Chicano Moratorium Committee conducts a march and rally commemorating ninth anniversary of Chicano anti-Vietnam war demonstrations in Atlantic Park. Hernando Perez (right foreground) gets inspired… Read more »
Enshrined in the laws that govern the United States, the right to freedom of expression has permanently solidified a part of the identity of the American people. Listed as the… Read more »
Essentially, this primary source is a bulletin listing that provided an insight into the precarious state of education for Mexican Americans in the United States, but specifically listing the situation… Read more »
Five Mexican-American fathers Thomas Estrada, William Guzman, Gonzalo Mendez, Frank Palomino, and Lorenzo Ramirez challenged the practice of Mexican school segregation in the United States District Court for… Read more »
This document provides insight on the petition to bring in a more inclusive curriculum by students of the University of Washington to create… Read more »
Printed around 1970, this picture reveals the execution of the boycott by students and members coincided with the Unified Farm Workers organization. Originally two separate groups known as Agricultural Workers… Read more »
Dated in 2002, this source demonstrated the modern effects of the Chicano movement as it surpassed the civil rights era and revealed its success in the position of recognition… Read more »
Primary Sources: Longoria, J. M. 1934. “The Education of the Mexican-American.” Alonso S. Perales Collection: LULAC & Sons of America: LULAC News Monthly Bulletins, March, 4-5. Orange County Archive, “Original Court… Read more »