paper 3: chapter 7: mexican americans Flashcards
LULAC?
League of United Latin American Citizens.
1929
The full assimilation of Mexican-Americans in US society
They supported restrictions on immigration from Mexico. Non US citizens were not allowed in LULAC.
worried that an influx of poorly educated Mexican migrant workers would find it difficult to assimilate into the US, and would turn Americans against Mexican-American citizens.
What were some reasons for the increase in Mexican-American citizenship after 1945?
GI Bill awared veterans (inc. Mexican Americans) with subsidised college education.
Dynamic leadership from organizations + Organisations like LULAC won many victories over discrimination.
Mexican Americans established the American GI Forum in 1948. It was very successful, opposing segregation in public facilities.
GI Forum demonstrated that the new US-born generation was more inclined to demand equality than their parents.
There was a steady increase in Mexican-American voting.
What led to the first ‘awakening’ of the Mexican-American electorate in the 1960s and greater militancy?
Inspired by the Black Civil Rights movement.
80% lived in ghettos. They suffered from poor housing, discrimination, poverty etc.
Voting Rights Act facilitated more voting for Mexican-Americans (e,g, bilingual ballots)
LULAC emphasised voting and elected represetnatives who were likely to help bring change. walked out of EEOC in 1966 bc there was no mexican american representation, johnso responded ot thier demands and appotined a M.A to the orgnaization.
1965 Voting Rights Act that required biliungal ballots in electoral disctricts with high concentration of spanish speakers + 1975 extension of voting rights act further faciliated mexican american voting -> representation increased all over gov.
Why did many poor Mexican farm workers initially avoid politics?
Fear of deportation
When did César Chávez establish the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA)?
1962
What did the NFWA do with the Agricultural Workers Organising Committee (AWOC).
In 1965, they striked together. During their strike against grape growers, they merged into the United Farm Workers (UFW),
When did Chavez organize a grape boycott? Who helped?
How many Americans supported the grape boycott at its peak?
- White liberals such as Senator Robert Kennedy helped in the boycott.
17 million
When did growers agree to sign contracts with UFW?
- however triumph was short somewhat shortlived, even though it allowed the 1975 Agricultural Labour Relations Act (exceptionally worker friendly legislation), increased oppositoin and increased immigration weakened thew UFW.
Why was Chavez considered a hero?
His mobilization of the Catholic Church to support UFW
Emphasis on non-violence
Gave ethnic Mexican workers their first positive and successful US role model -> Encouraged Mexican-Americans into even more activism
UFW was one of the only Mexican-American organisation to gain significant national attention.
became the catalyst for the chicano movement, isnpired it
Who were Tejanos? Where were there lots of Tejanos?
Texan Mexican-Americans.
Crystal City. They had long been the majority, but they were excluded by the Anglo population.
What did Tejano union activists do in 1963?
They organized an unprecedented all Mexican-American City Council.
What were the consequences of the Tejano City Council?
Anglos intimidated Mexican-American councilors and sabotaged their work.
Initial triumph started activism in Crystal City and elsewhere.
Inspired student activists who started military organizations, such as Mexican-American Youth Organisation (MAYO)
What organization did Reies Lopez Tijernia found? When?
(Alianza) Federal Alliance of Land Grants
1963
What did the Federal Alliance of Land Grants (Alianza) protest for in 1966, New Mexico?
Claimed that the federal government and private parties had broken the 1848 treaty and illegally appropriated their ancestor’s land.
What led to Alianza violence in June 1967?
The arrest of Alianza members as they planned to occupy a section of the Kit Carson forest, which had been a nineteenth-century land grant.
Tijernia led a group of militants in an armed raid on the Rio Arriba County courthouse in northern New Mexico.