Antonio de la Mora y Hernández (12 March 1884 – 9 May 1926 Kansas City, Missouri) was a Mexican-born virtuoso cornetist, composer, music educator, publisher, and influential military band director who served as Chief Musician (aka bandmaster) in elite Army bands of three countries [1] [2] – in Mexico: (i) the Mexican Army 6th Infantry Band; in the United States: (ii) the U.S. Army 21st Infantry Band stationed at Fort Logan, Colorado, and (iii) the U.S. Army 20th Infantry Band at Fort Douglas, Utah, the Philippines (island of Mindanáo at Ludlow Barracks), Honolulu at Schofield Barracks, and El Paso, Texas, at Camp Cotton; and in Canada (as a U.S. citizen): (iv) the Canadian Expeditionary Force 97th Battalion Band.
In de la Mora's post-military career, he served as an educator and bandmaster of YMCAs and Shriners of several cities. In particular, he organized (i) the amateur military band at the Salt Lake City YMCA in 1913, (ii) the Kem Shrine and YMCA of Grand Forks, North Dakota, and (iii) the Hamasa Temple Shrine Band of Meridian, Mississippi.
Como suave racha primaveral empapada con los perfumados cármenes del Anáhuac recibí la noticia. Un hijo dilecto de la divina Euterpe, un inspirado artista aureolado con los multiformes destellos de los lauros, se Hallaba en esta ciudad, huyendo del tormentoso turbión político de México.
En gruesas titulares, " The Wichita Beacon", uno de los grandes rotativos de esta urbe así lo decía:
Tanto para saludar a un come patriota, como también con el fin de entrevistarlo en nombre de LA PRENSA, acudií inmediatamente a su céntrico domicilio, ubicado en entresuelo de la casa marcada con el número 135 1-2 N. Market.
En el apartamento se respiraba un ambiente musical. Un violín sobre una mesita, parecía invitar a la melódica región de los suenos de Paganini, y un flamante y esbelto cornetín daba la impresión vibrante de fanfarria guerrera. Un método aprisionado en metálico acentuaba la profesión del entrevistado que daba mano a su toilette después de la tibia caricia del baño.
—Sírvase decirme, señor de la Mora, —pregúntele después de hacer mi presentación, —cuál fué su actuación política en México.
—Afiliado al Partido Cooperatista, tomé parte en la formación de diversas agrupaciónes en la Metrópoli, que sostenían la candidatura de don Adolfo de la Huerta para la Presidencia de la República.
—El señor de la Huerta es amigo de Ud¿
—Desde hace 22 años que me ligan con el inquebrantables vínculos de amistad. Entre paréntesis la señora de la Huerta, antes de contraer matrimonio, fue mi discípula de piano.
—Desempeño Ud. algún puesto en la Administración Publica de nuestro país¿
—Uno de los más importantes en el ramo de Hacienda. Pero comenzó la compaña política, y todos los que militamos en las filas delahuertistas, fuimos cesados inmediatamente. Sobrevino la revolución, y los elementos civiles no dejamos de estar amagados hasta que por fin puse pies en polvorosa, y aquí me tiene Ud. en Estados Unidos.
—Es Ud. nativo del Estado de Sonora¿
—No, de la ciudad de Tepic. Si, he vivido en algunas poblaciones sonorenses. Tuve oportunidad de conocer al general Calles, cuando era tan solo humilde maestro de escuela.
Y como caudalosa vertiente, el señor de la Mora, propicio a las confidencias, vaciá en amena charla, variadas anécdotas de vivido color político.
Después rompiendo la estridencia incandecente del tópico electoral, me dice: Ahora, que conoce Ud. al político, uno de mis álbums de dirá quien es el músico. Véalo con detenimiento.
Y emergió el artista, el artífice maravilloso de innúmeros ritmos, el sabio profesor que ha dado brillo y lustre al nombre de México, en extranjeras tierras. Su excelente método titulado "El Alfabeto del Cornetín", es admirable en su genero, según la opinión de competentes profesores musicales.
