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Who Was Pancho Villa? 

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Pancho Villa was a Mexican fugitive turned revolutionary and politician, elected Governor of Chihuahua in 1913. After a failed coup attempt and angered by U.S. support for his opponent, Pancho Villa raided Columbus, New Mexico.
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#PanchoVilla #Biography #Documentary #History
Today's Daily Dose short biography film covers the life and revolution of Pancho Villa. The filmmaker has included the original voice over script to further assist your understanding:
Today on The Daily Dose, Pancho Villa.
Born into a poor sharecropping family in 1878 Durango Mexico, after his father died, Pancho Villa dropped out of school to support his mother and four siblings, until he killed a hacienda owner who raped one of Pancho’s sisters. Stealing a horse and fleeing into the hills, Pancho joined up with banditos until he was arrested in 1902 and inducted into the Federal army-a practice adopted by then President Porfirio Diaz to deal with troublemakers. After killing an army officer and stealing his horse, Pancho Villa became known to his friends as La Cucaracha or “the cockroach.”
While living as a fugitive, Pancho joined Francisco Madero in the nine-and-a-half-year Mexican Revolution, where his fighting and leadership skills rose him to the rank of colonel. When Madero was removed from power in 1912, Pancho fled to the United States, returning to form his own military army known as Division del Norte. After joining forces with fellow revolutionaries Venustiano Carranza and Emiliano Zapata in an attempt to remove Victoriano Huerta from power, Pancho proved his medal as a brilliant tactician on the battlefield, leading to his 1913 election as provisional governor of Chihuahua, which allowed him to recruit stronger military generals and raise more money for a drive south against Huerta’s Federal Army. At the height of Villa’s power and popularity in late 1914 and early 1915, the U.S. toyed with the idea of recognizing him as Mexico’s legitimate authority, until a Civil War broke out between Carranza and Pancho Villa. Pancho Villa’s Division del Norte suffered a resounding defeat during the summer of 1915, followed by the U.S.-backed Second Battle of Agua Prieta in November of that same year.
Angered by American support of Carranza, Pancho Villa raided the border town of Columbus New Mexico in early 1916, and while the U.S. sent a contingent of soldiers to hunt down the revolutionary, Pancho Villa was never captured. When President Carranza was ousted from power in 1920, Pancho Villa negotiated an amnesty deal with interim President Adolfo de la Huerta, who awarded Pancho with a landed estate in northern Mexico in exchange for a promise to retire from politics. Pancho Villa was assassinated by seven gunmen in 1923 while preparing to board a train. Before and after his death, Pancho Villa’s life was celebrated in films and dime store novels, while in 1976, his remains were reburied in the Monument to the Revolution in Mexico City, forever cementing his legend as one of the Mexican Revolution’s most charismatic and prominent figures.
And there you have it, the revolutionary life of Pancho Villa, today on The Daily Dose.

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28 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 67   
@doraperez-connolly7455
@doraperez-connolly7455 10 месяцев назад
My grandfather would often tell the story of how his younger brother Willy joined Pancho villa and never returned home or was heard of again!
@DailyDoseDocumentary
@DailyDoseDocumentary 10 месяцев назад
Pretty cool. My grandfather and great grandparents lived in Mexico during the revolution, and my grandfather's memoirs talk about having Pancho Villa and Emiliano Zapata visit them in their home during the revolution. My great grandfather lent them six horses, which they returned two weeks later, well fed and cared for.
@kaelingonzalez5
@kaelingonzalez5 4 месяца назад
Thank you so much u helped me do my project right❤❤❤
@Ed-fs3xm
@Ed-fs3xm 27 дней назад
@@DailyDoseDocumentarymy great-great grand father fought in the Mexican revolution when he was 14 and unfortunately lost his eye during the war and my grandfather remembered him as his sweet and brave grandfather and he fought next to Pancho Villa
@AmFuture
@AmFuture Год назад
General Villa is a great example of what a revolutionary is. A man who rises up and helps the people when they need it most. He was not fighting for an ideology, he didn't fight so he can come into power, he fought for the people and only for the people. Che, Castro, they arent even in the same league and cant be compared to Villa or Zapata. General Villa is a hero in Mexican history
@JosephMarquez-pj9dp
@JosephMarquez-pj9dp 4 месяца назад
True!!
