Pancho Villa
Doroteo Aranga learned to hate aristocratic
Dons, who worked he and many other
Mexicans like slaves, Doroteo Aranga
also known as Pancho villa hated
aristocratic because he made them work like
animals all day long with little to
eat. Even more so, he hated ignorance
within the Mexican people that allowed
such injustices. At the young age of
fifteen, Aranga came home to find his
mother trying to prevent the rape of
his sister. Aranga shot the man and fled to
the Sierra Madre for the next
fifteen years, marking him as a fugitive for the
first time. It was then that
he changed his name from Doroteo Aranga to
Francisco "Pancho" Villa, a
man he greatly admired. Upon the outbreak
of the Mexican Revolution of
1910-1911 against the Mexican dictator Porfirio
Diaz, Villa offered his
services to the rebel leader Francisco I. Madero. During
Madero’s
administration, he served under the Mexican general Victoriano
Huerta,
who sentenced him to death for insubordination. With his victories
attracting
attention in the United States, Villa escaped to the United
States.
President Woodrow Wilson’s military advisor, General Scott,
argued that the
U.S. should support Pancho Villa, because he would become
"the George
Washington of Mexico." In August of 1914, General Pershing
met Villa for
the first time in El Paso, Texas and was impressed with his
cooperative
composure; Pancho Villa then came to the conclusion that the U.S.
would
acknowledge him as Mexico’s leader. Following the assassination of
Madero and
the assumption of power by Huerta in 1913, he returned to join the
opposition
under the revolutionary Venustiano Carranza. Using "hit and
run"
tactics, he gained control of northern Mexico, including Mexico City. As
a
result, his powerful fighting force became "La Division Del
Norte."
The two men soon became enemies, however, and when Carranza
seized power in
1914, Villa led the rebellion against him. By April of
1915, Villa had set out
to destroy Carranzista forces in the Battle of
Celaya. The battle was said to be
fought with sheer hatred in mind rather
than military strategy, resulting in
amass loss of the Division del Norte. In
October of 1915, after much worry about
foreign investments, in the midst of
struggles for power, the U.S. recognized
Carranza as President of Mexico.
When Pancho Villa learned of this he felt
betrayed by President Wilson and
assumed Carranza had signed a dangerous pact
with the U.S., putting Mexico in
United States’ hands. As a result, this set
the stage for a confrontation
between the U.S. and Pancho Villa. Hence, the
United States put an
embargo on Villa, not allowing him to purchase guns,
ammunition, equipment,
etc., in American border towns. His transactions were,
thus, made illegal,
which automatically doubles his price. Considering his
shortages, troops
through harsh terrain to Aagua Prieta. Villa assumed it would
be poorly
protected and by capturing it, he would create a buffer zone with
the
U.S. to transport arms in his campaigning efforts. Too his surprise,
Agua Prieta
was heavily protected, because Wilson had allowed Carranza to
transport 5000
Mexican troops to American soil, which had arrived before
Villa. The trains of
soldiers forced Villa’s tired horseback troops into
retreat. The U.S. was
delighted when Carranza declared Villa done for good.
Consequently, Carranza
invited old U.S. investors (from before the
Revolution) to invest again. On
March 9th 1916, Villa crossed the border
with about 600 men and attacked
Columbus, NM killing 17 American citizens
and destroying part of the town.