Los 14 anos de 1900 a 1914 —que ha estado fuera del terruño aztecas los fragantes pétalos del triunfo han marcado su paso. En este país, desempeño acertadamente la dirección de una banda militar por espacio de 7 anos. En Canadá, durante 3 anos, tuvo otra banda militar a su mando ganando en un concurso el primer como solista de cornetín.
A su regreso a México, fue inspector general de bandas, organizando con los tranviarios metropolitanos, una excelente banda que daba los matinees en Chapultepec. Y sus conferencias sobre los instrumentos de boquilla circular son calurosamente aplaudidas: lo mismo que la adaptación e instrumentación de nuestras canciones vernáculas. Y veo que la figura del maestro se agiganta, que sus facciones se dulcifican, al sentirse sembrador de ritmos.
Afuera el grisáceo dombo de nublado cielo, enmarcaba et triste y puritano domingo, sin espectáculos y carente de la polifónica gama cadenciosa de las músicas.
Y añoré le "tierra de sangre y de broma," el paradisíaco vergel de la eterna primavera, empurpurado con la grana de las auroras y ennegrecido como el humo de la tragedia ....
A. MARTINEZ M.
Wichita, Kansas, abril, de 1924
____________________
("Un Artista Mexicano en el Destierro,"
La Prensa,
San Antonio, Texas, April 22, 1924, p. 6)
De la Mora grew up in Tepic. He studied music at the National Conservatory of Music in Mexico City, completing in five years the regular eight years, graduating with distinction.
In 1908, De la Mora was with the 21st Infantry Band stationed at Fort Logan – near Denver. The 21st Infantry Band, 4 years earlier based at Fort Snelling, under the direction of Charles W. Graves (born about 1864 Kenton, Ohio), was one of seven military bands selected to perform at the Saint Louis World Fair of 1904. [3]
February 4, 1908, he was promoted to sergeant. On March 21, 1909, he was appointed Acting Chief Musician. On May 5, 1909, he was appointed chief musician and left the service December 16, 1909, at that position. He re-enlisted that same day, December 16, 1909, in the 20th Infantry at Fort Douglas, Utah – just a few miles east of Salt Lake City. He was appointed principal musician, pending the discharge of then bandmaster.
Around 1910, while serving as vice head musician, he was with the 21st U.S. Infantry in the Philippines, on the island of Mindanáo at Ludlow Barracks. July 1, 1911, he was appointed chief musician.
While in the Philippines, De la Mora was on the "Sick List" of enlisted personnel: Admitted February 10, 1910, return to duty March 25, 1911, in Manilla. (note: When admitted, De La Mora was listed as being in the 20th Infantry) [4]
September 4, 1911, de la Mora arrived in Honolulu from the Philippines aboard the U.S. Army Transport Sherman with his 19-piece military band. [5] As head musician of the 20th Infantry Band, they performed in Hawaii as late as October 1911. He was discharged December 25, 1911.
De a Mora Organized an amateur military band at the Salt Lake City Y.M.C.A. in 1913. [6]
Beginning towards the end of 1913, and throughout 1914, De la Mora and the 20th Infantry Band, with the 20th Regiment from Fort Douglas, was stationed at Camp Cotton, a sub-post of Fort Bliss in El Paso. The 20th Infantry Band was on patrol duty on the Mexican border.
Before the United States entered World War I, the Canadian Expeditionary Force recruited Americans to fill ranks of the 97th Battalion, one of five American Legion battalions that had greatly deteriorated. The other four battalions were the 212th, the 211th, the 213th, and the 237th. [8]
De la Mora resided in Meridian, Mississippi, for a few months during 1918. While there, he published his book, Cornetist Alphabet, and organized the Hamasa Temple Shrine Band. He remained in Meridian until about late-November-early-December when he married Susan May Stennis (maiden; 1899–1973) in Meridian and, with her, moved to New Orleans for his work as a musician. When he signed his World War I Draft Registration on September 12, 1818, he provided the name of his wife, Amanda de la Mora, and his address at 817 24th Avenue (between 8th and 9th Streets), Meridian, Mississippi, an address that corresponds to the site upon which the Hamasa Temple was built in 1924. The Meridian Shriners contracted the Saenger organization to design, build, and operate the auditorium in their building. The Saenger organization was the same organization that designed, built, owned, and operated the Strand in New Orleans, where de la Mora began working in 1918.
