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Battle of Tepic (1911)

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Battle of Tepic
Part of the Mexican Revolution
DateApril, 1911
Location
Result Espinosist Victory
Belligerents
Holmdahlist Espinosist
Commanders and leaders
E.L Holmdahl (WIA) Martín Espinosa
Strength
280 Cora Indians
7 Officers
1 Old Brass Cannon
2,000–5,000
Casualties and losses
193 killed Unknown

The Battle of Tepic was an engagement during the Mexican Revolution where two formers allies Emil Lewis Holmdahl and Martín Espinosa, turned enemies fought for control over the provincial capital of Tepic.

Battle

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Holmdahl and 7 officers were brought before Espinosa, who asked them to join his Junta. They refused and then wisely fled to the mountains, from where they joined 280 Cora Indians loyal to Madero. Holmdahl, the 7 officers, and the Indians attacked Tepic, armed with bows and arrows and an old brass cannon.[1]

Espinosa and his forces numbering between 2,000 to 5,000 men while his men were armed with guns. Holmdahl had presumed that Espinosa's men would defect and join their cause. They didn't and the battle erupting into a brutal fight on the city streets. Holmdahl and his men outnumbered began to loose ground, while Holmdahl was wounded by a shell that burst near him killing the man next to him. After 36 hours of fighting, Holmdahl's forces were defeated with 2/3 of their men dead including all 7 officers.[2]

Aftermath

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Holmdahl would disband his faction and join Madero's cause and would distinguish himself during the revolution. Espinosa on the otherside would later loose tepic, be exiled by Victoriano Huerta, and later assassinated.

Sources

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  • Soldier of Fortune: Adventuring in Latin America and Mexico with Emil Lewis Holmdahl By Douglas V. Meed
  • Nayarit and The Mexican Revolution, 1910-1920 By. Wayne A. Sabesk
  • Mountjoy, Joseph B. (2013). "Aztatlan Complex". In Evans, Susan T.; Webster, David L. (eds.). Archaeology of Ancient Mexico and Central America: An Encyclopedia. Routledge
  • Taylor, Laurence D (1999) "The Magonista Revolt in Baja California". The Journal of San Diego History.

References

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  1. ^ Soldier of Fortune: Adventuring in Latin America and Mexico with Emil Lewis Holmdahl By Douglas V. Meed, page 57
  2. ^ Soldier of Fortune: Adventuring in Latin America and Mexico with Emil Lewis Holmdahl By Douglas V. Meed, page 58