 |
Ernesto Galarza labor organizer, historian, professor, activist Born: 1905 Birthplace: Nayarit, Mexico, near Tepic
When Ernesto Galarza was eight, he and his parents migrated to Sacramento, California, where he worked as a farm laborer. Excelling at school, he became one of the first Mexican-Americans from a poor background to complete college, after which he received a M.A. from Stanford in 1929, and a Ph.D. in history from Columbia University in 1944. Galarza returned to California, where—at the height of the Cold War and McCarthyism—he organized unions for farm laborers, joining the effort to create the first multiracial farm worker union. While this effort failed, it created the foundation for the United Farm Workers Union of the 1960s. He wrote several books, most notably the 1964 Merchants of Labor, on the exploitation of Mexican contract workers, and the 1971 Barrio Boy, about his own childhood. He was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1976. Died: 1984
Information Please® Database, © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. More on Ernesto Galarza from Infoplease:
Warning: DOMDocument::loadXML(): Input is not proper UTF-8, indicate encoding !
Bytes: 0xE9 0x78 0x69 0x63 in Entity, line: 1 in /site/html/include/elibrary_search_box.php on line 109
|
|