@Taino1491
@Taino1491 2 месяца назад
Excuse me but Che n Fidel are also heroes of the People WORLDWIDE and have helped people Worldwide not just in Cuba unlike Zapata and Villa who I love also but they just helped Mexico... Watch your mouth talking about Che n Fidel the way you just did ..
@paimei7988
@paimei7988 13 дней назад
Fagete​@@Taino1491
@sliefox9453
@sliefox9453 12 часов назад
@@Taino1491they’re commie pigs. Look at the state Fidel left Cuba
@oscarslater9855
@oscarslater9855 Год назад
my great grandfathers grandfather was a good mate of this man after being an officer himself then joining up with pancho but not sure why.
@PedroMartinez007011930522
@PedroMartinez007011930522 Год назад
He was one of my great grandfather’s generals in the Mexican revolution
@DailyDoseDocumentary
@DailyDoseDocumentary Год назад
Very cool! I'm the one who made that piece, and my grandfather lived in Mexico during the revolution. His father lent six horsed to Pancho Villa and his men. All six were returned in good health two weeks later. Living history for sure.
@PedroMartinez007011930522
@PedroMartinez007011930522 Год назад
@@DailyDoseDocumentary you mean your great grandfather too
@roxanag5921
@roxanag5921 Год назад
I’m Mexican
@wreckitjax
@wreckitjax 6 месяцев назад
Do you want a cookie or something?
@torch1028
@torch1028 6 месяцев назад
Congratulations!
@dgf2b
@dgf2b 4 месяца назад
I never thought of it like that 🤔
@lilarctic5577
@lilarctic5577 4 месяца назад
Congrats
@jessikasalas355
@jessikasalas355 7 дней назад
Me too
@StayMadLmfao
@StayMadLmfao 10 месяцев назад
My grandma still talks about Pancho Villa. I find it interesting we’re still passing down legends of strong men. Many weak ass men like to bring us down but we’re never put down completely
@teresafernandez9849
@teresafernandez9849 10 месяцев назад
I was young, a kid, was watching an old movie with my great grandma and my cousins. Wallace Berry , an old USA movie star was playing Pancho Villa. My nana Lupe got SO UPSET! Pancho Villa was being portraid as a drunken slob! pancho Villa did not drink alcohol. Nana Lupe told us that Pancho Villa was a great General for Mexico. His uniform was always clean and pressed, his boots were always shiny and his beautiful white horse, El Siete Luegas (The Seven Lakes), was always clean and royal. She said not to ever believe how Mexican ppl and Indeginous ppl were portrayed by the Gringo. She was right!
@DailyDoseDocumentary
@DailyDoseDocumentary 10 месяцев назад
Hi from the filmmaker. My grandfather and his parents lived in Mexico during the revolution, and my great grandfather invited Pancho Villa and Zapata into his home. In his autobiography, my grandfather said they were both polite and well dressed, and after my great grandfather lent them six horses, they returned the animals well fed and well cared for. Thanks for your comments and cheers.
@teresafernandez9849
@teresafernandez9849 9 месяцев назад
@@DailyDoseDocumentary wow! That's a great story!
@LaReinaDeMuerte444
@LaReinaDeMuerte444 Год назад
My great great grandfather fought along side him, my great grandpa is named after him, my great great grandmother was from a tribe in Mexico and was one of the women who cooked for the desperados. She is in the Smithsonian American Indian Museum.
@DailyDoseDocumentary
@DailyDoseDocumentary Год назад
My great grandfather ran a sugar plantation in Mexico. He met with Pancho Villa and lent him six horses, which he returned two weeks later in good condition.
@rogerfuentes8765
@rogerfuentes8765 8 месяцев назад
My great great uncle was Alvaro Obregon. Love hearing stories about Mexico.
@Johnny_Janitor
@Johnny_Janitor 7 месяцев назад
I’m related to pancho villa funny enough 😂😂, my grandma was sharing stories with me
@Ultimatetexican
@Ultimatetexican 6 месяцев назад
⁠​⁠@@Johnny_Janitoram also related to pancho villa also who the heck is panache villa
@Johnny_Janitor
@Johnny_Janitor 6 месяцев назад
@@Ultimatetexican ah sorry it was autocorrected 🤷‍♂️
@chuyluna1862
@chuyluna1862 Год назад
Viva Durango!!! Viva la revolución!!!
