The ABC was a Cuban political organization founded in 1931 in opposition to the government of
Gerardo Machado
Gerardo Machado y Morales (28 September 1869 – 29 March 1939) was a general of the Cuban War of Independence and President of Cuba from 1925 to 1933.
Machado entered the presidency with widespread popularity and support from the major polit ...
. It used a
hierarchy of clandestine cells, in which each member would oversee a cell on the next level. The first cell was labeled A; the next tier B; then C, and so forth.
The ABC gained prominence quickly through dissemination of propaganda and through acts of terrorism. The group accepted the invitation of US Ambassador
Sumner Welles
Benjamin Sumner Welles (October 14, 1892September 24, 1961) was an American government official and diplomat in the Foreign Service. He was a major foreign policy adviser to President Franklin D. Roosevelt and served as Under Secretary of State ...
to participate in a new government, only to be forced out of power in less than a month, becoming again an opposition group during the
One Hundred Days Government
The One Hundred Days Government (Spanish: ''Gobierno de los Cien Días'') is the name normally used in Cuba to refer to the Cuban government of Ramon Grau which lasted from September 4, 1933 until January 15, 1934.
Background
Leading up to th ...
.
Founding
The ABC was founded in October 1931 by a group that had been meeting for a year in the office of Dr.
Juan Andrés Lliteras. The most prominent member was
Joaquín Martínez Saenz.
Jorge Mañach
Jorge Mañach y Robato (February 14, 1898, Sagua La Grande, Cuba – June 25, 1961, San Juan, Puerto Rico) was a Cuban writer and attorney, considered among the most distinguished of his time.
Education
His studies of José Martí, the 'Apostle ...
and
Francisco Ichaso were soon invited to join.
[Aguilar (1972), pp. 118–121.] The group's membership was predominantly middle class, including students and professionals.
Cells had about seven members, each of whom could lead a cell on the tier below. Members of the organization knew only their leader and the cell below them. The system of alphabetical lettering of cells from tier to tier gave the organization its name.
A sequence of numbers along with the letter identified each individual member. The members of cell A were numbered A1, A2, A3, etc. They gave their number as the first digit used in the next cell; the cell led by A3 would have members B31, B32, B33, etc.
[Alfredo José Estrada, ''Havana: Autobiography of a City''; ; pp]
173
��174.
Terrorism
The organization took credit for numerous terrorist attacks like assassinations and bombings.
They targeted police officers and soldiers, and also made several high-profile killings, including Senate President
Clemente Vázquez Bello. The ABC reportedly orchestrated a plan to kill Machado by bombing Vazequez Bello's funeral, but failed due to a last-minute change of cemetery.
In early 1932 the government created a secret police force called the Porra, which acted against the opposition with no less violence. This repression further weakened the Machado government and enhanced the ABC's standing.
[Jules R. Benjamin,]
The ''Machadato'' and Cuban Nationalism, 1928–1932
, ''Hispanic American Historical Review'' 55(1), February 1975, pp. 79–80. "The ABC was known not so much for its ideology, however, as for its tactics—urban terrorism. Its bomb attacks against well-known figures of the regime and its police apparatus (mainly carried out by student members) made ABC a popular symbol of the revolt against Machado. Moreover, the retributive torture and assassination against these sons and daughters of the Cuban middle class by the agents of the ''Machadato'' destroyed the cohesion of the bourgeoisie, splitting that portion of it desiring the overthrow of the regime from that which—for fear of the consequences—still supported the President. "
The ABC maintained close contact with Cuba's radical student group, the
Directorio Estudiantil Universitario The Directorio Estudiantil Universitario (DEU) ( en, University Student Directory) was founded in 1927 by University of Havana students against the backdrop of a power grab by President Gerardo Machado consisting of constitutional reforms designed t ...
. Student leader
Eduardo Chibás wrote that students sometimes carried out the bombing missions, with the ABC providing funding and equipment, and also taking credit.
[Jaime Suchlicki, "Stirrings of Cuban Nationalism: The Student Generation of 1930"; ''Journal of Inter-American Studies'' 10(3), July 1968]
JSTOR
Manifesto and ideology

In 1932, the ABC issued a Program Manifesto, written predominantly by Martínez Saenz, Mañach, and Ichaso. The Manifesto called for a range of reforms, including women's suffrage, worker's rights (unions, eight-hour day, right to strike, pensions), the elimination of ''
latifundios
A ''latifundium'' (Latin: ''latus'', "spacious" and ''fundus'', "farm, estate") is a very extensive parcel of privately owned land. The latifundia of Roman history were great landed estates specializing in agriculture destined for export: grain, ...
'' through taxation, and the creation of cooperatives.
It also called for the creation of a
Cuban National Bank.
Though wide-ranging, the ABC's program has been described as more pragmatic or realistic than those of other opposition groups at the time. The ABC was sometimes criticized (especially by the
Communist Party of Cuba) as fascist, elitist, or crypto-imperialist.
