1914 Peso - 'Muera Huerta' obverse
Obverse · PCGS
1914 Peso - 'Muera Huerta' reverse
Reverse
Hall of Fame

1914 Peso

Mexico (Durango)

A second example of Pancho Villa's 'Death to Huerta' peso - PCGS AU-58, the silver pay-coin of the División del Norte that Huerta reportedly made a capital offense to carry.

Metal
Silver
Mint
Durango
Grade
PCGS AU-58
Cert #
43920244
Full attribution & era
Era: Mexican Revolution · Constitutionalist Army of the North (Pancho Villa)
Country: Mexico (Durango)
Denomination: Peso - 'Muera Huerta'
The Story

The history behind the coin.

Before the Mexican Revolution erupted in 1910, Mexico had been ruled for 31 years by Porfirio Díaz. The Porfiriato was an era of order, foreign capital, and business - bought at the cost of land, suffrage, and political freedom. Despite Díaz's promise of open elections, his opposition - led by Francisco Madero - was arrested and the election rigged.

In response, Madero called for armed rebellion. By May 1911, with the help of caudillos Pascual Orozco and Pancho Villa, he forced Díaz from power. But once in office, Madero turned his back on the very men who had put him there and tried to appease the old Porfiriato establishment. This infuriated Orozco, who rose in revolt. To fight him, Madero appointed an old Porfiriato general, Victoriano Huerta, to lead the federal army - with Pancho Villa serving under him.

Huerta despised Villa and seized on a pretext - Villa requisitioning a horse - to arrest him. Villa slapped Huerta in the face; Huerta ordered him shot. Only a last-minute stay of execution from President Madero saved Villa's life.

On 9 February 1913, Porfiriato loyalists broke generals Bernardo Reyes and Félix Díaz (nephew of Porfirio) out of prison. Madero called on Huerta, then in the capital, to put the rising down. Instead, Huerta used the chaos as cover to launch his own coup on 19 February, had Madero arrested, and within days had him executed - La Decena Trágica, the Ten Tragic Days.

Venustiano Carranza, governor of Coahuila, declared the Constitutionalist rebellion against Huerta, with Villa nominally under his command. To fight Huerta, Villa built the legendary División del Norte. To pay his soldiers in the silver country he controlled, Villa struck his own coinage at the Durango mint - and the most famous of these is this Peso.

What makes the coin remarkable is the legend. The obverse carries a Phrygian liberty cap radiating sun-rays in the classic Mexican Republican style with ESTADOS UNIDOS MEXICANOS · UN PESO · 1914; the reverse - the Mexican eagle on cactus - is encircled by EJÉRCITO CONSTITUCIONALISTA above and MUERA HUERTA ("DEATH TO HUERTA") below. Huerta is said to have been so enraged by this open death-threat circulating as pocket change that he decreed possession of the coin a capital offense - anyone caught with one to be executed on the spot.

PCGS AU-58 is an exceptional grade for a piece minted in field conditions to be spent hard among Villa's soldiers and the people of northern Mexico. Cartwheel luster survives in the protected fields beneath rich circulation toning.

Citations
  • Krause-Mishler - Standard Catalog of Mexican Coins (KM-621).
  • Guthrie & Bothamley - Mexican Revolutionary Coinage (Durango issues).
  • Utberg - The Coins of the Mexican Revolution.
  • PCGS Cert #43920244.