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  • Texas | Columns | "Texas Tales"

    Royalty for a Day

    by Mike Cox
    Mike Cox

    For a man who had lost an arm to a rifle bullet during the Mexican Revolution, Alvaro Obregon seems to have been a bit lax with security matters.

    That attitude, born either of bravery or naivety, would prove costly, but it also set the stage for an experience that Ruth Wilkerson Henderson remembered the rest of her long life.

    It happened when she was a young woman. Strikingly attractive, appropriately enough she hailed from Venus, Texas. Wherever she went, she attracted male eyes. But the man she considered the love of her life had been killed in World War I.

    In 1920, she traveled by train from Fort Worth to El Paso to visit her uncle, a physician. Having a doctor in the family turned out to be a good thing, because no sooner had she alighted from the passenger car at the mountain city’s Union Station than she started having trouble breathing. Over the next few days, she got worse.

    “What in the world is the matter with you?” the doctor asked. Answering his own question, he concluded that El Paso’s altitude was having an adverse affect on his niece.

    The doctor decided the only remedy was to send her home to the lower elevation of North Texas. The following morning he took her to the depot to catch the 6 a.m. eastbound train.

    A woman who knew her uncle also happened to be taking that train and at the doctor’s request, she agreed to look after Ruth at least until she got where she was headed, which would take about two-thirds of the trip. Ruth protested that she was perfectly capable of taking care of herself, but her uncle prevailed.

    Soon, having a chaperon forced on her proved to be the least of her worries. The crowded coach car they had boarded smelled of body odor and tobacco smoke.

    With her companion at her side, Ruth walked down the aisle to check the next car. With only a few men sitting toward the back, it was less crowded and far cleaner than the car they had left. They sat down about mid-way.

    When the conductor strolled through a few minutes later, he looked at the two women for a moment before walking back to where the men sat. After talking with them briefly, he returned to the women.

    “You and your chaperone are in the private coach of the President of Mexico,” he said. “Maybe you didn’t know it.”

    Ruth assured the conductor she had no idea she had boarded a private car, but said she couldn’t go back to the day coach. It was a matter of her health, she said.

    That’s when one-armed President Alvaro Obregon walked up and courteously introduced himself.

    “I would be happy to have the young lady and her chaperone be my guest today,” he told the conductor.

    Ruth thanked him and said she’d readily accept his gracious offer. Clearly, her chaperone didn’t mind the notion of the rail equivalent of first-class travel, either.

    Obregon told the women he was on his way to Fort Worth on state business, but would be making a few public appearances along the way. Whether acting in innocence or like a powerful man away from home, the president said Ruth reminded him of his beautiful daughter and asked if she would appear with him when he waved at people from the back of his private car.

    Ruth agreed. Maybe it helped him politically to be seen with someone whom his citizens may have believed to have been his daughter, but Obregon’s evident casual attitude eventually caught up with him. On July 17, 1928, not long after being elected to a second (but not consecutive) presidential term, Obregon was assassinated in a Mexico City restaurant.

    By then, Ruth had long since settled into life as a school teacher in Comanche County, which is where she later related the story of her “Royalty for a Day”-style encounter with Obregon to one of her students. The student, in turn, published it in a school-produced publication called “Comanche County: Reflections of Our Heritage.”

    Ruth had never married. But when she was about 60, she got a second chance at love.

    As it turned out, she and her fiancé had been friends with a couple who went on to marry. That couple stayed together until the woman died. When Ruth moved back to North Texas, she became reacquainted with the widower and eventually he asked her to marry him.

    The next five years, she later told a friend, were the happiest years of her life. But then her husband died. Ruth lived on, making it to just 13 days shy of her 90th birthday. She died in Venus on Nov. 21, 1983.


    © Mike Cox -
    November 3 , 2011 column
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