Monumental Men

 

Abraham Lincoln | Benito Juárez

 
Man wearing suit and vest seated in chair

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS


“As I would not be a slave, so I would not be a master. This expresses my idea of democracy.”

—Abraham Lincoln, 1809-1865


 
Oval portrait of man seated, wearing suit, vest, and gloves

UNIVERSITY OF WYOMING AMERICAN HERITAGE CENTER


“Respect for the rights of others is peace.”

—Benito Juárez, 1806-1872


 

Monumental Men for Monumental Times

Abraham Lincoln and Benito Juárez never met or corresponded directly. However, the contributions of these two monumental men helped shape the future of North America. By memorializing these men across borders, we celebrate our shared heritage.

 
Bronze statue of a cloaked man holding a book in left hand and pointing straight ahead with right hand. Statue is mounted on a large, inscribed metal base.
Statue of Benito Juárez in Washington, DC

NPS / KATHRYN WILLIAMS

 
Bronze statue of a man standing on front of a chair is mounted on a large stone base inscribed with text. The statue is in a grassy area surrounded by trees.
Statue of Abraham Lincoln in Mexico City

US CONSULATE GENERAL IN MEXICO / BENJAMIN MEDINA

 

From Log Cabin to the White House

 
Small, rustic, log cabin with one door and one window on the front.
Log Cabin at Knob Creek Farm

NPS

Abraham Lincoln was born to American parents in a single room log cabin in Kentucky, USA. He became a politician, lawyer and the 16th President of the United States.

 
Landscape view of the White House from across a lawn, featuring the semicircular south portico
White House, residence of President Lincoln

THE WHITE HOUSE

Lincoln ensured the preservation of the Union during the US Civil War of 1861-1865.

Throughout the French Intervention and rule of Emperor Maximilian I in Mexico, the United States continued to recognize the republican government of Benito Juárez.

 

From Adobe House to the National Palace

 
White stucco building front with orange framed window and door
House in which a young Benito Juárez Lived in Oaxaca, the Casa de Juárez Museum.

INAH /ACIEL SÁNCHEZ, 2014

Benito Juárez was born to Zapotec (Ben 'Zaa) parents in San Pablo Guelatao, Mexico. Orphaned as a boy, he moved to Oaxaca where he would become a state legislator and a lawyer.

 
A three-story building surrounds an inner courtyard. Rows of arched openings line the exterior walls of each floor.
National Palace of Mexico, residence of President Juárez after the Republic was restored.

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE

As President of Mexico from 1861-1872, he preserved the Mexican Republic during the French Intervention of 1862-1867.

 

Matías Romero Visits Lincoln

 
Bearded man stands posed in suit with long coat
Matías Romero

NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION, 111-B-1228

 
Tan, rectangular, two-story house with five green-shuttered windows on the top floor and two on either side of front door on the first floor. Fence around the small front yard is garlanded with semicircle flag banners.
Lincoln Home in Springfield, Illinois

NPS

In January, 1861, Matías Romero, representative of President Benito Juárez, met with President-elect Abraham Lincoln in Springfield, Illinois. Lincoln wrote to Romero, “While, as yet I can do no official act on behalf of the United States, as one of its citizens, I tender the expression of my sincere wishes for the happiness, prosperity, and liberty of yourself, your government, and its people.”

During Lincoln’s presidency and beyond, Romero represented Mexico in Washington, DC. Romero developed a close relationship with the Lincoln family.

 

Exchanging Presidents, Sharing Heritage

In the late 1960s, the presidents of the United States and Mexico exchanged statues of their predecessors.

 
Head and torso of bronze statue of Abraham Lincoln with left hand clutching the lapel of his coat
Statue of Abraham Lincoln in Mexico City

U.S. CONSULATE GENERAL IN MEXICO CITY / BENJAMIN MEDINA

 
Portrait photo of Lyndon Baines Johnson
Lyndon Baines Johnson

NATIONAL PORTRAIT GALLERY, SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION


“All nations rightly praise their own famous men. But only a truly great people pause to pay tribute to the great of other lands. And that is what Mexico is doing today. What Abraham Lincoln stood for is what binds our two nations—and, indeed, this entire hemisphere—together.”

