apprehended and will spend many years in prison.
The trial is long, and does not reach a verdict.
Some of the conspirators will die in prison, but Portilla himself will live to see the independence of Mexico.