Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
The Aerodrome: Blog Mirror: Without explanation, FAA closes El Paso and New Mexico airspace for 10 days, cites national defense
Thursday, February 5, 2026
Sunday, February 5, 1911. First Battle of Bauche.
Mexican Federal troops, stopped the day prior at Bauche by rebels under Pascual Orozco, abandoned the railroad and commenced marching overland towards Juarez in an effort to relieve forces besieged there.
A revolution in Haiti was put down with the capture of rebel General Montreuil Guillaume.
Last edition:
Saturday, February 4, 1911. Deadlocks.
Wednesday, June 19, 2019
June 20, 1919. German government dissolves Villa asks why, and Californians go for root beer
Tuesday, June 18, 2019
June 18, 1919. Aftermaths
President Wilson toured Belgium.
While in the U.S., the aftermath of the fighting in Juarez was still in the headlines. The Mexican government was regarding the incident as closed, the U.S. Senate, now in GOP hands, was considering investigating U.S. relations with Mexico since the onset of the Revolution, and Americans in Chickasaw were advised to get out.
Meanwhile, the Germans were reported to be considering what would occur if they rejected the Paris Peace Treaty.
Saturday, June 15, 2019
The Mexican Border War: The Third Battle of Ciudad Juarez. June 15-16, 1919 Part 3.
Friday, June 14, 2019
The Mexican Border War: The Third Battle of Ciudad Juarez. June 15-16, 1919 Part 2.
The attack was not any kind of a surprise and had been expected for days. Indeed, the presumption that the attack was going to be launched on June 14, which ultimately it was but only very late at night, resulted in newspaper headlines regarding its delay. Whatever the source of that delay actually was, it would have done speculators well to recall that Villa liked to attack at night.
The attack on the night of the 14th spread into the next day with the Constitutionalist forces withdrawing towards the city center. But during the day they recovered and forced Villa back to the eastern part of the city. In the meantime, the U.S. Army ordered up troops from the 24th Infantry, the 2nd Cavalry, the 82nd Field Artillery and the 8th Engineers to a location near a ford across the Rio Grande in case an American intervention proved necessary. By daybreak it appeared it would not be, so the troops were ordered back to Ft. Bliss.
The battle was not yet over however. The Villistas would launch another nighttime assault that night.
July 14, 1919. Wars and Rumors of War. Villa attacks Juarez, World waits for German decision, AFL protests Prohibition
Pancho Villa's reconstituted forces had been approaching Juarez for days and had announced their intent to attack the city. The attack was delayed.
And the news reported it delayed.
According to the Tribune, that was because Villa's scouts had determined that the Constitutionalist forces defending Juarez were ready and able to withstand his intended assault.
On the same day, the paper reported the ominous news that if the Germans didn't sign the Versailles Treaty by June 21, the war may well resume.
The Wyoming State Tribune was more blunt in its assessment that the war in Europe may very well resume.
On the same page, however, it noted the arrival of the 148th Field Artillery, containing Wyoming National Guardsmen, back in the states. How exactly the Allies intended to resume a war against Germany, on its own soil, with the US and the British disbanding their armies as quickly as possible was certainly an open question.
That paper also noted the Villista's delay in attacking Juarez.
The Laramie Daily Boomerang didn't bother with the Villistas, but it did with the looming deadline, as well as disturbing news from the Russian Civil War.
The Cheyenne Daily Leader reported, however, both that the assault was coming today, and that there were no rebels near Juarez. It also celebrated Flag Day.
The prediction of an assault today was correct. At 11:35 p.m., the Villista's attacked from the East. Villa, who seems to have favored nighttime assaults, in an era in which they were very difficult, launched one yet again. The Constitutionalist began to withdraw towards the center of the town.
It wasn't looking good for drinkers either, which is perhaps why the American Federation of Labor had a big Prohibition demonstration in Washington D. C. on this Flag Day.
Others just wanted to send letters home.
Wednesday, June 12, 2019
June 13, 1919. Misleading Headlines
American troops had not been sent into Mexico.
They were taking up positions near Columbus, New Mexico, however. As well as standing ready in El Paso. It was clear by this day that Villa was going to attempt to move north. . . maybe to Juarez, and less likely on Columbus.
And it was unlikely that he was going to try to cross the border. But being on guard was well warranted.
Vladivostok was also a location where a lot of troops, and refugees, were in evidence on this day in 1919. In this case, White Russian troops, and refugees fleeing the Reds as the lines changed every day.
Tuesday, June 11, 2019
June 12, 1919. Villa arrives at Villa Ahumada.
Monday, June 10, 2019
June 10, 1919. Meanwhile, in Texas. . . .
Saturday, February 23, 2019
February 23, 1919. Villa advances on Juarez
Which is news that would have seemed current a couple of years ago, and then seemed impossible, only to be current again.
Friday, November 30, 2018
November 30, 1918. Americans enter Germany for the first time, Villa threatens Juarez, Wyomingites get Reserve Plates, Teenage Bride Mildred Harris Chaplin rumored to be planning a visit home, No beer for New Years.
Wednesday, March 8, 2017
The Cheyenne State Leader for March 8, 1917: Troops Rushed To Protect Border
Juarez was in the news again, and troops were going to the border.
And the Senate was preparing to adopt the cloture rule.
The Wyoming Tribune for March 8, 1917: Guardsmen muster out tomorrow.
Wyoming National Guardsmen called up to guard the Mexican border during the Punitive Expedition were being mustered out on March 9, it was reported.
