Garrido's rule, which marked the apogee of Mexican anti-clericalism, was supported by the Radical Socialist Party of Tabasco (PRST) of which he was the leader.
•
In 1916 his predecessor Francisco J. Múgica had restored the name of the state capital Villa Hermosa de San Juan Bautista ("Beautiful Town of St. John the Baptist") to Villahermosa ("Beautifultown").
Mexico | Mexico City | New Mexico | Gulf of Mexico | Santa Fe, New Mexico | Mexico national football team | Albuquerque, New Mexico | University of New Mexico | Las Cruces, New Mexico | State of Mexico | México | New Mexico Territory | Maximilian I of Mexico | Taos, New Mexico | National Autonomous University of Mexico | President of Mexico | Los Alamos, New Mexico | Saint Thomas Christians | New Mexico State University | Socorro, New Mexico | Music of Mexico | Santa Fe de Nuevo México | Roswell, New Mexico | Nuestra Belleza México | National Action Party (Mexico) | Hidalgo (Mexico) | Chihuahua, Mexico | Silver City, New Mexico | Montezuma, New Mexico | Mexico–United States border |