Beginning late-November-early-December 1918, De la Mora worked as a musician in New Orleans in the Concert Orchestra under the direction of Don Philippini (né Salvatore Philippini; 1870–1950) of the recently built Strand Theater. The Strand, no longer in existence, was at the corner of Baronne and Gravier Streets for about 53 years. [b]
On February 9, 1919, de la Mora seemingly tried to commit suicide by leaping eighteen feet to the street from the second-story window of the newspaper editorial room of the New Orleans States [c] building at 619 Canal Street. News accounts attributed de la Mora's distress to a prior nervous breakdown from overwork and marital unhappiness relating to disagreements with in-laws. De la Mora, about two months earlier, had married Susan May Stennis (maiden; 1899–1973) in Meridian, Mississippi. Soon after marrying, they moved to New Orleans and resided at 611 St. Charles Street (at Lafayette Square). [10] [11]
Músicos Mexicanos entra 18 y 35 anos de edad para trabajar en la Cudahy Packing Co. y tocar con la banda mexicana que sé está organizado bajo la dirección del Prof. Antonio de la Mora, en Wichita, Kans. Trabajo ligero pagos desde $3.20 diarios Instrumentos que más falta hacen: Soprano Saxophon-primer, clarinete, primer cornetín, 1er alto o corno, dos trombones de vara, baterías. Tendrán que pagar su pasaje y traer sus instrumentos. Se prefieren que sepan leer. STANDARD MUSIC, 2239 No. Laurel St., Mr. A. de la Mora, Wichita, Kans.
____________________
(advertisement,
La Prensa,
San Antonio, Texas, July 19, 1925, p. 7)
In 1925, Antonio de la Mora was living in Wichita, Kansas, at 1665 North Waco Avenue with his wife, Martha, and two sons, Antonio, Jr., and Adolphus. He was working there as a music teacher. He resided with his family at 2239 North Laurel Street.
De la Mora moved to Kansas City, Missouri, around December 1925 to organize the Mexican Band of the Unión Cultural Mexicana (U.C.M.) in Kansas City's Westside at 1017 West 24th Street. He trained a 45-piece band composed mostly of youth from the community. De la Mora, with Martha (1903–1983), Antonio, Jr. (1922–1985), and Adolfo (born 1934) – his wife and two sons – resided at 2322 Monitor Place. The Mexican communities in Wichita and Kansas City were viewed somewhat as colonies for Mexican exiles.
Antonio de la Mora died May 9, 1926. Dr. Nicolás Jaime (1885–1965) (surname pronounced "high-me" with the accent evenly divided) was the attending physician who signed the death certificate. He and Dr. Othoniel de Rivas y Jaén (1890–1973), a Granada, Nicaragua-born chiropractor, held a funeral vigil for Antonio de la Mora May 22, 1926, at the U.C.M.
Dr. Jaime, a co-founder of the U.C.M., 73 days earlier had signed a US$2,500 bail bond (equivalent to US$43,026 in 2023) for Jorge Prieto Laurens (1895–1990), who was elected and served as interim governor of San Luis Potosí in 1923 for one year, was indicted in San Antonio and arrested on February 28, 1926, in Kansas City, on a charge by the Mexican government that he had, as part of the Huerta faction, participated in a plot to overthrow (another revolution) the then present Mexican regime, a government for which, diplomatically, the United States was on friendly terms. [12] Dr. Jaime, himself, was a 1915 Mexican exile. But as a community member, in 1958, he was named "Man of the Year" by the Kansas City Academy of General Practice.
In 1927, after the death of Antonio de la Mora, the "Antonio de la Mora Band," directed by Alfredo Antonio González Flores (1904–1983), continued to perform in Kansas City. González, who had arrived early 1904 in Kansas City to assist with teaching music in the Mexican community, went on to become an influential music educator at Universidad Juárez del Estado de Durango. [13]
Antonio de la Mora
Other
Catalog of Copyright Entries, Part 3, Musical Compositions, New Series, Library of Congress, Copyright Office