Pancho Villa in 1911

Pancho Villa in 1911

Notation on image: (back) Villa Juarez, Mex 1912 Visible: Two horses are visible --on the right side, Pancho Villa is mounted on one of the horses. In the back of Pancho Villa a man is standing with a white coat. Other men are on the left side. Some horses are visible in the background. Mountains are also visible in the background. Note-- included with image from Miguel Angel Berumen---it says "Villa En 1911". Pancho Villa (1978-1923) was a Mexican revolutionary leader who advocated for the poor. Though he was a killer and a bandit, many remember him as a folk hero. Born into a poor family, he learned the gap between the rich and the poor in Mexico in the end of the 19th century the hard way. After having shot the owner of the hacienda on which his family lived and worked with the age of 16, Villa ran from the law and became the leader of a group of bandits. Because of his skills as a guerilla fighter, he caught the attention of men who were planning a revolution. Since Porfirio Diaz, the sitting president of Mexico, had created much of the current problems for the poor and Francisco Madero promised change for the lower classes, Pancho Villa joined Madero and became an effective leader in the revolutionary army from October 1910 to May 1911. Together with Madero and Pascual Orozco, he commanded the troops during the Battle of Juarez, which led to the resignation of Porfirio Diaz. However, in May 1911, he resigned from command because of differences he had with Orozco. Villa married Maria Luz Corral and tried to settle down. When Orozco started a new rebellion against Madero, who had become Mexican President, Villa supported Madero together with General Victoriano Huerta. When Huerta became a Madero adversary and eventually killed him to claim the presidency for himself, Villa allied himself with Venustiano Carranza to fight against Huerta. Pancho Villa was extremely successful, but in the summer of 1914, Villa and Carranza, became enemies and fought against each other for the next several years. The United States supported Carranza, which is why Villa attacked the town of Columbus, New Mexico, in 1916. His attack was the first on American soil since 1812. Under the leadership of General Pershing, the U.S. sent thousands of soldiers across the border to hunt for Pancho Villa (Punitive Expedition), but they never caught him. When Adolfo De la Huerta became the interim president of Mexico in 1920, Villa agreed to retire from revolutionary life but was gunned down in 1923.

Area: Out of Area / Ciudad Juarez

Source: EPMH

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Report this entry

Choose the most important reason for this report

Your name

Your email address

Optional detail

Thank you for your report

More from the same community-collection

Photography by Rene Luna

Pasos Urbanos: A Photographic Narrative of Downtown Borderland ...

Photography by Rene Luna

Pasos Urbanos: A Photographic Narrative of Downtown Borderland ...

Photography by Rene Luna

Pasos Urbanos: A Photographic Narrative of Downtown Borderland ...

Photography by Rene Luna

Pasos Urbanos: A Photographic Narrative of Downtown Borderland ...

Photography by Rene Luna

Pasos Urbanos: A Photographic Narrative of Downtown Borderland ...

Photography by Daniel Dominguez

Pasos Urbanos: A Photographic Narrative of Downtown Borderland ...

Photography by Patrick Donohue Craig

Pasos Urbanos: A Photographic Narrative of Downtown Borderland ...

Photography by Mónica Becerril

Singin' to Death - by Mónica Becerril. November 2018. Paying ...

Photography by Mónica Becerril

Pasos Urbanos - by Mónica Becerril. October 2018. After a day ...

Photography by Mónica Becerril

A Walk in the Sun: The perfect instant where the sunset mixes ...

Photography by Mónica Becerril

Vuelo de Libertad: Young people practicing parkour, getting ...

Postcard of Church of Guadalupe, Ciudad Juarez c. 1905

Postcard of Church of Guadalupe, Ciudad Juarez c. 1905

Weekends in Juarez

Rosario and Hector with their young daughters Rosarito and Mara ...

The Queen and Escort

In 1961, the courtship of Hector and Rosario begins. In the ...

The Courtship

Hector and Rosario enjoy a vibrant social life in Juarez and El ...

Memories of Grandparents' Home

Hector Holguin Jr. is standing in the front entrance of Medina ...

The Medina Homes in Juarez

With the success of Casa Medina, Fausto Medina was able to build ...

Casa Medina lights up downtown Juarez

This evening view highlights the unique design of the new Casa ...

The Marketplace celebrates Mexico

Casa Medina was filled with the best offerings of a Mexican ...

Casa Medina

After the Stock Market Crash of 1929, Fausto Medina could not ...

The Patriarch and his Grandchildren

Grandfather Fausto Medina with eldest cousins Aida and Olga ...

La Reina

Maria del Rosario Gomez Goeldner

Sales Contract

Sales contract from September 06, 1937. Seller: Josefina F. ...

home.search_collection