
Office–Library
Sala
This is the most meaningful room in the house. Carranza spent the most critical moments of his government here and likely discussed major national matters in this space. On the center table is a 1916 photo album of Acapulco, a gift from Guerrero governor Silvestre G. Mariscal. On the wall are four panoplies—two short, two long. The long ones hold four of Carranza’s swords; the short ones include symbolic plaques: one commemorating the closing of the Constituent Congress, and the other related to the Carranza Doctrine. His personal library contains 833 books on various topics: history, politics, education, literature, and agronomy.
