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Pascual Orozco - Childhood |  | Pascual Orozco - Childhood: Encyclopedia II - Pascual Orozco - Childhood |  | Orozco was born to a middle-class family on Santa Isabel hacienda near San Isidro, Guerrero municipality, in the state of Chihuahua. He worked as a muleteer and store keeper before he became rich from an investment in a gold mine.
His parents were Pascual Orozco and Amada Orozco y Vázquez (1852 - 1948). Amada's mother, Aitana Vazquez Armendaraz (1821 - 1906) decends from the Armendaraz family from Navarre, Pamplona, Spain. Her father, born Don Fransisco Vazquez de Molenar' (1826 - 1888) was decendent from the Spanish Hapsburg family ...
See also:Pascual Orozco, Pascual Orozco - Childhood, Pascual Orozco - Political ideas, Pascual Orozco - Under Madero's government, Pascual Orozco - Fallout with Madero, Pascual Orozco - Revolt against Madero, Pascual Orozco - House arrest in the United States |  | | Pascual Orozco, Pascual Orozco - Childhood, Pascual Orozco - Fallout with Madero, Pascual Orozco - House arrest in the United States, Pascual Orozco - Political ideas, Pascual Orozco - Revolt against Madero, Pascual Orozco - Under Madero's government, Mexican Revolution |  | |
|  |  | Pascual Orozco: Encyclopedia II - Pascual Orozco - Childhood
Pascual Orozco - Childhood
Orozco was born to a middle-class family on Santa Isabel hacienda near San Isidro, Guerrero municipality, in the state of Chihuahua. He worked as a muleteer and store keeper before he became rich from an investment in a gold mine.
His parents were Pascual Orozco and Amada Orozco y Vázquez (1852 - 1948). Amada's mother, Aitana Vazquez Armendaraz (1821 - 1906) decends from the Armendaraz family from Navarre, Pamplona, Spain. Her father, born Don Fransisco Vazquez de Molenar' (1826 - 1888) was decendent from the Spanish Hapsburg family in Burgos, Spain. Pascual married Refugio Frías, and dedicated his youth to the transport of precious metals between the mining firms of the state. This allowed him to buy his own gold mine. In the first years of the 20th century he was attracted by the ideas of the Flores Magón brothers and, in 1909, he started importing weaponry from the USA in the face of the imminent outbreak of the Mexican Revolution.
Other related archives10 May, 13 May, 15 July, 1882, 1909, 1910, 1911, 1912, 1913, 1915, 1923, 2 January, 20th century, 27 June, 28 January, 3 March, 3 September, 30 August, 31 October, 7 October, Chihuahua, Chihuahua State, Ciudad Juárez, El Paso, El Paso, Texas, Emiliano Zapata, February, Flores Magón, Francisco I. Madero, Francisco S. Carvajal, Francisco Villa, Guanajuato, Los Angeles, Mexican, Mexican Revolution, Mexico City, Newman, New Mexico, Ojinaga, Pancho Villa, Porfirio Díaz, President of Mexico, Presidente Díaz, Texas, U.S. government, USA, United States, Venustiano Carranza, Victoriano Huerta, William Taft, brigadier general, citation needed, colonel, company store, coup d'état, gold, hacienda, house arrest, maderist, miles, muleteer, rheumatism, tamales, weaponry
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Childhood", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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