Doroteo Arango Arámbula (June 5, 1878 – July 23, 1923) — better known as Francisco Villa or, in its diminutive form, Pancho Villa — was one of the foremost leaders and best known generals of the Mexican Revolution, between 1911 and 1920, and provisional governor of the Mexican state of Chihuahua in 1913 and 1914.All information in this article, unless otherwised sourced, comes from one of the following two sources:
Villa mostly operated in the northern theatre of the war, centering on Chihuahua, in the north of Mexico. Villa is often referred to as El centauro del norte (The Centaur of the North), due to his celebrated cavalry attacks as a general. Numerous streets and neighborhoods in Mexico are named for Villa.
Villa and Villa's ardent supporters, known as Villistas, employed tactics such as propaganda and firing squads against enemies, expropriated hacienda land for distribution to peasants and villista soldiers, and printed fiat money to finance Villa's cause. Many of Villa's tactics and strategies were adopted by later 20th century revolutionaries.
Villa's troops were collectively known as the División del norte (Division Of The North). His elite cavalry troops and bodyguards were known as Los dorados (The Golden Ones).
As one of the major (and most colorful) figures of the first successful popular revolution of the 20th century, Villa's notoriety attracted journalists, photographers, and military freebooters of both idealistic and opportunistic stripe, from far and wide.
Villa's revolutionary aims (other than military goals), unlike those of Emiliano Zapata's Plan de Ayala, were never clearly defined. Villa spoke vaguely of creating communal military colonies for his ex-soldiers, and he subscribed to Venustiano Carranza's Plan of Guadalupe.
Despite extensive research by Mexican and foreign scholars, many of the details of Villa's life are in dispute, and probably will always be.
For several years Villa spent most of his time in the mountains running from the law. Villa had an intimate knowledge of the mountainous terrain and knew how to survive on his own in the wilderness, but by 1896 he had joined some other bandits under the control of a man named Ignacio Parra. When Parra was killed in a police ambush, Doroteo led the charge back into the wilderness were it was agreed that Doroteo would now lead. Doroteo's name, Francisco Villa, was borrowed from a well-known Mexican bandit who, according to legend, stole from the rich and gave to the poor.
On November 20, 1910, the Mexican Revolution, led by Francisco Madero, began to overthrow the dictatorship of Porfirio Diaz. After nearly 35 years of rule which the Mexican people were thoroughly tired of, Diaz's political situation was untenable, and his poorly paid conscript troops were no match for the motivated antireeleccionista volunteers fighting for libertad and Maderismo. The antireeleccionistas booted Diaz from office in a few months of fighting. Villa helped defeat the federal army of Díaz in favor of Madero in 1911, most famously in the first Battle of Juarez, which was viewed by Americans sitting on the top of railroad boxcars in El Paso, Texas. Madero became president of Mexico. On May 29, 1911, Villa married Maria Luz Corral.
Most people at that time assumed that the idealist Madero would lead Mexico into a new era of true democracy, and Villa would fade back into obscurity. But Villa's greatest days of fame were yet to come, and democracy in Mexico was further off than most people living in 1911 could have imagined.
Villa's hatred of Huerta became more personal and intense after March 7, 1913, when Huerta ordered the murder of Villa's political mentor, Abraham González. Villa later recovered Gonzalez's remains and gave his friend a hero's funeral in Chihuahua.
Villa joined the rebellion against Huerta, crossing the Rio Grande into Ciudad Juarez with a mere 8 men, 2 pounds of coffee, 2 pounds of sugar, and 500 rounds of rifle ammunition. The new United States president Woodrow Wilson dismissed Ambassador Wilson, and began to support Carranza's cause. Villa's remarkable generalship combined with ingenious fundraising methods (including allowing an american movie company to film his troops during actual fighting and even briefly appearing in the resulting motion picture) to support his rebellion, would be a key factor in forcing Huerta from office a little over a year later, on July 15,1914.
