Germany declared war on Portugal.
Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Sunday, March 8, 2026
Thursday, March 9, 1916. Germany declares war on Portugal,
Germany declared war on Portugal.
Wednesday, March 8, 1916. Villa crosses the border.
Pancho Villa and about 400 of his men crossed the Mexican border near Columbus New Mexico.
The town had a U.S. Army garrison of 600.
The town was also the home of Sam Ravel, a man to whom Villa had given money to buy arms but who had not delivered, although that is unlikely to have been the reason for the attack, as we discussed here:
The Columbus Raid. Why did it occur?
Ottoman forces stopped a much larger British force attempting to relieve Kut.
The sledging party of the second arm of the Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition was reduced to three walking members during their return trek from Mount Hope in the Antarctic.
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Tuesday, March 7, 1916. Villa close to the border.
Thursday, March 10, 2016
The Punitive Expedition. Making the decision.
An adequate force will be sent at once in pursuit of Villa with the single object ofcapturing him and putting a stop to his forays. This can and will be done in entirely friendly aid of the constituted authorities in Mexico and with scrupulous respect for the sovereignty of that Republic
Wednesday, March 9, 2016
The Raid on Columbus New Mexico: The news hit.
Most towns and cities in 1916 were served by a morning and an evening newspaper, or a paper that published a morning and evening edition. Therefore, most Americans would have started learning of the Villista raid around 5:00 p.m. or so as the evening newspapers were delivered or started being offered for sale.
Here's the evening edition of the Casper Daily Press, a paper that was in circulation in Casper Wyoming in 1916 and which is the predecessor of one of the current papers.
The Raid on Columbus New Mexico, 1916
The Raid on Columbus New Mexico: The Telegram.
Columbus attacked this morning, 4:30 o’clock. Citizens murdered. Repulsed about 6 o’clock. Town partly burned. They have retreated to the west. Unable to say how many were killed. Department of Justice informed that between 400 and 500 Villa troops attacked Columbus, New Mexico about 4:30. Villa probably in charge. Three American soldiers killed and several injured; also killed four civilians and wounded four. Several of the attacking party killed and wounded by our forces. Attacking party also burned depot and principal buildings in Columbus. United States soldiers now pursuing attacking parties across the line into Mexico. No prisoners reported taken alive
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The Raid on Columbus New Mexico, 1916
The Raid on Columbus New Mexico, 1916
The raid on Columbus New Mexico, 1916
The Raid on Columbus New Mexico, 1916
They expected to encounter an American garrison of only 30 men, as noted above, based upon their scouting and intelligence. However, Columbus had a garrison of over 300 men, to Villa's force of approximately 500 men. The US forces were from the U.S. 13th Cavalry who occupied adjacent Camp Furlong. Moreover, U.S. troops were equipped in a modern fashion, complete with the Benet Mercie light machine gun which had been adopted for cavalry use.
Thursday, March 9, 1916. The Raid On Columbus New Mexico.
Remembering Pancho Villa’s attack on Columbus, N.M.
Tuesday, March 8, 2016
The Columbus Raid. Why did it occur?
Unlike some historitans, I think the answer is obvious, and I've touched on it before in our thread Lex Anteinternet: The Mexican Revolution. As the anniversary of the event came upon me at a time when work and activities kept me from posting a really new entry here on the episode, I'm linking in, over the course of the week, a variety of items, but this particular item addressed some of these topics. So I'm basing this post on what I earlier wrote. Perhaps that's bad form, but none the less I think the earlier entry was pretty good.
I'm not going to repeat all that was there, but let's note that Mexico had slid into revolution, and the US had already intervened in Mexico during that revolution. Mexico's long standing dictator Porfirio Diaz had fallen in revolution. In turn, Modero, who overthrew him in the name of liberal democracy, had ruled naively and had gone down in a 1913 military coup that brought Victoriano Huerta to power. Unfortunately, that coup had the local support of the American ambassador to Mexico, Henry Lane Wilson. Mexico erupted into civil war. That civil war brought the radical Venustiano Carranza into power and soon remaining Mexican revolutionaries took sides with or against him as Mexico descended into chaos. One of the revolutionary generals opposing Carranza was Pancho Villa with his Army of the North.
