Railroads played an important role in the Mexican Revolution. They were vital to logistics and much of the fighting took place close to the lines. Trains with sandbagged flat cars would move ahead of the freight trains and cavalry would provide flank guards.
Federal armies were particularly tied to railroads and they could be outmanoeuvred by more mobile opponents. However, in 1914, Pancho Villa moved his whole 16,000 strong Division del Norte south by rail. He also had a well provisioned hospital train that could deal with 1400 casualties.
I am on a bit of a roll with the painting with 90mins a night allocated to the task. So, the latest addition is another squad of Federales. These are from the Old Glory range.
Then a squad of Villistas, again from Old Glory, this time in the US brown khaki that many wore.
And finally the box car that holds the gold. After much searching I found a reasonably priced O Gauge US van that looks close enough to the pictures I have. A bit of dry brushing and there it is. I am sure there will be a train spotter at the show who will tell me there is a rivet out of place!
Realy cool!
ReplyDeleteI am planning to do the same period but in 20 mm.
What the color are You using for Federales? And is it enough historical? I am asking because I have planned on khaki while I like your greish blue a lot.
from the plates I have you have choice of white, blue/grey or a light khaki and probably many more shades. There was no central uniform factory and the dust etc would take its toll.
ReplyDeleteFrom the pictures, albeit black and white, few units were quite as uniform as mine, so you really ought to mix up the colours a bit.
Thanks!
ReplyDelete