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IIMEXICAN REVOLUTION CHRONOLOGY 1910-1920
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Orson Pratt Brown's Encounter with History

section header - chronology

Mexican Revolution
1910-1920

~ ~ UNDER CONSTRUCTION ~ ~

Mexican Revolution Chronology (1910-1920)

1910

July 8

Porfirio Diaz is re-elected president of Mexico, a post he has held almost continuously since 1876. His main political rival, Francisco I. Madero, is in jail, along with 60,000 other supporters. Madero, released on bail eleven days later, flees to San Antonio, Texas.

Nov. 20

Francisco Madero returns to Mexico from Texas, an event still commemorated in Mexico.

1911

May 5

Francisco I. Madero, leader of the rebellion against President Porfirio Diaz, holds a meeting at Bustillos.

May 10

City of Juarez falls to Madero's forces, thanks largely to the aggressiveness (and insubordination) of Francisco "Pancho" Villa and Pascual Orozco.

May 13-15

Villa and Orozco break with Madero over his clemency to General Navarro, whom they took prisoner at Juarez. Villa returns to his wife at San Andres, Chihuahua.

May 25

Porfirio Diaz resigns as president, is escorted to Veracruz, departs for exile in Paris. Madero refuses to take office until elected. Vice President Francisco de La Barra is installed as interim president.

Oct.

Madero is elected president, inaugurated in November.

1912

March 3

Threatened by Orozco, Villa flees from Chihuahua after refusing to join in rebellion against Madero. Villa sets about raising his own force.

March 24

Villa takes the city of Parral from the Orozco rebels.

April 4

Orozco retakes Parral from Villa, who melts into the mountains and joins Victoriano Huerta, Madero's field commander, at Torreón.

June 3

Villa, sentenced to be shot for insubordination by Huerta, is spared by Madero's order at the last moment and sent to Santiago Tlatelolco prison, in Mexico City.

Nov.

Woodrow Wilson elected president of the United States.

Dec. 26

Villa escapes prison, where he has learned of plots hatched by Generals Bernardo Reyes and Felix Diaz, but has refused to join them.

1913

Villa crosses Rio Grande into El Paso on January 3, 1913.

Feb. 9-18

"Ten Tragic Days." Rebellion of Bernardo Reyes, Felix Diaz, and Victoriano Huerta. Huerta arrests Madero on February 18 and assumes power.

Feb. 22

President Madero and Vice President Pino Suarez are murdered outside Lecumberri prison, Mexico City.

March 4

Inauguration of Woodrow Wilson as president of the United States.

March 23

Villa returns to Mexico after learning of Madero's assassination; gathers army on way to San Andres; sends message of defiance to governor of Chihuahua.

March 28

Venustiano Carranza draws up Plan of Guadalupe, in which he declares himself "First Chief of the Constitutionalist Army," claiming to be the rightful successor to Madero.

June 1

President Wilson sends William Bayard Hale to Mexico on a fact-finding mission. Hale sends reports throughout June.

Aug. 9

President Wilson sends Governor John Lind to Mexico as an unofficial agent. Lind, rebuffed by Huerta, spends some months in Veracruz.

Aug. 26

Villa's new army routs forces under Felix Terrazas at San Andres, taking three trains and other booty.

Aug. 27

Woodrow Wilson declares policy of "watchful waiting" before a joint session of Congress. Start of the ''honeymoon'' between Mexico and the United States.

Oct. 2

Villa's Division of the North captures Torreón. Villa becomes a civil governor for the first time.

Oct. 10

Huerta's second coup. Arrest and imprisonment of eighty-five Mexican congressmen. Huerta is elected president in an election so obviously rigged as to be nullified and deferred for nine months.

Oct. 17

Carranza establishes a provisional government at Hermosillo, in Sonora.

Nov. 7

Wilson's "Circular Note," which includes an obvious implied threat to remove Huerta.

Nov. 15.

Villa captures Juarez, taking 3,000 prisoners.

Mid-Nov.

Wilson sends William Hale to Nogales, Mexico, for a conference with Carranza, which turns out disastrously. Hale returns to the U.S. side on November 19. Wilson levies an arms embargo against Carranza.

Nov. 19

Villa defeats General Jose Ines Salvador at Tierra Blanca.

Dec. 8

Chihuahua City falls to Villa's Division of the North.

1914

Jan. 11

Villa defeats Salvador Mercado at Ojinaga, across from Presidio, Texas, on the Rio Grande. Mercado and his army escape to the Texas side of the river. John J. Pershing comes to the Mexican side to call on Villa.

