Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Mexican Revolution Cuatro

Toltec Club Building

Built in 1910 for the eight-year-old men's club, the Toltec Club building was once the address where El Paso’s business and political decisions and debates and glitzy socializing took place. The membership list of the Toltec Club read like a “Who’s Who” of El Paso society. Some of the more prominent members included Joseph Magoffin, founder of the first bank in El Paso and civic leader, Henry C. Trost, the Southwest’s foremost architect, and W. W. Turney. Guests included President Roosevelt, Porfirio Diaz and General John J. Pershing. The Toltec Club also played a prominent role during the Mexican Revolution: Peace negotiations were carried out and the victory banquet for Madero was held there. Due to the Great Depression the Toltec Club had to close its doors in 1930 and since then, the building has housed various businesses. However, it is rumored that the house is hunted.

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: Leo Miletich

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

General Pascual Orozco, 1911

General Orozco, photo taken by my grandfather. On the day after the Battle of Ciudad Juarez, May 11, 1911, my grandparents Alfred and Annie Kleyhauer and other Americans went from El Paso into Juarez to see the city and Pancho Villa's rebel fighters.

Area: Out of Area / Ciudad Juarez

Source: Debra KleyhauerPhotographer: Alfred D. Kleyhauer

Uploaded by: Debra Kleyhauer

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Annie Kleyhauer with Female Maderista, May 11, 1911

On the day after the Battle of Ciudad Juarez, May 11, 1911, my grandparents Alfred and Annie Kleyhauer and other Americans went from El Paso into Juarez to see the city and Pancho Villa's rebel fighters. This is Annie with the flowered hat behind a male and a female rebel fighter.

Area: Out of Area / Ciudad Juarez

Source: Debra KleyhauerPhotographer: Alfred D. Kleyhauer

Uploaded by: Debra Kleyhauer

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Woman and man Maderistas posing in Juarez, May 11, 1911

On the day after the Battle of Ciudad Juarez, May 11, 1911, my grandparents Alfred and Annie Kleyhauer and other Americans went from El Paso into Juarez to see the city and Pancho Villa's rebel fighters. This is a picture of a man and a woman Maderista posing for my grandfather.

Area: Out of Area / Ciudad Juarez

Source: Debra KleyhauerPhotographer: Alfred D. Kleyhauer

Uploaded by: Debra Kleyhauer

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Clowning for Photographer, May 11, 1911

This is one of my favorites--a group of Maderistas clowning around while my grandfather takes their picture. On the day after the Battle of Ciudad Juarez, May 11, 1911, my grandparents Alfred and Annie Kleyhauer and other Americans went from El Paso into Juarez to see the city and Pancho Villa's rebel fighters.

Area: Out of Area / Ciudad Juarez

Source: Debra KleyhauerPhotographer: Alfred D. Kleyhauer

Uploaded by: Debra Kleyhauer

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Group of Maderistas, May 11, 1911 in Juarez

This is a group of Maderistas posing for my grandfather to take their picture. On the day after the Battle of Ciudad Juarez, May 11, 1911, my grandparents Alfred and Annie Kleyhauer and other Americans went from El Paso into Juarez to see the city and Pancho Villa's rebel fighters.

Area: Out of Area / Ciudad Juarez

Source: Debra KleyhauerPhotographer: Alfred D. Kleyhauer

Uploaded by: Debra Kleyhauer

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Provisional Cabinet

The picture shows the provisional cabinet which Francisco I. Madero set up after the victory of the revolutionaries in the Battle of Juarez in May 1911 and the resign of Porfirio Diaz as Mexican President. Amongst the members were his brother Gustavo A. Madero as minister of finance, and Venustiano Carranza as minister of war (later Mexican President). Francisco I. Madero made Francisco León de la Barra, one of Díaz's supporters, interim president, until he became duly-elected president in November 1911. The captured city of Juarez became provisional capital.

Area: Out of Area / Out of Area

Collection: Wayne Brendt Print and Postcard Collection

Source: University of Texas at El Paso Library - Special Collections Department

Reference ID: MS245-1-1-030

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Aultman Scrapbook, "Pancho" Villa

This is a collection of men featuring José Doroteo Arango Arámbula (5 June 1878 – 20 July 1923) – better known by his pseudonym Francisco Villa or his nickname, Pancho Villa. He was one of the most prominent Mexican Revolutionary generals.

Area: Out of Area / Out of Area

Collection: Aultman Scrapbook

Source: El Paso County Historical Society

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Maderista on Horse, Juarez, May 11, 1911

On the day after the Battle of Ciudad Juarez, May 11, 1911, my grandparents Alfred and Annie Kleyhauer and other Americans went from El Paso into Juarez to see the city and Pancho Villa's rebel fighters Image Description:Scanned image of a black and white photo from 1911. The photo is of a Mexican revolutionary man sitting on his brown horse in the desert. The reigns are simple and made of ropes. The man wears a large, brimmed sombrero with a black suit, white top, and vaquero boots. There are people in the desert with him. Two young children stand directly to the side of his horse. An elderly woman looks off into the mountains while sitting on a rock. A second man leads his horse by the reigns. The mountains can be seen faintly in the distance, while a large ominous smokestack blows into the atmosphere.