[Whitney (2001), pp. 84–85. "The ABC's program opposed the politics of class struggle. Instead, they tried to build a multiclass and mass insurrectionary movement favoring a 'new Cuba' based on national capitalist development. Their program was corporatist and protofascist. Corporatist movements were a response to the development of a mass workforce and the creation of new urban social classes; corporatists wanted to work out ways to control and manage the process of rapid social class formation while guaranteeing capitalist development. ..The ABC's view of the new Cuba was elitist. They believed that the Cuban people were not ready for liberal democracy and that state intervention, directed by an intellectual elite, was required to prepare Cubans to assume their civil responsibilities. At the same time, the ABC Manifesto stated that the organization was opposed to both fascism and communism because both ideologies contradicted the principles of political liberty."] The British Ambassador John J. Broderick related his "surprise to hear university professors and lawyers and doctors of education and intelligence attempt to justify the nightly bombings in the capital and its surroundings, on the grounds that they serve to keep alive amongst the people a spirit of uneasiness and revolt until comprehensive plans have been prepared for a series of systematic direct attacks on the machinery of the Government."
[Whitney (2001), p. 86.]
The ABC itself declared its opposition to both communism and fascism.
Its green banner contrasted notably with the gray, black, and blue colors of contemporary European right-wing groups, and its logo inspired by the
Jewish star was intended to connote persecution.
Regime changes of 1933–1934

By early 1933 the ABC had reached its peak popularity, and its green flag was reportedly flown widely.
Apparently contrary to its stance against American interventionism, the ABC accepted a seat at the table in negotiations with American ambassador
Sumner Welles
Benjamin Sumner Welles (October 14, 1892September 24, 1961) was an American government official and diplomat in the Foreign Service. He was a major foreign policy adviser to President Franklin D. Roosevelt and served as Under Secretary of State ...
, prompting the creation of a more rigidly anti-interventionist splinter group called ABC Radical. ABC's participation gave credibility to the negotiations, and by twice threatening to withdraw the organization was able to effect release of its imprisoned members, thanks to pressure by Welles on Machado.
Welles wrote of the ABC in a telegram to Washington on 1 July 1933, "the representatives of that organization are both intelligent and well-disposed and I am hopeful that for some weeks at least the organization can be kept in line."
When, amidst a general strike in
Havana, Welles succeeded in pressuring Machado to resign, the ABC requested four cabinet positions in the new government of
Carlos Manuel de Céspedes y Quesada. It got two: Martínez Saenz as Secretary of the Treasury, and
Carlos Saladrigas y Zayas
Carlos Saladrigas Zayas (''Carlos Eduardo Ramón Saladrigas y Zayas''; October 13, 1900 – 15 April 1956) was a Cuban politician and diplomat.
Career
He was an abogado-notario who served as Senator (1936-1940), Minister of Justice (1934), ...
as Secretary of Justice.
The Céspedes government was displaced by the
Sergeants' Revolt
The Cuban Revolution of 1933 ( es, Revolución cubana de 1933), also called the Revolt of the Sergeants, was a coup d'état that occurred in Cuba in September 1933. It began as a revolt of sergeants and enlisted men in the military, who soon allie ...
of 4 September 1933. One of the plotters,
Fulgencio Batista, was an ABC member, but had not secured the help of his comrades in the government.
In November 1933 the ABC participated in an unsuccessful revolt against the
One Hundred Days Government
The One Hundred Days Government (Spanish: ''Gobierno de los Cien Días'') is the name normally used in Cuba to refer to the Cuban government of Ramon Grau which lasted from September 4, 1933 until January 15, 1934.
Background
Leading up to th ...
headed by
Ramon Grau. Despite the chaos of the times, many groups including ABC Radical, the
Communist Party, and eventually the armed forces under Batista fought on the side of the government. The rebels retreated to
Atarés Castle, where they held out for a few hours then surrendered. This defeat, and the ABC's confused explanation of its motives for the revolt, dealt a permanent blow to the group's credibility.
[Aguilar (1972), pp. 195–197.]
Decline and disbandment
The ABC continued as a political party but saw its influence steadily dwindle. The group took part in the Constitutional Assembly of 1940, along with other several parties of the time. It disbanded in 1952,
after a new coup by Batista.
Numismatic connection
In 1934 a new
silver peso was introduced. Secretary of the Treasury Saenz was a member of ABC and suggested it be named after the group. Since then collectors have used that term for the coin.
Footnotes
References
Sources
* Aguilar, Luis E. (1972). ''Cuba 1933: Prologue to Revolution''. Cornell University Press. .
* Argote-Freyre, Frank (2006). ''Fulgencio Batista: From Revolutionary to Strongman''. Rutgers University Press. .
* Whitney, Robert W. (2001). ''State and Revolution in Cuba: Mass Mobilization and Political Change, 1920–1940''. University of North Carolina Press. {{ISBN, 0-8078-2611-1.
External links
El ABC al Pueblo de Cuba: Manifiesto-ProgramaPhotographs of ABC mausoleumForeign Relations of the United States, Diplomatic Paper, 1933, The American Republics, Volume 5: Cuba
News
* Arthur Evans. �
Rioters in Havana Shoot ‘Porristas’: 60 Are Slain��. Chicago Tribune. 14 August 1933, p. 1.
* Arthur Evans.
Cuba is Terrorized Anew: Troops Battle Rioting Mobs in Several Cities: Uprising Reported in Ranks of Army. ''Chicago Tribune''. 21 September 1933, p. 1.
*
Revolt Flares Anew in Cuba; Bomb Havana. ''Chicago Tribune'' (via ''New York Times''). 9 November 1933.
* Edmund A. Chester.
Retaliation in Cuba is Feared: ABC Leaders, Beset in Sunday's Parade by Machine Gunners, Expected to Strike; 15 Dead. ''Prescott Evening Courier'' (AP), 18 June 1934, p. 1.
Politics of Cuba