COLUMBUS NEW MEXICO
Battle of Columbus New Mexico
In need of supplies during the Mexican Revolution, Francisco Pancho
Villa led his men in a raid across the border into the United States, at Columbus,
New Mexico, on March 8, 1916. The raid quickly escalated into a full-scale battle
when they encountered the towns U.S. Army garrison.
By late 1915, Pancho Villa had lost much of the widespread support he had enjoyed
at the start of the Mexican Revolution. Having lost a series of battles, Villa
and the remaining 500 soldiers of his Army of the North were desperate for food,
horses, and weapons.
In March 1916, Villa planned a raid on the military garrison in the U.S. town
of Columbus, New Mexico. The small town lay only a couple of miles across the
border. Villa sent spies to gather information, and they returned to report
that the garrison consisted of only 50 men. On the night of March 8, Villa led
the Army of the North into Columbus and attacked the garrison in the early hours
of March 9. Villas men also began looting and setting fire to houses in
the town. However, rather than the 50 U.S. soldiers that Villa had expected,
there were actually 350 soldiers, including the 13th U.S. Cavalry, stationed
at the garrison.
The raid quickly became a fierce battle when U.S. troops, led by Lieutenant
Ralph Lucas, fought back from the garrison with machine guns. A second detachment
of U.S. soldiers, commanded by Lieutenant James Castleman, launched a counterattack,
which forced Villa and his men to retreat. They were pursued by U.S. cavalrymen
back across the border into Mexico, although, no less desperate, a few weeks
later Villas forces attacked two small towns in the Big Bend region of
Texas, Glenn Springs and Boquillas, fighting another garrison of American soldiers
at the former.
The raid on Columbus was a disaster for the Mexicans, with Villas forces
suffering huge casualties. In response to the attack, U.S. forces under the
command of General John J. Pershing invaded Mexico in an attempt to capture
Villa. The raid also touched off anti-Villista reprisals throughout the Southwest,
with six captured raiders hanged by vigilantes at Columbus.
Losses: Villas Army of the North, 190 casualties of 500; U.S., 7 dead,
5 wounded of 350, plus 8 civilians dead, 2 civilians wounded.
| Parcel # | Acres/size +/- | legal description/address | power/ phone | Notes | $$$$ |
|
0106783, 0106784
|
.74
|
nearby
|
2 adjoining lots West side of Columbus Pershing Ave
SE
|
SOLD
|
|
|
0106786 , 0106787
|
.68
|
nearby
|
2 adjoining lots West side of Columbus Pershing Ave
SE
|
SOLD
|
|
|
0106788, 0106789, 0106790
|
1.02
|
nearby
|
3 adjoining lots West side of Columbus Pershing Ave
SE
|
SOLD
|
|
|
0106805
|
.32
|
Nearby
|
on Lucas
|
SOLD
|
|
|
0106824
|
.37
|
nearby
|
North Slocum Ave
|
SOLD
|
|
|
0106835, 0106836
|
.68
|
nearby
|
2 adjoining lots Pershing Ave SE
|
SOLD
|