Area: Out of Area / Ciudad Juarez

Source: Debra KleyhauerPhotographer: Alfred D. Kleyhauer

Uploaded by: Debra Kleyhauer

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Felipe Cazares with other revolutionaries

Felipe Cazares, third from the right, great grandfather of Jorge Angulo.

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: Jorge I. Angulo

Uploaded by: Jorge I. Angulo

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Globe Mills

This Globe Mills building was constructed in 1910 where it was used as a flour mill. Globe Mills was a large company with mills spread throughout the American West in the early 1900′s. Globe Mills was eventually bought out by Pillsbury in 1940. Something interesting about this building is that it was a popular location for El Paso residents to congregate and watch battles from the Mexican Revolution across the border. http://on-walkabout.com/2011/11/26/picture-of-the-day-globe-mills-in-el-paso/

Area: Central / Old Ft. Bliss

Collection: Aultman Collection

Source: El Paso Public Library

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Men Preparing To Fire Artillery

This picture shows men, probably revolutionaries, preparing to fire artillery.

Area: Out of Area / Out of Area

Collection: Aultman Collection

Source: El Paso Public Library

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Pablo Baray Apartments

The first novel of the Mexican Revolution, Los de Abajo by Mariano Azuela, was published here in serial form by the Villista doctor in 1915 when it housed the El Paso del Norte printing press. According to the El Paso County Appraisal District, this building was constructed in 1910 and turned into the Pablo Baray apartments in the 30s.

Area: Central / South Central

Source: El Paso Museum of History

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Back of El Paso Laundry

This building still bears battle scars from the Mexican Revolution.

Creator: Lotte Kryger Bro

Area: Central / Chihuahuita

Collection: Neighborhood photos

Source: EPMH

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Merrick Building

The Merrick building was built in 1887 in the Victorian style popular at that time. Constructed by John J. Steward and William J. Carpenter, Charles Merrick operated his clothing and tailoring business on the first floor. During the Mexican Revolution it was turned into a major arms dealer called the Shelton Payne Arms Company. In 1931 the Hollywood Cafe replaced the arms store. The St. Charles Hotel was operated on the 2nd and 3rd floors of the building and was once considered the longest running hotel in El Paso until it closed in 1996. The building was beautifully renovated in 2000 and today houses a retail store and apartments.

Creator: Lotte Kryger Bro

Area: Central / Downtown

Collection: Neighborhood photos

Source: EPMH

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Camino Real Hotel with Street Lamp

The picture shows parts of the old Paso del Norte Hotel, now the Camino Real. Designed by Henry C. Trost and opened in 1912, the Hotel was popular for its elegance. Also, it became a hotspot for cattlemen, ranchers, and especially for guests to see the Mexican Revolution from the rooftop. The sign which is attached to the lamp marks the "Golden Horseshoe District". It refers to the rampant time when the downtown area was filled with gambling dens, saloons and other diversions and crime and gunfights were a daily occurrence. Today, this wild west past is commemorated by plaques around town.

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: Leo Miletich

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Merrick Building - El Paso, Texas

The Merrick building was built in 1887 in El Paso, Texas in the Victorian style popular at that time. Constructed by John J. Steward and William J. Carpenter, Charles Merrick operated his clothing and tailoring business on the first floor. During the Mexican Revolution it was turned into a major arms dealer called the Shelton Payne Arms Company. In 1931 the Hollywood Cafe replaced the arms store. The St. Charles Hotel was operated on the 2nd and 3rd floors of the building and was once considered the longest running hotel in El Paso until it closed in 1996. The building was beautifully renovated in 2000 and today houses a retail store and apartments.

Creator: Leo Miletich

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: Leo Miletich

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Holy Family Catholic Church

Holy Family Catholic Church is part of the Catholic Diocese of El Paso, Texas. The parish was originally founded as a Jesuit Mission in 1916 to care for families seeking refuge from the Mexican Revolution. It was the last church built by Rev. Carlos Pinto, S.J.. The cost to build the new church was contributed by several of the refugee families. Holy Family continued to serve exiled Mexicans for many decades. Holy Family was a mission of Sacred Heart Parish until 1933 when Bishop Schuler elevated it to a parish. In September 1948, Bishop Metzger placed the parish under the administration of diocesan priests, thereby ending 34 years of Jesuit administration. The altar of the church still holds the original statue of the Holy Family that was located at the altar of El Paso’s first Catholic Church, St. Mary Chapel.