This was the time of Villa's greatest fame and success. He recruited soldiers and able subordinates such as Felipe Angeles and Sam Dreben and raised money via methods such as forced assessments on hostile hacienda owners (such as William Benton, who was killed in the Benton affair), and train robberies. In one notable escapade, he held 122 bars of silver ingot from a train robbery (and a Wells Fargo employee) hostage and forced Wells Fargo to help him fence the bars for spendable cash. A rapid, hard fought series of victories at Ciudad Juarez, Tierra Blanca, Chihuahua and Ojinaga followed. Villa then became provisional governor of Chihuahua state.
As governor of Chihuahua, Villa raised more money for a drive to the south by printing fiat money. He decreed his paper money to be traded and accepted at par with gold Mexican pesos, under penalty of execution, then forced the wealthy to trade their gold for his paper pesos by decreeing gold to be counterfeit money. He also confiscated the gold of banks, in the case of the Banco Minero, by holding hostage a member of the bank's owning family, the wealthy and famous Terrazas clan, until the location of the bank's gold was revealed.
Villa's stature at that time was so high that banks in El Paso, Texas accepted his paper pesos at face value. His generalship drew enough admiration from the US military that he and Alvaro Obregon were invited to Fort Bliss to meet General John J. Pershing. A photo A photograph of Obregon, Villa and Pershing together was taken of Obregon, Villa and Pershing together.
The new pile of loot was used to purchase draft animals, cavalry horses, arms, ammunition, mobile hospital facilities, and food, and to rebuild the railroad south of Chihuahua City. The rebuilt railroad transported Villa's troops and artillery south, where he defeated Federal forces at Gomez Palacio, Torreon, and Zacatecas.
Villa, disgusted by what he saw as egoismo, tendered his resignation. Felipe Angeles and Villa's officer staff argued for Villa to withdraw his resignation, defy Carranza's orders, and proceed to attack Zacatecas, a strategic mountainous city considered nearly impregnable; but since Zacatecas was the source of much of Mexico's silver, and thus a supply of funds for whomever held it, victory there against Huerta would mean that his chances of holding the remainder of the country would be slim. Villa accepted Angeles' advice, cancelled his resignation, and the Division del norte defeated the Federals in the Toma de Zacatecas (Taking of Zacatecas), the single bloodiest battle of the Revolution, with the military forces counting approximately 7,000 dead and 5,000 wounded, and unknown numbers of civilian casualties. (A memorial to and museum of the Toma de Zacatecas is on the Cerro de la Bufa, one of the key defense points in the battle of Zacatecas. Tourists use a teleferico (aerial tramway) to reach it, due to the steep approaches. From the top, tourists may appreciate the difficulties Villa's troops had trying to dislodge Federal troops from the peak.) The loss of Zacatecas in June of 1914 broke the back of the Huerta regime, and Huerta left for exile on July 14, 1914.
This was the beginning of the split between Villa and the constitutionalistas of Carranza, which would eventually doom Villa as a military and political power in Mexico. Carranza's egoismo would eventually become self-destructive, alienating most of the people he needed to hold power, and doom him as well.
There was much speculation in the US press in 1913 and 1914, that Villa would become President of Mexico. Villa always denied such speculation, claiming that he was not educated well enough to assume the responsibility.
After the interim presidency of Francisco S. Carvajal, who succeeded Huerta, Carranza and the Constitutionalist Army entered Mexico City in August 1914. Meanwhile, Villa and Zapata refused to join Carranza, claiming that Carranza was attempting to set himself up as a caudillo, and was not intending to carry out the aims of the revolution. The Convention of Aguascalientes, which Carranza refused to attend, met between October 10 and November 13, 1914. The Convention deposed Carranza as primer jefe (Number One Chief) of the Revolution and installed Eulalio Gutiérrez as President. In November, 1914, Carranza left Mexico City for Veracruz, and repudiated the Convention. *
After Carranza's exit, Villa and Zapata entered and occupied Mexico City in early December, 1914. They had their first face to face meeting in Xochimilco on December 4, 1914.
