Saturday, April 25, 2020
Pancho Villa Essays - Mexico, Mexican Revolution, Pancho Villa
  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    
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