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History of Mexican Americans in Houston

The city of Houston has significant populations of Mexican Americans, Mexican immigrants, and Mexican citizen expatriates. Houston residents of Mexican origin make up the oldest Hispanic ethnic group in Houston, and Jessi Elana Aaron and José Esteban Hernández, authors of "Quantitative evidence for contact-induced accommodation: Shifts in /s/ reduction patterns in Salvadoran Spanish in Houston," referring to another large Latino group in Houston, stated that as of 2007 it was the most "well-established" Hispanophone ethnic group there.[1] Houston is the third city for Mexican immigrants after Chicago and Los Angeles.[2]

Original Ninfa's on Navigation Boulevard, established by Ninfa Laurenzo

History

Beginning and immigration in the early 20th century

 
The former location of the final Felix Mexican Restaurant operation, established by Mexican-American Felix Tijerina

When Houston was first settled in 1836, some Mexican prisoners of war cleared and drained swampland so the city could be settled. Some parcels of land were given to 100 of the prisoners, who became servants. Throughout most of the 19th century most Mexican immigrants traveled to the Rio Grande Valley, El Paso, and San Antonio and did not go to East Texas cities like Houston. The Anglos (non-Hispanic, English speaking whites) in East Texas had a Deep South culture and preferred sharecroppers who were African American and Anglo. Robert R. Treviño, author of The Church in the Barrio: Mexican American Ethno-Catholicism in Houston, said that the Anglos "made it clear that Mexicans were not welcome."[3] At various points between 1850 and 1880, six to eighteen Mexicans lived in Houston. Treviño said that "Mexicans were almost invisible in Houston during most of the nineteenth century."[3] The authors of Mexican American Baseball in Houston and Southeast Texas, Richard A. Santillán, et al., stated that the lack of an established Mexican-American population differentiated Houston from other major Texas cities.[4] Nestor Rodriguez, author of "Hispanic and Asian Immigration Waves in Houston," wrote that the 1880 U.S. Census showed a "handful" of Mexicans in Houston.[5] That census counted fewer than ten persons of Mexican ancestry within the municipal boundaries.[4]

 
Molina's Cantina in Southside Place: Molina's was established by Raul Molina

Mexican migration into Houston increased with the expansion of the railroad system and the installation of Porfirio Díaz as the President of Mexico. Mexicans fleeing the hardships of the Díaz modernization program used the railroads to travel to Texas. In the late 1800s and early 1900s Mexican Americans and immigrants from Mexico began to stay in Houston permanently. Many worked in unskilled labor and as food vendors. 500 people of Mexican origin lived in Houston by the year 1900. This increased to 2,000 by 1910, Treviño said "[...]the haphazard trickle had become a steady influx[...]"[6] In 1907 a junta patriótica (cultural committee) opened Mexican Independence Day festivities. In 1908 at least one Mexican American mutual aid society had formed.[7] By 1910 Houston had about 2,000 people of Mexican ancestry.[4]

In the early 20th century the population further increased due to several factors. The 1910 Mexican Revolution drove many Mexicans to Houston. Employers recruited Mexican Americans and made them into enganchadores (labor agents) so they could recruit more workers; the enganchadores recruited Tejanos and immigrants. In addition many Mexican Americans in rural areas faced unemployment as commercial agriculture increased, and they traveled to Houston since Houston's economy was increasing. The labor shortage during World War I encouraged Mexicans to work in Houston. The immigration restrictions put in place in the 1920s did not affect Mexicans, so Mexicans continued to come to Houston.[8] The increased work demands came from the building of the Houston Ship Channel and railroad construction in addition to the agricultural work in areas around Houston. Rodriguez wrote that "The labor-hungry Houston economy probably had as much influence" as the Mexican Revolution did."[5] In 1920 Houston had 6,000 residents of Mexican origin. In 1930 about 15,000 residents were of Mexican origin.[8] Originally Mexicans settled the Second Ward. Jesus Jesse Esparza of Houston History magazine said that the Second Ward "quickly became the unofficial hub of their cultural and social life."[9] Magnolia Park began to attract Mexican immigrants in the 1920s.[5] As time passed, Mexicans began moving to other neighborhoods, such as the First Ward, the Sixth Ward, the Northside (then a part of the Fifth Ward), and Magnolia Park.[10] A group of about 100 Mexican families also settled the Houston Heights.[9]

By 1930 Houston had about 15,000 Mexicans. This was almost twice as many as the 8,339 first and second generation Eastern and Southern European immigrants in Houston. Treviño said that the Mexican American community "took root in a society that had been historically black and white but one that increasingly became tri-ethnic— black, white, and brown[...]"[11] He added that "In a city that considered them nonwhite, Mexicans stood out even though their numbers were smaller than those in such places as San Antonio and Los Angeles."[11]