Feb. 3

President Wilson lifts the embargo of arms against Carranza.

Feb.

The Benton affair, in which Villa murders the British subject William H. Benton. Villa claims "self-defense," but nobody believes him.

March

Villa and Carranza fall out over plans for the future. Villa gives in and attacks Saltillo, at Carranza’s insistence. Villa then learns that Carranza has sent another general to take Zacatecas, Villa's own objective.

April 10

A Huertista general at Tampico arrests crewmen from the US Dolphin. U.S. demands for a public display of contrition create an international crisis.

April 20

Wilson asks Congress for extraordinary military powers as a result of the Tampico incident.

April 21

The German ship Ypiranga arrives off Veracruz. Admiral Frank Fletcher lands sailors and marines at Veracruz the next day.

April 24

Meeting between Wilson and his cabinet. Secretary of War Lindley M. Garrison urges that the U.S. Army push on to Mexico City. Argentina, Brazil, and Chile offer to mediate between the United States and Mexico the next day.

April 30

Fifth Infantry Brigade, under Brigadier General Frederick Funston, relieves marine garrison at Veracruz.

May 20-July 2

U.S. and Mexican diplomats meet at Niagara Falls, Canada, under ABC sponsorship. As a result, Wilson asks Carranza to hold up the march on Mexico City. Carranza refuses on June 16.

June 23

Villa takes Zacatecas, though without Carranza's approval. Carranza responds by withholding supplies of ammunition and coal from Villa.

July 8

Alvaro Obregón, military commander under Carranza, captures Guadalajara.

July 15

Huerta resigns as provisional president and flees to Spain.

Aug. 15

Obregón occupies Mexico City on behalf of the Constitutionalists. Carranza soon follows.

Aug. 16

Woodrow Wilson sends Paul Fuller to visit Villa at Santa Rosalia and urges him to establish a government and then retire. Villa agrees.

Sept. 5

Fuller confers with Carranza in Mexico City. Carranza promises to cooperate.

Sept.

Obregón, now minister of war in Mexico City, visits Villa in Chihuahua. Together they visit Pershing in Fort Bliss, Texas, and Maytorena in Nogales.

Sept. 23

Villa declares war on Carranza.

Oct. 12-Nov. 12

Convention at Aguascaliente. General Eulalio Gutierrez is elected president.

Nov. 23

U.S. Fifth Infantry Brigade debarks at Veracruz. Generals Alvaro Obregón and Pablo Gonzalez join the deposed Carranza, who occupies Veracruz as his capital. Villa and Emiliano Zapata occupy Mexico City.

1915

Jan. 6

Carranza issues a decree revising the Plan of Guadalupe to include land reform, electoral reform, workers' rights.

Jan.

Villa meets with U.S. General Hugh S. Scott and sells out Governor Maytorena in the Sonora civil war.

Jan. 15

Obregón begins a campaign against Villa's forces.

April 6-15

Obregón defeats Villa in two battles at Celaya, near Queretaro.

June 2

Wilson warns Mexico, threatening intervention.

June-Sept.

Villa is defeated at León and takes refuge in Chihuahua.

Oct. 19

The United States and six Latin American nations recognize the Carranza government.

Nov. 1

Villa's army is decimated by Carrancista forces under Plutarco Elias Calles in a two-day battle at Agua Prieta, opposite Douglas, Arizona. Later word that the U.S. had assisted Calles infuriates Villa. Agua Prieta is soon followed by a similar defeat at Hermosillo, Sonora.

Dec.

Pascual Orozco, jumping bail in El Paso, is killed by Texas Rangers near Presidio, Texas. Huerta dies in El Paso.

1916

Jan. 11

Villa raids a train, running from Chihuahua City to the Cusi mines, at Santa Isabel, Chihuahua. Villa's men kill sixteen of the seventeen Americans aboard.

March 9

Villista raid on Columbus, New Mexico, killing nineteen Americans.

March 15

Brigadier General John J. Pershing, on President Wilson's order, crosses the Mexican border at Columbus and Culberson's Ranch, pursuing Villa.

March 24

Protocol signed between Washington and Carranza, interpreted by Wilson as allowing the Punitive Expedition into Mexico.

April 8

Pershing's Punitive Expedition, now 6,675 men strong, reaches over three hundred miles into Mexico.

April 12

Skirmish between U.S. cavalry and Carrancistas at Parral, over five hundred road miles into Mexican territory. End of Pershing's pursuit of Villa.

May 22

Long and bitter note from Carranza to Wilson.