Unfortunately, Villa's talent for generalship began to fail him in 1915. When Villa faced General Obregon in the Battle of Celaya on April 15, repeated charges of Villa's vaunted cavalry proved to be no match for Obregon's entrenchments and modern machine guns, and the villista advance was first checked then repulsed. In a later engagement, Obregon lost one of his arms to villista artillery.
Villa retrenched to Chihuahua and attempted to refinance his revolt by having a firm in San Antonio, Texas, crank out more paper fiat money. * (Most Villa money seen today dates from this period) But the effort met with limited success, and the value of Villa's paper pesos dropped to a fraction of their former value as doubts grew about Villa's political viability. Villa began ignoring the counsel of the most valuable member of his military staff, Felipe Angeles, and eventually Angeles left for exile in Texas. Despite Carranza's unpopularity, Carranza had an able general in Obregon and most of Mexico's military power, and unlike Huerta, was not being hampered by interference from the United States.
On March 9, 1916, Villa led 1,500 (disputed, one official US Army report stated "500 to 700") Mexican raiders in a cross-border attack against Columbus, New Mexico, in response to the U.S. government's official recognition of the Carranza regime They attacked a detachment of the [http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/agency/army/1-13ar.htm 13th US Cavalry, seized 100 horses and mules, burned the town, killed 10 soldiers and 8 of its residents, and took much ammunition and weaponry.
United States' President Woodrow Wilson responded by sending 6,000 troops under General John J. Pershing to Mexico to pursue Villa. In the U.S., this was known as the Punitive or Pancho Villa Expedition. During the search, the United States launched its first air combat mission with eight airplanes. * At the same time Villa was also being sought by Carranza's army. The U.S. expedition was eventually called off as a failure, and Villa successfully escaped from both armies.
In 1920, Villa negotiated peace with new President Adolfo de la Huerta and ended his revolutionary actions. He went into semi-retirement, with a detachment of 50 of los dorados for protection, at the hacienda of El Canutillo *. He was assassinated three years later (1923) in Parral, Chihuahua, in his car. The assassins were never found. While there is some circumstantial evidence that Obregon was behind the killing, Villa made many enemies over his lifetime, who would have had motives to murder him. Today Villa is remembered as a folk hero.
In 1926 grave robbers decapitated his corpse. * His skull has yet to be found.
The location of the rest of Villa's corpse is in dispute. It may be in the city cemetery of Parral, Chihuahua or in the Monument of the Revolution in Mexico City [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=11754343. Tombstones for Villa exist in both places.
His final words were "Don't let it end like this. Tell them I said something."
As noted in the introduction, the tumultous times of the Mexican revolution in which Villa lived means that many details of Villa's life will never be completely verifiable. Even contemporary press and eyewitness accounts often conflict, each side of the conflict had a propaganda machine churning out its own spin on events. However, listing some of the legends and stories is important for explaining Villa's political mystique.
John Reed's book Insurgent Mexico relates many tales of Villa, and has stories of Reed's personal encounters with the general. John Eisenhower's book Intervention! details the US interventions in Tampico and Chihuahua during the Revolution. Freidrich Katz's Life and Times of Pancho Villa is the most thorough scholarly English language treatment of Villa's life.
Some contacts between Germans (prinicipally in the person of Felix A. Sommerfeld, noted in Katz's book) and Villa are documented well enough to be believeable. However, the actions of Sommerfeld indicate he was likely acting in his own self interest (he supposedly was paid a $5,000 per month stipend for supplying dynamite to Villa, a fortune in 1915), and Villa's actions were hardly that of a German catspaw. * When weighing claims of Villa conspiring with Germans, one should take into account that at the time, portraying Villa as a German sympathizer served the propaganda ends of both Carranza and Wilson.
The use of Mauser rifles by Villa's forces does not necessarily indicate any German connection, these were widely used by all parties in the Mexican revolution.
1878 births | 1923 deaths | American folklore | Deaths by firearm | Governors of Chihuahua | Mexican generals | People from Durango | People of the Mexican Revolution | Revolutionaries
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