@TheChocolateNick
@TheChocolateNick 8 месяцев назад
My grandma was just telling me about how her grandfather used to ride around with bandits, with sombrero's and guns, then eventually he had to immigrate to American and change his names cause he got in trouble with the Mexican government. All she said was 'yeah they were called pancho villa or something like that?? I don't remember it was 60 years ago. I think they came from Durango?!" turns out it was one of the most infamous bandito gangs around 😂
@robertbertagna1672
@robertbertagna1672 8 дней назад
Thanks!
@infected7258
@infected7258 3 месяца назад
Pancho Villa was a Criminal to y’all but a Hero to us
@Bryan-iy7le
@Bryan-iy7le 9 месяцев назад
My mother told me stories of when my great great grandfather fight with pancho villa
@louiszierlein5814
@louiszierlein5814 9 месяцев назад
I was hoping for more detail. My Wife is from Chihuahua. I have seen many of the historical sites surrounding Poncho Villa. Including the Dodge Brothers car he was in when assanated in.
@DailyDoseDocumentary
@DailyDoseDocumentary 9 месяцев назад
Unfortunately, our short film format doesn't allow for full illumination on a given person or historical event--it's a tough challenge to pack everything in when we're limited to 400 words. Consider our short films as primers into a given topic, if you will, which should encourage interested minds to dig deeper through other, more voluminous sources.
@louiszierlein5814
@louiszierlein5814 9 месяцев назад
I understand.
@nivek367
@nivek367 4 месяца назад
My great-grandfather was a member of Villa's elite bodyguard, they were also known as the Villa Goldens. When he retired from his service, Villa gave him a piece of land where he made his life.
@warpoet6977
@warpoet6977 7 месяцев назад
I didn’t know about this man until I saw a video about a “ poncho villa “ mask in a crime museum
@Bubstahh
@Bubstahh 2 месяца назад
I swear like half of ya'll in this comment section have to be lyin.
@nukeretek
@nukeretek 3 месяца назад
Pancho Villa was Doroteo Arango nowhere near as honorable and charismatic leader as Emiliano Zapata
@ramongraciano5669
@ramongraciano5669 2 месяца назад
Pancho is double the man zapata will ever be.
@vs_richy8516
@vs_richy8516 Год назад
what was the outro song?
@DailyDoseDocumentary
@DailyDoseDocumentary Год назад
Just some little piano ditty--just one that we don't use all that much.
@Ps3Gaming69
@Ps3Gaming69 Год назад
erik satie: once upon a time in paris
@JosephMarquez-pj9dp
@JosephMarquez-pj9dp 4 месяца назад
The movie the return of Pancho Villa starring Leo Carrillo as Pancho Villa, was himself a Californian Chumash native. The best movie made of Pancho Villa. Pancho Villa was a Yaqui native.
@DailyDoseDocumentary
@DailyDoseDocumentary 4 месяца назад
I live about five minutes from Leo Carrillo's Carlsbad ranch. He was a big star in his day, and you're right; the best portrayal of Pancho Villa on the big screen. Cheers!
@robertmyers6865
@robertmyers6865 10 месяцев назад
That was Good!
@3rdwrldkid
@3rdwrldkid Год назад
at 3:44 hes with some white guys, who are they?
@DailyDoseDocumentary
@DailyDoseDocumentary Год назад
My British great grandfather ran a sugar plantation in Mexico. He met with Pancho Villa and loaned him six horses, which he returned in good health two weeks later. Apparently Pancho hated Americans, but loved the Brits.
@3rdwrldkid
@3rdwrldkid Год назад
@DailyDoseDocumentary wow interesting thanks for sharing that story with us
@beto-sv7to
@beto-sv7to 6 месяцев назад
The scripture says, there is no better friend than the one who gives his life for him, obviously Jesus is the only true sample of such statement but Villa and Zapata did just that for their people and that is why to this day they are remember for that and many outside México look at them with respect, they proved to be true mexican revolutionaries which come far in between and never are forgotten.
@asianguy6174
@asianguy6174 Год назад
People who support Villa rationalize just like people who support Trump
@mrRoverkane
@mrRoverkane 10 месяцев назад
You’re foolish.
@sackchaser0178
@sackchaser0178 9 месяцев назад
what??
@troybaker7737
@troybaker7737 8 месяцев назад
Who’s talking about trump did he sleep with your wife it’s not trumps fault you couldn’t keep her happy
@troybaker7737
@troybaker7737 8 месяцев назад
I have to say I didn’t know much about him what we are taught about him was very little but the more you dig into it he was a great man I have a lot more respect
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