June 18

Wilson calls up the National Guard, eventually 100,000 men.

June 21

Battle of Carrizal, in which Captain Charles T. Boyd, Lieutenant Henry R. Adair, and Mexican General Felix G. G6mez are killed. Heavy losses on both sides. Twenty-three Americans are taken prisoner by the Carrancistas

July 4

Carranza proposes Mexican-U.S. talks.

Sept. 16

U.S.-Mexican meetings begin in New London. Later shifted to Philadelphia and Atlantic City. A protocol is signed November 24.

Oct.

Constitutional convention meets at Queretaro.

Dec. 17

Carranza rejects protocol of November 24 between the United States and Mexico.

1917

Jan. 27

Beginning of the withdrawal of the Punitive Expedition.

Jan. 31

Completion of the radical new Mexican constitution.

Feb. 5

Last of the Punitive Expedition crosses the Rio Grande into the United States.

March 11

Venustiano Carranza is elected president.

March 13

President Woodrow Wilson establishes full diplomatic relations with the new Carranza government by sending Henry P. Fletcher as ambassador to Mexico.

April 6

The United States declares war on imperial Germany.

May 1

Carranza is inaugurated as president of Mexico.

1919

April 10

Emiliano Zapata is assassinated at Chinameca on orders of Carranza.

June 1

Alvaro Obregón declares himself a candidate for the presidency in the election to be held in 1920. Carranza, in early September, endorses his own candidate, Ignacio Bonillas.

1920

April 2

Carranza summons Obregón to Mexico City to face trumped-up charges. Obregón escapes with his life through the aid of friends.

April 20

Obregón manifesto declaring rebellion against Carranza.

May 7

Carranza flees Mexico City. Abandons train on May 14

May 21

Carranza is assassinated in the village of Tlaxcalantongo, Puebla.

June 1

Adolfo de la Huerta is inaugurated provisional president.

Sept. 5

Obregón is elected president, inaugurated on November 30.

1923

July 20

Assassination of Pancho Villa and his bodyguards in Parral. His executioners are never punished.

 
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Sources:

PAF - Archer files =

Copyright 2001 www.OrsonPrattBrown.org



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PERSONAL ANCESTRAL FILE
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ADDRESS LIST FOR BROWN FAMILY
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ORSON PRATT BROWN FAMILY REUNIONS
... Easter 1986 through October 2005


... ARTICLES OF ASSOCIATION - BY-LAWS
COMMENTS AND INPUT ON ARTICLES

... Published December 2007:
"ORSON PRATT BROWN AND HIS FIVE WONDERFUL WIVES VOL. I and II"
By Erold C. Wiscombe

... Published March 2009:
"CAPTAIN JAMES BROWN AND HIS 13 WIVES"
(unfortunately the publisher incorrectly changed the photo
and spelling of Phebe Abbott Brown Fife's name
after it was proofed by this author)
Researched and Compiled by
Erold C. Wiscombe

... Published 2012:
"Finding Refuge in El Paso"
By Fred E. Woods [ISBN: 978-1-4621-1153-4]
Includes O.P Brown's activities as Special Church Agent in El Paso
and the Juarez Stake Relief Committee Minutes of 1912.


...Published 2012:
"Colonia Morelos: Un ejemplo de ética mormona
junto al río Bavispe (1900-1912)"
By Irene Ríos Figueroa [ISBN: 978-607-7775-27-0]
Includes O.P. Brown's works as Bishop of Morelos. Written in Spanish.

...Published 2014:
"The Diaries of Anthony W. Ivins 1875 - 1932"
By Elizabeth Oberdick Anderson [ISBN: 978-156085-226-1]
Mentions O.P. Brown more than 30 times as Ivins' companion.

... To be Published Soon:
"CAPTAIN JAMES BROWN 1801-1863:
TEMPER BY NATURE, TEMPERED BY FAITH"

Send Comments and Information to: 
OrsonPrattBrown@gmail.com


ORSON PRATT BROWN FAMILY UPDATES

... FAMILY GROUP PHOTOS
...
FAMILY REUNIONS

... FAMILY GET TOGETHERS

... Lily Gonzalez Brown 80th Birthday Party-Reunion
July 14, 2007 in American Fork, Utah

...Gustavo Brown Family Reunion in October 2007

... FAMILY MEMBERS WHO DIED RECENTLY
... NEWS, WEDDINGS, BABIES, MORE
... HELP US IDENTIFY THESE ANCESTORS
Send Additions and Information to:
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ORSON PRATT BROWN 1863-1946

