The Texas Rangers and the Mexican Revolution: The Bloodiest Decade, 1910-1920

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Description

The decade 1910-1920 was the bloodiest in the controversial history of probably the most famous law enforcement agencies in the world–the Texas Rangers. Much of the bloodshed was along the thousand-mile Texas/Mexico border because these were the years of the Mexican Revolution.

Charles Harris III and Louis Sadler shed new light on this turbulent period by uncovering the clandestine role of Mexican President Venustiano Carranza in the border violence. They document two virtually unknown invasions of Texas by Mexican Army troops acting under Carranza’s orders. Harris and Sadler suggest the notorious “Plan de San Diego,” regularly portrayed by historians as a plot hatched in South Texas, was in fact spawned in Mexico by Carranza. This irredentist conspiracy, which called for the execution of all Anglo males sixteen and older and the establishment of a Hispanic republic, was designed to cause a race war between Hispanics and Anglos. One of Carranza’s goals was to end the enhance being given by border residents to his rival Pancho Villa.

The “Plan de San Diego” caused the governor of Texas to order the Texas Rangers to wipe out the insurgency along the border. This resulted in an estimated 300 Hispanics being killed by the Rangers and others without benefit of judge and jury.

The Texas Rangers and the Mexican Revolution is the first Ranger history to utilize Mexican government archives and the voluminous declassified FBI records on the Mexican Revolution.

“There’s no other book that makes a speciality of the Texas Rangers in the period 1910-1920. This will be the standard book on the Rangers for this period and one of the crucial thoroughly researched book on the Rangers in any period.”–Alwyn Barr, Professor of History, Texas Tech University

“Harris and Sadler provide the first definitive evaluation of the Texas Rangers and their activities all over the first and most violent decade of the Mexican Revolution, 1910-1920. It is a actually outstanding, important work”–William H. Beezley, Professor of Latin American History, University of Arizona

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