—President Lyndon Baines Johnson at the dedication of the Abraham Lincoln Statue in Mexico City, April 15, 1966


 
Upper torso portion of bronze Benito Juárez statue with right arm extended and index finger pointing forward
Statue of Benito Juárez in Washington, DC

NPS / KATHRYN WILLIAMS

 
Portrait photo of Gustavo Díaz Ordaz
Gustavo Díaz Ordaz

INSTITUTO NACIONAL DE ANTROPOLOGÍA E HISTORIA, MÉXICO


“Permit me, Mr. President, in return for the gift received by Mexico City, the statue of Abraham Lincoln, to give to the city of Washington a statue of a great Mexican President, Benito Juárez. These two men, who were born relatively close together, have become brothers in the sense that they both share an indomitable spirit. They are both saviors of their countries and they are both similar in their ideals.”

—President Gustavo Díaz Ordaz at the White House, October 26, 1967


 
Bronze statue of President Lincoln on stone pedestal in road median. Lincoln his holding papers in left hand and gesturing with right.
Statue of Abraham Lincoln in Ciudad Juárez

NPS

"Of One Mold"

At the 1964 dedication of the Abraham Lincoln statue in Ciudad Juárez, US Senator Ralph Yarborough of Texas stated, “Abraham Lincoln and Benito Juárez never met, but their thoughts and aims and hopes for freedom and justice for mankind were of one mold. Lincoln never saw this city but his spirit and ideals are here today, and we are all caught up in it.” Mexico’s National Border Program placed this 18-foot statue.

 

Chamizal: In the Spirit of Lincoln and Juárez


“The Chamizal treaty is an act of justice. It was done in the spirit of Abraham Lincoln, of John F. Kennedy, in the spirit of Benito Juárez’ declaration that peace is the respect of others' rights.”

—US Senator Ralph Yarborough, 1964


 
Sketch from paper publication showing a statue with hands raised installed on a paved esplanade
Artist’s Conception and Plan View of Proposed Juárez Statue at Chamizal National Memorial:  "Landscape Management Plan, Comprehensive Design, September, 1989" (US National Park Service planning document)

NPS

 
Plan view diagram shows birds-eye view of statue location and seating on three sides

NPS

A 1980s plan for Chamizal National Memorial stated, “A statue of Benito Juárez will be emplaced in a visually prominent location just east of the plaza near the visitor center. This statue (to be constructed by donation) will complement and be of a size comparable to the Abraham Lincoln statue in Ciudad Juárez.”

 

XII Travelers Monument at Chamizal National Memorial

 
Small bronze maquette showing a youth seated on the left side of a bench with a sheep at his feet and a well dressed adult man to the right. Both are reading books.
Maquette entitled, “Benito Juárez – Child to Man” by Sculptor Ethan Taliesin Houser

NPS / RODNEY SAUTER

The nonprofit XII Travelers Memorial of the Southwest and Chamizal National Memorial began working together in 2016 to install a monument of Benito Juárez on the grounds of Chamizal National Memorial. See our XII Travelers partner page for additional information about the project.

 

Hands Across the Border

 
Two men surrounded by crowd of people walk toward each other with hands extended. A chrome obelisk monument is slightly behind them in the center of the scene.
Presidents Lyndon Johnson and Adolfo López Mateos at Bowie High School, September 25, 1964

NPS / JOE CASARES

While Benito Juárez was in Villa Paso Del Norte (present-day Ciudad Juárez) in 1865-1866, he initiated a formal complaint to the US Government requesting a resolution to the boundary dispute that would become known as “The Chamizal Problem.” Nearly 100 years after his request, President Lyndon Baines Johnson and President Adolfo López Mateos celebrated the successful and peaceful settlement of this dispute.

Though Lincoln and Juárez never met, their ideals and their lives are connected in our collective memory of the monumental events that rocked the North American Continent in the 1860s. The memory of them both is truly for the ages.

Last updated: September 29, 2022

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