...... Wives and 35 Children Photo Chart
...... Chronology
...... Photo Gallery of OPB
...... Letters

ORSON'S JOURNALS AND BIOGRAPHIES

...... Biographical Sketch of the Life Orson Pratt Brown
...... History of Orson Pratt Brown by Orson P. Brown
...... Journal & Reminiscences of Capt. Orson P. Brown
...... Memories of Orson P. Brown by C. Weiler Brown
...... Orson Pratt Brown by "Hattie" Critchlow Jensen
...... Orson Pratt Brown by Nelle Spilsbury Hatch
...... Orson Pratt Brown by W. Ayrd Macdonald


ORSON PRATT BROWN'S PARENTS
- Captain James Brown 1801-1863

...... Wives and 29 / 43 Children Photo Chart
...... Captain James Brown's Letters & Journal
...... Brown Family Memorabilia
...... Mormon Battalion 1846-1847
...... Brown's Fort ~ then Brownsville, Utah
...... Chronology of Captain James Brown

- Phebe Abbott Brown Fife 1831-1915

- Colonel William Nicol Fife - Stepfather 1831-1915


ORSON'S GRANDPARENTS

- James Brown of Rowan County, N.C. 1757-1823

- Mary Williams of Rowan County, N.C. 1760-1832

- Stephen Joseph Abbott of, PA 1804-1843

- Abigail Smith of Williamson, N.Y. 1806-1889

- John Fife of Tulliallan, Scotland 1807-1874

- Mary Meek Nicol, Carseridge, Scotland 1809-1850 


ORSON PRATT BROWN'S 5 WIVES

- Martha "Mattie" Diana Romney Brown 1870-1943

- Jane "Jennie" Bodily Galbraith Brown 1879-1944

- Elizabeth Graham MacDonald Webb Brown 1874-1904

- Eliza Skousen Brown Abbott Burk 1882-1958

- Angela Maria Gavaldón Brown 1919-1967


ORSON PRATT BROWN'S 35 CHILDREN

- (Martha) Carrie Brown (child) 1888-1890

- (Martha) Orson Pratt Brown, Jr. (child) 1890-1892

- (Martha) Ray Romney Brown 1892-1945

- (Martha) Clyde Romney Brown 1893-1948

- (Martha) Miles Romney Brown 1897-1974

- (Martha) Dewey B. Brown 1898-1954

- (Martha) Vera Brown Foster Liddell Ray 1901-1975

- (Martha) Anthony Morelos Brown 1904-1970

- (Martha) Phoebe Brown Chido Gardiner 1906-1973

- (Martha) Orson Juarez Brown 1908-1981

- (Jane) Ronald Galbraith Brown 1898-1969

- (Jane) Grant "Duke" Galbraith Brown 1899-1992

- (Jane) Martha Elizabeth Brown Leach Moore 1901-1972

- (Jane) Pratt Orson Galbraith Brown 1905-1960

- (Jane) William Galbraith Brown (child) 1905-1912

- (Jane) Thomas Patrick Porfirio Diaz Brown 1907-1978

- (Jane) Emma Jean Galbraith Brown Hamilton 1909-1980

- (Elizabeth) (New born female) Webb 1893-1893


- (Elizabeth) Elizabeth Webb Brown Jones 1895-1982

- (Elizabeth) Marguerite Webb Brown Shill 1897-1991

- (Elizabeth) Donald MacDonald Brown 1902-1971

- (Elizabeth) James Duncan Brown 1904-1943

- (Eliza) Gwen Skousen Brown Erickson Klein 1903-1991


- (Eliza) Anna Skousen Brown Petrie Encke 1905-2001

- (Eliza) Otis Pratt Skousen Brown 1907-1987

- (Eliza) Orson Erastus Skousen Brown (infant) 1909-1910

- (Eliza) Francisco Madera Skousen Brown 1911-1912

- (Eliza) Elizabeth Skousen Brown Howell 1914-1999

- (Angela) Silvestre Gustavo Brown 1919-


- (Angela) Bertha Erma Elizabeth Brown 1922-1979

- (Angela) Pauly Gabaldón Brown 1924-1998

- (Angela) Aaron Aron Saul Brown 1925

- (Angela) Mary Angela Brown Hayden Green 1927

- (Angela) Heber Jedediah Brown (infant) 1936-1936

- (Angela) Martha Gabaldón Brown Gardner 1940


ORSON'S SIBLINGS from MOTHER PHEBE

