-
blamed Wilson for his
defeat against Carranza. In
January 1916, a
group of
Villistas attacked a
train on the
Mexico North Western Railway, near
Santa Isabel...
- the
Villistas provoked an
intervention by the
United States Army
protecting the
neighboring city of El Paso, Texas. The
Americans routed the
Villistas in...
-
horses (hence the
limit of 100
Villistas).
Before 2006, the
Mexican horses were left
behind in Mexico, and the
Villistas rode
American horses from the...
- was
attacked by
Villistas and in turn
skirmished for a half hour. One
American was
killed along with
several of Villa's rebels.
Villistas and Constitutionalists...
-
killed or
captured 292
Villistas and
captured 605 rifles, 5 pistols, 14
machine guns, and 139
horses and
mules from the
Villistas. Most of the
horses and...
- Obregón. As the
Villistas occupied the
defensive positions they had captured, Obregón
ordered his
bugler to
sound general retreat. The
Villistas, believing...
- the city, the
Villistas began evacuating Nogales, Sonora. However,
their evacuation was
disrupted when a
train used to
transport Villista troops out of...
-
border with Mexico. The raid
escalated into a full-scale
battle between Villistas and the
United States Army.
Villa himself led the ****ault, only to be...
- on
Glenn Springs occurred on the
night of May 5–6, 1916, when
Mexican Villistas and
Carrancistas attacked the
towns of
Boquillas and
Glenn Springs, Texas...
- in
Presidio County, Texas. At the time the
raiders were
thought to be
Villistas, as they had been
responsible for
several other previous incursions into...