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Pancho Villa

Outlaw / Revolutionary

A hero to some and a villain to others, Pancho Villa was a brutal modern-day version of Robin Hood. Born a peasant, Doroteo Arango got on the wrong side of the law early; according to legend he shot to death a wealthy hacienda owner who had made advances on his sister. Arango fled into the mountains and then joined a gang led by Francisco "Pancho" Villa; when that Villa was killed, Arango took over his name and his gang. In 1910 the new Villa and his men joined the revolt against Mexican dictator Porfirio Diaz. (Among Villa's fellow revolutionaries was another Mexican folk hero, Emiliano Zapata.) The revolution succeeded, but a few years later shifting alliances made Villa an outlaw again. Over the next decade he criss-crossed the U.S.-Mexico border, robbing and rustling cattle to survive, with armies from both sides unable to capture him. (One famous U.S. expedition was led by "Black Jack" Pershing and included future General George S. Patton.) Villa's sympathy for peasants and his early battles against the corrupt Diaz regime made him popular with Mexico's poor, and his exploits were heavily publicized in the U.S. and around the world. In 1920 Villa accepted a deal with a new Mexican government, laying down his arms in exchange for thousands of acres of land in Durango. He was assassinated three years later, though his killers were never captured.

Extra credit: Some sources say Villa was born in 1878 or 1879.

Four Good Links

Biography.Com: Pancho Villa

Plainspoken history, sticks to the basic facts

Don Mabry's Historical Text Archive

Long and sympathetic biography of Villa, plays up the folk hero angle

Return of the Americano

Essay about the story of Pancho's relationship with the movies

Pancho Villa Page

Many pages devoted to his history

Vital Stats

Birth

c. 1877

Birthplace

San Juan del Rio, Durango, Mexico

Death

20 June 1923
(assassination, age 46)

Best Known As

Legendary Mexican bandit