Arthur Johnson Memorial Library

Hall, Linda B.

Revolution on the border: US and Mexico, 1910-1920 Linda B. Hall and Don M. Coerver - Albuquerque, New Mexico University of New Mexico Press 1988 - xii, 205 p.

Contents:
Introduction
Revolution on the Rio Grande
The Arizona-Sonora border and the Mexican revolution
The military response : from nonintervention to Veracruz
The military response : the punitive expeditions
Oil and the Mexican revolution : the southwestern connection
Mining and revolution : a losing proposition
The refuge : Mexican migration to the United States, 1910-1920
Trade, arms, and revolutionaries
Conclusion

In September 1916 some 120,000 guardsmen bivouacked along the border separating the United states from Mexico. President Wilson had mobilized them in support of general Pershing's Punitive Expedition into Mexico, six months earlier. Elsewhere on the Mexican side, competing militia skirmished n a civil war that had begun in 1910. Yet amid all the warfare, trade continued unabated, and in fact imports from Mexico increased slightly between 1913 and 1918. Front cover

0826310990 9780826310996


Southwest
Foreign economic relations--Mexico
International economic relations


United States--Relations--Mexico
Mexico--History--Revolution--1910-1920
United States

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