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THE PANCHO VILLA
STATE RV PARK
BY: BILL
MONTFORT
It
is a rare and compelling occasion for a RV’er to
find a great campground and, at the same time,
to find one's self smack in the middle of a very
unique historical site. Thirty miles south of
Deming, New Mexico, there is just such a place:
the Pancho Villa State Park at Columbus, New
Mexico.
Here you
will find a 49-acre park that offers full
camping facilities, whether for a rally group or
a lone rig. There are beautiful xeroscapic
grounds, a museum/interpretive center,
historical displays, original buildings from the
early 1900's, and a park staff that cannot do
enough to make your stay a pleasant one.
First, a
little bit about the park itself. It sits on
the grounds of what was Camp Furlong, one of a
string of early army forts that protected the
U.S./Mexico border from marauders and bandits.
The park office/museum is an original structure,
as is the adjacent dining hall. The latter has a
full kitchen and is available for group
activities.
The
sixty-one gravel sites are spacious and most
have ramadas, picnic tables, grills and/or fire
pits, 20/30-amp service and water. There is a
modern central dump station on- site and the
restrooms and showers are airy and spotless.
There are walking paths and well-labeled
botanical gardens. The daily rate is $14 and
there is a 14-day limit.
This is
a park that was built with group or caravan
travelers in mind. Two large, spacious
pavilions, in addition to the dining hall, are
available. If you have a special need-whether
it be an additional fire pit, tables,
interpretive program or whatever-the park staff,
under ranger manager Armando Martinez, is one of
the most cooperative and facilitative you will
find in any park.
For the
history buff, there are buildings, sites,
displays and relics inside the campground. In
addition to the explanatory signs, ranger Robert
Apodaca is always ready to fill in the gaps with
colorful and interesting stories and facts.
Make no mistake about it, while the park is a
'true find' by any standard, the immediate area
is truly unique in our country's history: it is
the only site, since the war of 1812, that the
united states has been invaded by armed, foreign
troops.
In the
pre-dawn hours of March 9,1916, General
Francisco 'Pancho' Villa crossed the border and
attacked Camp Furlong and the adjoining town of
Columbus with a savagery and wantonness that
rivals virtually any invading army on record.
The Villistas streamed through the streets of
Columbus and indiscriminately shot and killed
soldiers and civilians alike, burning and
pillaging as they went.
Much of
what led to the raid is shrouded in myth and
loosely knit facts. Villa never wrote about it
and there are no participant’s journals that
adequately explain why this former U.S. ally
turned his troops loose on Columbus. Some say
he was in a rage because the U.S. government
formally recognized a political adversary of
Villa's; another story says the raid resulted
from a Columbus merchant taking Villa's money
and then shorting him on the supplies and
ammunition he had paid for. Whatever the reason,
he turned his men loose on Columbus!
Camp
Furlong garrisoned about 350 troops. Columbus,
surviving off the camp and the railroad that
passed through, had approximately 400 civilians.
The numbers of the attacking Villistas range
from 500 to 1000. Whether Pancho was actually
with his troops is a matter of conjecture. Some
have him waiting at the border with the horses
and supplies; others have him leading the
charge.
Regardless, a few hours later, much of the
downtown was burned and sacked, and ten
civilians and eight soldiers were dead. The toll
could have been much worse had not the soldiers
managed to break in the armory and obtain
weapons and, thankfully, a new-fangled French
invention, a machine gun. Taking the high ground
(Coote's hill,
which is located inside the park), the soldiers
began to establish fields of fire that sent
Villa's men scurrying for the border. Mexican
dead lay strewn on the streets of Columbus, Camp
Furlong and the escape route to Mexico.
Estimates of Villa's dead vary from seventy to
several hundred. Their bodies were gathered,
tossed in a pile a mile west of town and burned.
Somewhere between five and fifteen were captured
and records indicate six were taken to Deming
for trial and later hanged. Within weeks of the
raid, Camp Furlong swelled to over ten thousand
troops and commanded by none other than 'Black
Jack' Pershing, who would later lead our
doughboys in WW1. General Pershing's troops
drove 500 miles deep into Mexico in an effort to
defeat the Villistas and to capture Villa. After
eleven months, they did neither. The punitive
action was a dismal failure and Villa lived on,
only to be assassinated by his countrymen in
1923.
The camp
became a laboratory for several 'firsts' for the
U.S. military: the site of the first operational
military airstrip, the first time an aircraft
('the Jenny’) was used in a
military operation, the first time mechanized
trucks were used by U.S. troops. This was the
last true cavalry operation of U.S. troops. And
what a learning experience it was! The hard
rubber, thin wheeled tires of the trucks quickly
sank in the sand; in the searing sun, the
armored vehicles baked their unfortunate
occupants to toast, and the Jenny could not gain
enough altitude to get over some of the
mountains.
Today,
preserved in the park, are actual vehicles of
the type used against Villa: a 1916 Dodge
touring car of the type used by Pershing, a
full-scale replica of what would evolve into a
military tank. There are camp buildings of the
time, a planned display of a Jenny airplane, and
a museum that sports pictures and relics.
Columbus
now has a population of some 700 people. There
is a walking tour of the raid's downtown sites
(one hotel purports that the holes in its walls
were from the raid. Inside, at the foot of the
steps to the second floor, the story goes that a
Villista shot a guest of the hotel, a pregnant
woman, to death.
If
Villa's raid is not your thing, the area's
offerings to visitors are notable, including a
town museum, a dinner theatre, The Shrine To The
Perfect Man, and The City Of The Sun, to mention
a few. The latter is a community of
one-of-a-kind houses built entirely of
indigenous materials, such as paper, tires,
adobe, bottles and bottles and bottles. A
glittering house can be built for as little as a
hundred dollars and a lot of sweat equity!
The thirty plus residents are friendly to
visitors and rightly proud of their community.
Oh yes, their only concessions to high tech
living are solar panels and running water, so
don't ask where the pay phone is located! A
personal favorite: while there are several good
restaurants within walking distance, the Patio
Grill serves an exceptional breakfast and, with
all respect to the renowned Owl Bar in San
Antonio, NM, the Green Chili Cheeseburger is
arguably one of the best in the country.
Finally,
three miles south of the park is the border and
the town of
Palomas. Easy to park and walk across to do
your shopping, visit the
dentist, pharmacia and optometrist, or to
enjoy a fine meal at 'The Pink Store.' A visit
to
Palomas is a must and a highlight of a stay
at the park.
There's
something for everyone during a stay at the
Pancho Villa State Park and Columbus, New
Mexico!!! Do yourself a big favor. Whether you
are traveling east-west on RT. I-10 or
north-south on RT. I-25, drop thirty minutes
south of Deming and give yourself a real treat.
CONTACT:
PANCHO VILLA STATE
PARK 1-575-531-2711
P.O. BOX
450 1-888-NMPARKS
COLUMBUS, NM
88029
www.emnrd.state.nm.us/nmparks
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