Because of the growing discrimination
towards Latinos, the bodies of Mexicans
were gathered and burned as a
sanitary precaution against "Mexican
diseases." A punitive expedition,
costing the U.S. about twenty-five
million dollars, dispatched and about
150,000 troops to be mobilized in efforts
to capture Pancho Villa, who was
now known as a bandit in U.S. territory and a
hero to many in Mexico. The
Tenth Cavalry, which was made up of
African-Americans and headed by
Anglo-American officers, were labeled the
"Buffalo Soldiers" because they
were tough men who would punish the
Mexicans. This was first time the
United States used heavily armored vehicles
and airplanes, which in turn
served as a practice run before W.W.II. General
John Joseph "Blackjack"
Pershing had already earned a respectable name
in the U.S. with his service
in the Apache campaign, Therefore, he was assigned
to head the Punitive
Expedition, an attractive assignment. His mission
objective, as he understood
it, was to bring Villa in dead or alive. On March
16th, the New York
Times reported, "When Word Was Given, All Were After
Villa." The
expedition included new machinery, which the American people
were not
familiar with yet. Tanks weighing up to four tons, along with the
production
of trucks and planes, were the reason for the deaths of many
American
soldiers who did not know how to operate them. None-the-less,
Pershing ordered
many pilots to board and land as he wished. Villa’s troops
did not have
uniforms, so wherever American troops traveled, they paralleled
the route.
Hence, their survival was based on their familiarity with the
land. Towards the
end of March, Pershing established his headquarters 125
miles south of
Chihuahua. Pershing realized how strong Pancho Villa’s
countrymen supported
him and his raids, when he was met with dramatic
hostility and resentment. In
actuality it is ostensibly logical to believe
that the hostility was due to fear
of foreign powers on their territory. Most
of the blood spills were amongst
townspeople and Carranzista troops, because
Pershing’s troops never caught
sight of Villa. On the second day of April of
1916, Pershing received word of
what was supposed to be Villa’s hiding place.
Major Hank Tomkins, commander of
the thirteenth cavalry was ordered to
Parral, which is about 410 miles south of
the U.S. border. This was the
deepest penetration of U.S. troops into Mexico to
look for Villa. The
townspeople responded by saying that the Americans were
invading them and
Mexican families. When two tired American soldiers decided to
bathe in a
public fountain of the humble and conservative, town, the children
began to
throw stones at them. As the chaos grew into an uproar, the Mexican
people
began to retaliate and shots fired. Carranzista troops trying to stay
away to
avail battle, were not too far off and joined the retaliation.
The
American troops retreated sixteen miles way in a small village. With
the death
of a few Americans, Pershing was outraged and decided to
counterstroke. In
support, the American people demanded a full-scale invasion
of Mexico. Within
two months, more than 150,000 troops were on active duty
from Texas to
California; this was the largest military duty since World
War I. After many
weeks, Mexico began to pressure Carranza more decisively
against the Punitive
Expedition. Carranza, claiming Pancho Villa was no
longer a dangerous threat,
formally demanded the retreat of American troops.
Wilson refused, which lead to
a full-scale war between Mexico and the United
States. On the morning of June
18th, 1916, the commander of the tenth
cavalry arrived in a small town named
Carrizal, saying they would have to
pass through the town to reach their ordered
destination. Carranza refused,
proclaiming his uncertainty of the peoples
reactions to such an event. The
commander of the American troops refused to go
around and began to march on
through, firing at those who refuted. To the
surprise of many Americans, the
captain was killed along with about eighty men
of the tenth cavalry, claiming
fourteen Americans killed and twenty-four taken
prisoners. As a result,
Wilson prepared a letter to Congress demanding a
full-scale war and an
ultimatum was sent to Carranza, demanding the release of
all American
prisoners, which Mexico had already threatened to kill. Within
days, all
prisoners were released and all international bridges were
seized.
Although Carranza was finished, Pancho Villa was not ready to
throw in the
towel. Thus, he prepared for a series of attacks to come.
General Pershing
reported to Wilson of Villa’s repeated violence, but Villa
continued,
capturing many towns held by Carranzista forces. On January 1917,
Pancho Villa
gathered his forces to capture Toreon. In the end, hundreds of
his men were dead
and his defeat was seized upon by Wilson as a convenient
way out of the problems
in Mexico. The U.S. would then prepare to withdraw,
declaring the Punitive
Expedition a success, although they failed to ever
capture Villa. After the
overthrow of Carranza in 1920, Villa formed a truce
with the new government by
laying down his arms in exchange for land and
amnesty. He then retired to a
ranch near Parral, Chihuahua, where he was
assassinated by political enemies in
1923.