On This Date In History
On March 9, 1916, angered over American support of his rivals for the control of Mexico, the peasant-born revolutionary leader Pancho Villa attacks the border town of Columbus, New Mexico.
In 1913, a bloody civil war in Mexico brought the general Victoriano Huerta to power. American President Woodrow Wilson despised the new regime, referring to it as a “government of butchers,” and provided active military support to a challenger, Venustiano Carranza. Unfortunately, when Carranza won power in 1914, he also proved a disappointment and Wilson supported yet another rebel leader, Pancho Villa.
A wily, peasant-born leader, Villa joined with Emiliano Zapata to keep the spirit of rebellion alive in Mexico and harass the Carranza government. A year later, though, Wilson decided Carranza had made enough steps towards democratic reform to merit official American support, and the president abandoned Villa. Outraged, Villa turned against the United States. In January 1916, he kidnapped 18 Americans from a Mexican train and slaughtered them. A few weeks later, on this day in 1916, Villa led an army of about 1,500 guerillas across the border to stage a brutal raid against the small American town of Columbus, New Mexico. Villa and his men killed 19 people and left the town in flames.
Now determined to destroy the rebel he had once supported, Wilson ordered General John Pershing to lead 6,000 American troops into Mexico and capture Villa. Reluctantly, Carranza agreed to allow the U.S. to invade Mexican territory. For nearly two years, Pershing and his soldiers chased the elusive Villa on horseback, in automobiles, and with airplanes. The American troops had several bloody skirmishes with the rebels, but Pershing was never able to find and engage Villa.
Finally losing patience with the American military presence in his nation, Carranza withdrew permission for the occupation. Pershing returned home in early 1917, and three months later left for Europe as the head of the American Expeditionary Force of World War I. Though Pershing never captured Villa, his efforts did convince Villa never again to attack American citizens or territory. After helping remove Carranza from power in 1920, Villa agreed to retire from politics. His enemies assassinated him in 1923. The resentment engendered in Mexico by the efforts against Pancho Villa, however, did not fade with his death, and Mexican-American relations remained strained for decades to come.
The ruins in Columbus, NM after the Villa raid.
On March 9, 1862, one of the most famous naval battles in American history occurs as two ironclads, the U.S.S. Monitor and the C.S.S. Virginia, fight to a draw off Hampton Roads, Virginia. The ships pounded each other all morning but their armor plates easily deflected the cannon shots, signaling a new era of steam-powered iron ships.
The C.S.S. Virginia was originally the U.S.S. Merrimack, a 40-gun frigate launched in 1855. The Confederates captured it and covered it in heavy armor plating above the waterline. Outfitted with powerful guns, the Virginia was a formidable vessel when the Confederates launched her in February 1862. On March 8, the Virginia sunk two Union ships and ran one aground off Hampton Roads.
The next day, the U.S.S. Monitor steamed into the Chesapeake Bay. Designed by Swedish engineer John Ericsson, the vessel had an unusually low profile, rising from the water only 18 inches. The flat iron deck had a 20-foot cylindrical turret rising from the middle of the ship; the turret housed two 11-inch Dahlgren guns. TheMonitor had a draft of less than 11 feet so it could operate in the shallow harbors and rivers of the South. It was commissioned on February 25, 1862, and arrived at Chesapeake Bay just in time to engage the Virginia.
The battle between the Virginia and the Monitor began on the morning of March 9 and continued for four hours. The ships circled one another, jockeying for position as they fired their guns. The cannon balls simply deflected off the iron ships. In the early afternoon, the Virginia pulled back to Norfolk. Neither ship was seriously damaged, but the Monitor effectively ended the short reign of terror that the Confederate ironclad had brought to the Union navy.
Both ships met ignominious ends. When the Yankees invaded the James Peninsula two months after the battle at Hampton Roads, the retreating Confederates scuttled their ironclad. The Monitor went down in bad weather off Cape Hatteras, North Carolina, at the end of the year. Though they had short lives, the ships ushered in a new era in naval warfare.
On March 9, 1959, the first Barbie doll goes on display at the American Toy Fair in New York City.
Eleven
inches tall, with a waterfall of blond hair, Barbie was the first
mass-produced toy doll in the United States with adult features. The
woman behind Barbie was Ruth Handler, who co-founded Mattel, Inc. with
her husband in 1945. After seeing her young daughter ignore her baby
dolls to play make-believe with paper dolls of adult women, Handler
realized there was an important niche in the market for a toy that
allowed little girls to imagine the future.
Barbie’s appearance was
modeled on a doll named Lilli, based on a German comic strip character.