We pick up the story after the U.S. first intervened military at Vera Cruz to keep arms being supplied to Huerta.
Indicative of things to come, perhaps, Huerta was defeated and fled while the United States occupied Vera Cruz, but he was no more pleased about the American presence there than a disgruntled Huerta was, who went on to plot with German agents to bring Mexico into war with the United States, as noted. American forces withdrew in November 1914, but they'd be back, as we'll see, in a different location only shortly thereafter. The intervention at Vera Cruz, however, did prevent the Germans from supplying a shipment of arms to Huerta, which may or may not have had an impact on the Mexican Revolution. Ironically, the arms were actually American made as the Germans, in 1914, were not in a position to export arms to Mexico.Carranza soon found himself fighting the two main stars of the Mexican Revolution, Pancho Villa and Emiliano Zapata. Zapata, while he receives less attention, is by far the most interesting of the two as he had a real political vision for Mexico, that being a distributist agrarian state. Villa was more of a peasant free agent, with less defined goals. Suffice it to say, however, both had been highly successful revolutionaries and a betting man would have bet against Carranza at that point.However, Carranza was a radical as well, and that position allowed him to undercut support for a war weary Mexican population in the south. This began to undercut support for the agrarian Zapata, and he began to face supply problems and accordingly set backs in the field. Nonetheless Zapata was still in the field in 1919 when he was lured into a trap in an effort to secure supplies and assassinated. In the north, Pancho Villa, who had been a very successful natural cavalry commander, found himself unable to adapt to the changes in battlefield tactics that were also being used in Europe. Constantly in battle against Carranzaista commander Alvaro Obregon, who used barbed wire and trenches, his fortunes rapidly declined.Alvaro Obregon, whose competence and study of military tactics lead to the defeat of Pancho Villa and his Division del Norte. He'd ultimately become present of Mexico following his coup against Carranza. Obregon would serve one term as president of Mexico, and was elected to a second term to follow his successor Calles, but he was assassinated prior to taking office.But before they did, Carranza, in spite of a dislike of the United States, approached the Wilson administration about transporting troops through Texas by rail to be used against Villa. Wilson had been horrified by H L. Wilson's actions in bringing about Madero's downfall, and he deeply desired to see an end to the fighting in Mexico. Deciding to recognize Carranza as the legitimate ruler of the country, he granted permission for this to be done in 1915. Traveling under arms, they were used against Villa. Villa retaliated against the United States for its entering the conflict in this fashion by raiding Columbus New Mexico on March 9, 1916.
The raid on Columbus has seemingly baffled American historians ever since, but the reasons for it couldn't be more apparent. Villa was a fairly simply man, not a diplomat, and he had been attacked by Carranza's forces after they'd crossed the United States by rail. By doing that, the US had taken a position in the war, which indeed it had whether President Wilson recognized that or not. Indeed, Wilson had been warned by those knowledgeable not to support Carranza, who deeply disliked the US, and when it wasn't clear who was going to win the civil war. Wilson's actions did nothing to engender love from Carranza but it did inspire Villa to retaliate against the US.
Friday, March 4, 2016
Saturday, March 4, 1916. Captured Villistas reveal plans.
Ranch foreman Juan Favela (Palomas Land & Cattle Company) and his cowboys captured several Villistas who reported plans to attack Hatchita or Columbus. Favela dispatched a cowboy to Columbus and provide warning.
It was a Saturday.
The UK raised income tax to help pay for the war.
The third Irish Race Convention was held in New York City, and resulted in the formation of the Friends of Irish Freedom.
The University of Oregon fight song "Mighty Oregon" was first performed at a college basketball game by the Oregon Marching Band in Eugene, Oregon.
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