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Events in the year 1936 in Mexico.
Incumbents
Federal government
- President: Lázaro Cárdenas
 - Interior Secretary (SEGOB): Silvestre Guerrero
 - Secretary of Foreign Affairs (SRE): Eduardo Hay
 - Communications Secretary (SCT): Francisco J. Múgica
 - Education Secretary (SEP): Gonzalo Vázquez Vela
 - Secretary of Defense (SEDENA): Manuel Ávila Camacho
 
Supreme Court
- President of the Supreme Court: Daniel V. Valencia
 
Governors
- Aguascalientes: Enrique Osorio Camarena/Juan G. Alvarado Lavallade
 - Campeche: Eduardo Mena Córdova
 - Chiapas: Victórico R. Grajales/Efraín A. Gutiérrez
 - Chihuahua: Rodrigo M. Quevedo
 - Coahuila: Jesús Valdez Sánchez
 - Colima: Miguel G. Santa Ana
 - Durango: Enrique R. Calderón
 - Guanajuato: José Inocente Lugo
 - Guerrero: José Inocente Lugo
 - Hidalgo: Ernesto Viveros
 - Jalisco: Everardo Topete
 - State of Mexico: Eucario López
 - Michoacán: Rafael Ordorica/Gildardo Magaña
 - Morelos: José Refugio Bustamante
 - Nayarit: Joaquín Cardoso
 - Nuevo León: Gregorio Morales Sánchez/Anacleto Guerrero Guajardo
 - Oaxaca: Anastasio García Toledo/Constantino Chapital
 - Puebla: Gustavo Ariza
 - Querétaro: Ramón Rodríguez Familiar
 - San Luis Potosí: Mateo Fernández Netro
 - Sinaloa: Manuel Páez
 - Sonora: Ramón Ramos
 - Tabasco: Víctor Fernández Manero
 - Tamaulipas: Enrique Canseco
 - Tlaxcala: Adolfo Bonilla
 - Veracruz: Miguel Alemán Valdés
 - Yucatán: Fernando Cárdenas/Florencio Palomo Valencia
 - Zacatecas: Matías Ramos
 
Events
Popular culture
Sports
- Mexico wins a total of three bronze medals at the Summer Olympics.
 
Music
Film
- Allá en el Rancho Grande, directed by Fernando de Fuentes and starring Tito Guízar and Esther Fernández; beginning of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema[1]
 
Literature
Births
- 6 January – Rubén Amaro Sr., Mexican professional baseball player (d. 2017)
 - 23 February — Manuel Bartlett, politician (PRI)
 - 8 March – Mario Hernández, film director and screenwriter[2]
 - 15 April – José Becerra, boxer
 - 23 April — Víctor Cervera Pacheco, politician (PRI); Governor of Yucatán 1984–1988 and 1995–2001 (d. 2004)
 - 8 May – Víctor Yturbe, singer (died 1987)[3]
 - 19 September – Juliana González Valenzuela, Mexican philosopher
 - 8 October – Rogelio Guerra, actor (d. 2018)
 - 27 October – Enrique Canales, technologist, editor, political analyst, painter, and sculptor (died 2007)
 - Date unknown
- Mario Stern, composer and académic (d. 2017).
 
 
Deaths
- 19 May – Pascual Díaz y Barreto, Archbishop of Mexico City (born 1876; colitis)[4]
 
References
- ↑ "Por Fin: La Epoca de Oro 1936-1959" Archived 2017-01-11 at the Wayback Machine. http://cinemexicano.mty.itesm.mx Archived 2010-02-02 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved March 9, 2011.
 - ↑ "Hernández Sepúlveda, Mario". escritores.cinemexicano.unam.mx. Retrieved 10 July 2013.
 - ↑ Details of Yturbe's murder
 - ↑ TIME Magazine. Milestones June 1, 1936
 
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