Area: Central / Sunset Heights

Source: Leo Miletich

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Radford School - El Paso, Texas

A local private school for girls. Radford is the oldest private school in El Paso, Texas. Founded in 1910 by a group of local businessmen, the school was first known as the El Paso School for Girls. The school was originally located along the Rio Grande River in 2 homes in what is now known as the Sunset Heights area. There were about 25 original students from 7th grade and above in the school's first year. The school was both a day school and a boarding school for girls whose families lived outside of El Paso. The girls were given a thorough education; in addition to reading, writing and arithmetic, they were also schooled in manners, decorum and home economics. he schools' location on the border of the U.S. and Mexico has shaped its history and culture. Along with US ranchers, Mexican families who feared for their children's safety in the turbulent times following the Mexican Revolution sent their daughters north to be educated at Radford. During the Mexican Revolution, the school's students could hear and watch as battles raged just across the river. Because the school was just a stray bullet away from the war, it was moved to a safer location near Fort Bliss, at 2001 Radford Street, where it remains today. https://www.radfordschool.org/about-us/history/

Creator: Lotte Kryger Bro

Area: Central / Austin Terrace

Collection: Neighborhood photos

Source: EPMH

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Guardian Angel Church on Frutas

3021 Frutas Avenue El Paso, Texas 79905 915-533-2077; Fax: 915-533-3649 [email protected] "Guardian Angel Parish" "El Paso - 1908" "Guardian Angel Church in El Paso Texas was built in 1908 on what was then considered the northern slopes of El Paso. The cornerstone was blessed on October 7, 1907 and the new church blessed on June 7, 1908 with the first Mass and first marriage performed by Father Carlos Pinto, S.J. The first baby baptized was Magdalena Velásquez, the daughter of Fernando Velásquez and Maria Gonzales on the same day of the dedication of the church. The first wedding occurred a few days later on June 10 between Mary W. Dunne and Sylvester W. McConangy. The first pastor after Father Pinto was Father A. Gilbert, S.J. who made several improvements such as the addition of the choir loft. In 1912, Guardian Angel School opened under Rev. Aloysius Blanchard with the Sisters of Loretto as the faculty. Originally called Holy Angels School, the name was changed to match the parish when a new school building was completed in 1919." "In the beginning, the church was mainly attended by English-speaking Catholics. After 1915, however, as Mexican refugees began arriving in the city as a result of the Mexican Revolution, the church increasingly became a Spanish-speaking community. In February 1918, Guardian Angel was turned over to the Mexican Jesuits. Guardian Angel also administered several missions throughout its history including Our Lady of Guadalupe, San Juan Bautista, St. Francis Xavier, Nuestra Señora de la Luz, and El Calvario, all of which eventually became parishes..." To read the rest of the article, visit the following link: http://elpasodiocese.org/diocese/index.php/guardian-angel

Creator: Lotte Kryger Bro

Area: Central / Chamizal

Collection: Neighborhood photos

Source: EPMH

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Report this entry

Choose the most important reason for this report

Your name

Your email address

Optional detail

Thank you for your report

More from the same community-collection

World War II Memorial - El Paso, Texas

The Greatest Generation During this exhibit, discover the ...

State Championship - El Paso, Texas

State Baskeball Championship Trophy 1937-1939

Brother Amedy Long - El Paso, Texas

Brother Amedy Long (1914-1984) Brother Cecilian Amedy (Joseph ...

School Material - El Paso, Texas

Textbook Covers, 1960s and 1988 and Drafting Table 1930.The ...

School Uniforms - El Paso, Texas

Saint Patrick Elementary uniform skirt 1990s, First Holy ...

Timeline - El Paso, Texas

Timeline for the Eighth Wall of Giants at the El Paso Museum of ...

William H. Fryer - El Paso, Texas

William H. Fryer, AFSC (Affiliated Member of the Brother of the ...

Priest Breviary and Alb - El Paso, Texas

Priest Breviary, 1930s and Alb worn during the Cristero War when ...

Bishop Anthony Schuler’s Vestments - El Paso, Texas

Bishop Anthony Schuler’s Vestments (chasuble, mitre, cincture, ...

Saint Rita of Cascia - El Paso, Texas

Original statue of Saint Rita of Cascia, Early 1920s

Leo Cancellare - El Paso, Texas

Leo Cancellare (1958-1999) Leo Cancellare was a graduate of ...

First Steps Exhibit Ceremony - 2017 - El Paso, Texas

First Steps Exhibit Ribbon Cutting Ceremony - 2017 - El Paso, ...

Chalk the block 2017 in El Paso

Joshua Elias (me) and my girlfriend Helen, downtown during chalk ...

2017 Junior League Christmas Fair - El Paso, Texas

Pictures at the 2017 Junior League Christmas Fair held on ...

El Paso Police Motorcycle Section, 1917

left to right: E.M. Wilson, M.F. Sherrer, Gus Yarbro, Tom ...

And The Podium was born

El Pasos one of a kind Bike Boutique, Cafe, Indoor Virtual ...

Podium Finish brings BMC Switzerland to El Paso

We are so proud to bring this world class brand to the Sun City ...

What We Brought El Paso, Texas

Have you ever moved into a new (to you) house or apartment? A ...

1950's El Paso Post Card El Paso, Texas

Walk into history! You are welcome to stand among the words "El ...

1970 Map of El Paso, Texas

Together these blocks make up a 1970 map of the City of El Paso. ...

Hands on Activity Trunk El Paso, Texas

This trunk and items in it represent what people could bring ...

Hands on Activity Trunk El Paso, Texas

This trunk and items in it represent what people could bring ...

Baggage Scale El Paso, Texas

Baggage Scale from Union Depot, post 1873-1990.

home.search_collection