About two hours south of San Antonio lies the community of San Diego, Tex., a speck of a town with just under 4,000 residents. Its biggest claim to fame is the infamous “Plan of San Diego,” hatched in 1915 during the Mexican Revolution, which sought to reconquer from the U.S. government the portion of the Southwest that had been taken from Mexico in the Mexican-American War.
Listen
6 min
Share
Comment
Save
- A century ago, Mississippi’s Senate voted to send all the state’s Black people to AfricaFebruary 19, 2022A century ago, Mississippi’s Senate voted to send all the state’s Black people to AfricaFebruary 19, 2022
- After World War II, tens of thousands of U.S. soldiers mutinied — and wonNovember 11, 2021After World War II, tens of thousands of U.S. soldiers mutinied — and wonNovember 11, 2021
- The ugly reason ‘The Star-Spangled Banner’ didn’t become our national anthem for a centuryOctober 18, 2020The ugly reason ‘The Star-Spangled Banner’ didn’t become our national anthem for a centuryOctober 18, 2020