- Stephen Abbott Brown 1851-1853

- Phoebe Adelaide Brown Snyder 1855-1930

- Cynthia Abigail Fife Layton 1867-1943

- (New born female) Fife 1870-1870

- (Toddler female) Fife 1871-1872

ORSON'S 28 SIBLINGS from JAMES BROWN

- (Martha Stephens) John Martin Brown 1824-1888

-
(Martha Stephens) Alexander Brown 1826-1910

-
(Martha Stephens) Jesse Stowell Brown 1828-1905

- (Martha Stephens) Nancy Brown Davis Sanford 1830-1895


-
(Martha Stephens) Daniel Brown 1832-1864

-
(Martha Stephens) James Moorhead Brown 1834-1924

-
(Martha Stephens) William Brown 1836-1904

-
(Martha Stephens) Benjamin Franklin Brown 1838-1863

-
(Martha Stephens) Moroni Brown 1838-1916

- (Susan Foutz) Alma Foutz Brown (infant) 1842-1842

- (Esther Jones) August Brown (infant) 1843-1843

- (Esther Jones) Augusta Brown (infant) 1843-1843

- (Esther Jones) Amasa Lyman Brown (infant) 1845-1845

- (Esther Jones) Alice D. Brown Leech 1846-1865

- (Esther Jones) Esther Ellen Brown Dee 1849-1893

- (Sarah Steadwell) James Harvey Brown 1846-1912


- (Mary McRee) George David Black 1841-1913

- (Mary McRee) Mary Eliza Brown Critchlow1847-1903

- (Mary McRee) Margaret Brown 1849-1855

- (Mary McRee) Mary Brown Edwards Leonard 1852-1930

- (Mary McRee) Joseph Smith Brown 1856-1903

- (Mary McRee) Josephine Vilate Brown Newman 1858-1917

- (Phebe Abbott) Stephen Abbott Brown (child) 1851-1853

- (Phebe Abbott) Phoebe Adelaide Brown 1855-1930

- (Cecelia Cornu) Charles David Brown 1856-1926

- (Cecelia Cornu) James Fredrick Brown 1859-1923

- (Lavinia Mitchell) Sarah Brown c. 1857-

- (Lavinia Mitchell) Augustus Hezekiah Brown c. 1859

ORSON'S 17 SIBLINGS from STEPFATHER FIFE

- (Diane Davis) Sarah Jane Fife White 1855-1932

- (Diane Davis) William Wilson Fife 1857-1897

- (Diane Davis) Diana Fife Farr 1859-1904

- (Diane Davis) John Daniel Fife 1863-1944

- (Diane Davis) Walter Thompson Fife 1866-1827

- (Diane Davis) Agnes Ann "Aggie" Fife 1869-1891

- (Diane Davis ) Emma Fife (child) 1871-1874

- (Diane Davis) Robert Nicol Fife (infant) 1873-1874

- (Diane Davis) Barnard Fife (infant) 1881-1881

- (Cynthia Abbott) Mary Lucina Fife Hutchins 1868-1950

- (Cynthia Abbott) Child Fife (infant) 1869-1869

- (Cynthia Abbott) David Nicol Fife 1871-1924

- (Cynthia Abbott) Joseph Stephen Fife (child) 1873-1878

- (Cynthia Abbott) James Abbott Fife (infant) 1877-1878


ORSON PRATT BROWN'S IN-LAWS

- (Diana) Caroline Lambourne 18461979

- (Diana)  Miles Park Romney 1843-1904

- (Jane) Emma Sarah Bodily 1858-1935

- (Jane) William Wilkie Galbraith 1838-1898

- (Elizabeth) Alexander F. Macdonald 1825-1903

- (Elizabeth) Elizabeth Atkinson 1841-1922

- (Eliza) Anne Kirstine Hansen 1845-1916

- (Eliza) James Niels Skousen 1828-1912

- (Angela) Maria Durán de Holguin 1876-1955

- (Angela) José Tomás Gabaldón 1874-1915


INDEX OF MORMON COLONIES IN MEXICO

INDEX OF MORMON MEXICAN MISSION

INDEX TO POLYGAMY IN UTAH, ARIZONA, MEXICO

INDEX TO MEX. REVOLUTION & THE MORMON EXODUS

INDEX OF SURNAMES

MAPS OF THE MEXICAN COLONIES


BROWN FAMILY MAYFLOWER CONNECTION 1620

BROWN's in AMERICAN REVOLUTION 1775-1783

BROWN's in AMERICAN CIVIL WAR 1861-1865

BROWN's in WARS AFTER 1865

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