Originally marketed as a racy gag gift to adult men in tobacco shops,
the Lilli doll later became extremely popular with children. Mattel
bought the rights to Lilli and made its own version, which Handler named
after her daughter, Barbara. With its sponsorship of the “Mickey Mouse
Club” TV program in 1955, Mattel became the first toy company to
broadcast commercials to children. They used this medium to promote
their new toy, and by 1961, the enormous consumer demand for the doll
led Mattel to release a boyfriend for Barbie. Handler named him Ken,
after her son. Barbie’s best friend, Midge, came out in 1963; her little
sister, Skipper, debuted the following year.
Over the years, Barbie
generated huge sales, and a lot of controversy. On the positive side,
many women saw Barbie as providing an alternative to traditional 1950s
gender roles. She has had a series of different jobs, from airline
stewardess, doctor, pilot and astronaut to Olympic athlete and even U.S.
presidential candidate. Others thought Barbie’s never-ending supply of
designer outfits, cars and “Dream Houses” encouraged kids to be
materialistic. It was Barbie’s appearance that caused the most
controversy, however. Her tiny waist and enormous breasts, it was
estimated that if she were a real woman, her measurements would be
36-18-38, led many to claim that Barbie provided little girls with an
unrealistic and harmful example and fostered negative body image.
Despite
the criticism, sales of Barbie-related merchandise continued to soar,
topping 1 billion dollars annually by 1993. Since 1959, over one billion
dolls in the Barbie family have been sold around the world and Barbie
is now a bona fide global icon.
Original 1960's Barbie
On March 9, 1781, after
successfully capturing British positions in Louisiana and Mississippi,
Spanish General Bernardo de Galvez, commander of the Spanish forces in
North America, turns his attention to the British-occupied city of
Pensacola, Florida, on March 9, 1781. General Galvez and a Spanish naval
force of more than 40 ships and 3,500 men landed at Santa Rosa Island
and begin a two-month siege of British occupying forces that becomes
known as the Battle of Pensacola.
Galvez’s flotilla survived a
hurricane in harbor before initiating two months of constant artillery
and cannon bombardment of the British forts. By April 23, reinforcements
had arrived, increasing Galvez’s total force to 7,800 and, on the
morning of May 8, 1781, the 18-year British occupation of Pensacola,
Florida, ended with a British surrender. The British lost 105 men; the
Spanish lost 78. An additional 198 Spaniards were wounded. Spain took
1,113 prisoners and sent 300 Britons to Georgia on the promise that they
would not reenter the British military.
Spain never officially
signed an alliance with the American revolutionaries, as King Charles
III was hesitant about the precedent he might be starting by encouraging
the population of another empire to overthrow their monarch. However,
Spain also wanted to regain Gibraltar in the Mediterranean and solidify
control of its North American holdings, so it allied itself to France in
the international war against Britain. As a result, Spain regained West
Florida during the fighting and East Florida, which it exchanged for
the Bahamas, in the final peace. Though Gibraltar remained in British
control, Spain held all the land surrounding the Gulf of Mexico.
Spanish troops press the siege on Pensacola. Galvez’s skillful victory at Pensacola was the climax of a two-year campaign that cleared the British from the Gulf Coast. Painting by Spanish artist Augusto Ferrer-Dalmau.
On
March 9, 1916, Germany declares war on Portugal, who earlier that year
honored its alliance with Great Britain by seizing German ships anchored
in Lisbon’s harbor.
Portugal became a republic in 1910 after a
revolution led by the country’s military toppled King Manuel II (his
father, King Carlos, and elder brother had been assassinated two years
earlier). A liberal constitution was enacted in 1911, and Manuel JosÉ de
Arriaga was elected as the republic’s first president.
With the
outbreak of World War I in 1914, Portugal became increasingly anxious
about the security of its colonial holdings in Angola and Mozambique. In
order to secure international support for its authority in Africa,
Portugal entered the war on the side of Britain and the Allies. Its
participation was at first limited to naval support. In February 1917,
however, Portugal sent its first troops, an expeditionary force of
50,000 men, to the Western Front. They saw action for the first time in
Belgium on June 17 of that year.
One notable battle in which
Portuguese forces took part was the Battle of Lys, near the Lys River in
the Flanders region of Belgium, in April 1918. It was part of the major
German offensive, the last of the war, launched that spring on the
Western Front. During that battle, one Portuguese division of troops was
struck hard by four German divisions; the preliminary shelling alone
was so heavy that one Portuguese battalion refused to push forward into
the trenches.
All told, the victorious Germans took more than 6,000
prisoners in that conflict and were able to push through enemy lines
along a three-and-a-half mile stretch. By the time World War I ended, a
total of 7,000 Portuguese soldiers had died in combat.
Portuguese troops on the Western Front.
Portuguese troops disembarking at Brest.
Portuguese prisoners-of-war in 1918.
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