Meanwhile, that border was getting very tense once again.
Thursday, April 7, 2011
Friday, April 4, 1911. The First Battle of Ciudad Juárez commences.
The First Battle of Ciudad Juárez commenced at the border city with 1,500 men under the command of Maduro, 500 under Villa and another 500 under Orozco, with American mercenaries under Captain E.L Holmdahl and Captain Karl Linderfeldt, launching their assault on Temosachi and Bauche.
The surrounded the city, which retained only one route to the outside.
Long time readers here may recognize Linderfeldt for his role at Ludlow, Colorado, which of course lay in the future at this point in time.
Linderfelt had served in the Philippine Insurrection and in China with the U.S. Army and Colorado National Guard. He's also served in the Mexican Army in 1911 and his name was in the Colorado newspapers frequently due to that at the time, usually under his nickname "Monte". Prior to the 1913 mine labor troubles in Colorado, he's been working as a mine guard. He was activated again during the Puntive expedition and then again for World War One, during which he rose to the rank of Colonel in the Colorado National Guard in spite of Ludlow. His name was frequently in the news in the teens, with the papers being very hostile to him at first, but later more sympathetic as the Punitive Expedition and World War One rolled on. The troops he was in command of did deploy to France, but not until October 1918, making it unlikely that hey saw much, if any, wartime combat. In 1919 he purchased a farm in Custer County, Colorado. In 1922, however, he was being foreclosed upon. He died at age 80 in 1957, at which time he was living in Los Angeles.
Homdahl had fought in the Spanish American War and the Philippine Insurrection, joining the Army at age 15, under Lee Christmas in Central America, and then as a mercenary in the Mexican Revolution. He's serve in the U.S. Army during World War One. He's one of the people accused of stealing Pancho Villa's head.
Unlike Linderfeldt, Homdahl served the revolutionary side for most of the Revolution, before becoming disenchanted with Pancho Villa. He had some fairly substantial commands under Madero. In 1915 he was convicted in the U.S., along with some other Mexican Revolutionaries, of violating the neutrality laws. He turned against Villa shortly thereafter and sought to join the U.S. Army as an officer, which was denied to him because of his conviction.
During the Punitive Expedition he seems to have served as a scout for the U.S. Army, although the details are murky as the records were destroyed after the event. He began an extensive campaign to be pardoned which paid off in July 1917, although it also exhausted his financial resources. He thereafter rejoined the Army, but with difficulty due to prior wounds at first disqualifying him.
After the war he was a prospector and spent time searching for the "buried gold" of Pancho Villa. As noted, he's suspected of having stolen Pancho Villa's head, but he's not the only suspect. He died in April, 1963.
Linderfeldt certainly lived a life of adventure, but not a wholly admirable life. Linderfeldt certainly didn't live a wholly admirable life.
The Department of Justice obtained its first conviction of a member of the Black Hand, that being of Gianni Alongi for his role in sending death threats to butcher shop owner Garmila Marsala.
A fire at the Price-Pancoast Colliery at Throop, Pennsylvania, near Scranton, Pennsylvania, killed 73 coal miners, many of them boys.
Last edition:
Wednesday, April 5, 1911. Remembering the victims of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire.
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Thursday, March 16, 1911. A bombing in Juarez.
A bomb made of nitroglycerine was set off near the barracks of Mexican federal troops in Juarez, but without effect.
Las Vegas become an incorporated Nevada municipality.
Last edition:
Wednesday, March 15, 1911. .45 ACP Trials.
Monday, March 14, 2011
Tuesday, March 14, 1911. Worries in El Paso.
El Paso was jittery, although not without good reason.
Early in the Progressive Era, California adopted initiatives and referendums.
I'm not hugely keen on them myself.
The Japanese Antarctic Expedition reached its limit at Coulman Island.
Last edition:
Monday, March 13, 1911. The Supreme Court upheld corporate income tax as constitutional.
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Wednesday, February 15, 1911. Bogosity then and now and "Viva Diaz!"
NAVARRO IN JUAREZ; REBELS GO SOUTH; Mexican General with 1,000 Men Greeted with Cries of "Viva Diaz!" -- Met No Insurrectos.
Headline in the New York Times.
Compulsory domestic service? Crud, most women had that then, and still do today.
A completely ineffective medicine that purported to be a remedy for the treatment of tuberculosis made up of olive oil, squill root, almonds, nettle and red poppy petals was granted U.S. Patent 1,368,974.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., is probably ready to back it as we speak or read, assuming he's not recounting his glory days of sniffing coke off of toilet seats.
Ah. . . the best and the brightest. . .
Last edition:
Tuesday, February 14, 1911. Madero reenters Mexico, John Browning patents the 1911.
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
Thursday, February 9, 1911. Establishing the size of the House of Representatives.
The House of Representatives approved the Permanent Apportionment Act of 1929, increasing the number of U.S. Representatives, beginning in 1913, from 391 to 435, the number that it has had ever since.
This has created unequal representation and something really needs to be done to change it.
Voters in the Arizona Territory approved the proposed state Constitution.
Writer Jack London, who was a Socialist, came out in support of Socialist revolutionaries in Mexico.
The Army intended to deploy lighter than air craft near El Paso in an attempt to figure out what was going on in the revolution near there.
Indentured servitude for Chinese workers in British Malaya was abolished, effective June 30, 1914.
Last edition:







































_crop.jpg)