José F. Aranda, Jr. of Rice University, who reviewed the book The Church in the Barrio, wrote that historically Mexican immigrants "found the racial landscape particularly unwelcoming" because Houston was not in proximity to the, at the time, larger Mexican American communities in Texas.[12]

Scholars of Mexican-American studies say that, in regards to Houston's Mexican-American population, the "immigrant era" ended in the 1930s.[13] As the Great Depression affected Houston, City of Houston officials accused Mexican Americans of being economically harmful and launched raids into their communities.[9] Local and federal interests, which included American-born ethnic Mexicans, had feared that the Mexican population would try to escape the economic problems by attempting to obtain public relief, so they pressured Mexican immigrants to leave Houston.[14] Many Mexican-Americans did not receive federal benefits meant to alleviate the effects of the Great Depression.[9] At that time the immigration wave ended and about 2,000 Mexicans left Houston during the Depression era.[14] Several Mexican-American organizations, such as the Our Lady of Guadalupe Church and the Sociedad Mutualista Obrera Mexicana, provided relief services to the community during that era.[9]

Immigration in the late 20th century and 21st century

 
A Famsa location in the Gulfton area in Houston

In the late 1970s and early 1980s tens of thousands of Mexicans arrived in Houston due to increased economic opportunities from an increase in the oil business.[14] In the 1970s 63,000 Mexicans arrived in the Houston metropolitan area.[15] In the more recent immigrant wave, the Mexicans tended to work in informal labor markets. Most Mexicans in the immigrant wave in the 1970s and 1980s originated from Coahuila, Nuevo León, and Tamaulipas, states along the U.S.-Mexico border. In 1980, according to the U.S. census, there were 93,718 Mexicans who were born outside of the United States. 68% of the Mexicans in that figure had immigrated since 1970.[16] In the early 1980s there was an estimation of 80,000 undocumented immigrants from Mexico, along with 300,000 native Hispanics.[17]

Mexican immigration in Houston fluctuated due to the 1980s oil bust.[16] The oil bust resulted in hardships and job losses for area Mexicans. Because many Mexicans sought to find work in other U.S. cities, Houston-area transportation businesses started by Mexicans sought to flourish. In 1986 a federal law was passed that prohibited hiring of undocumented immigrants, reducing possibilities of work for Mexican undocumented immigrants. Despite this fluctuation, in the 1980s 89,000 Mexicans arrived in Harris County. After 1987, when the oil bust ended, the wages stagnated and the number of jobs had a slow growth. The Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA) offered amnesty and legalization for undocumented immigrants who arrived before 1982. The same law fined employers hiring undocumented immigrants.[15]

 
The original location of Taqueria Arandas, started by Jose Camarena

In 1990, there were 132,596 Mexican immigrants in Houston, making up 69% of the 192,220 foreign-born Hispanic residents of Houston. That year, 46% of all immigrants to Houston were Mexican.[16] In 1990, in Harris County, and the median household income of ethnic Mexicans was $22,447 and 6% of its ethnic Mexican population had a bachelor's degree or higher education. Nestor Rodriguez wrote that the percentage of those with a bachelor's degree or higher illustrates "a major educational disadvantage" and "partly explained the low median household income".[15]

From 1990 to 1997 the number of Mexican immigrants in Houston increased by over 110,000. In the 1990s the burgeoning economy, a decline in the Mexican economy, and thousands of legalized immigrants filing family reunification petitions encouraged additional Mexican immigration. During the decade an increase in anti-immigrant sentiments, the anti-hiring undocumented immigrant laws and a new law passed in 1996 that restricted immigration had, in the words of Nestor Rodriguez, "lessened the explosive energy that characterized Mexican undocumented immigration in the 1970s and 1980s."[15]

In the book Ethnicity in the Sunbelt: A History of Mexican Americans in Houston, author Arnoldo De León described the relationship between Houston Mexican-Americans and newly arrived immigrants from Mexico. De León said that the traditional residents disliked how they believed that the new immigrants were giving the Mexican-American community in Houston a bad reputation but added that, at the same time, the new immigrants kept the city's Mexican-American community in touch with the home country.[13]

As of 2007 most of the Hispanic and Latino political power in Houston consists of Mexican Americans.[18]

By 2007 many wealthy Mexican citizens escaping crime and kidnapping moved their families to Houston. Houston's air transport links to Mexico and the lower prices of luxury houses compared to other American cities made it attractive to wealthy Mexicans.[19] In 2010 many residents of Monterrey, Mexico moved to Houston to escape drug cartel violence.[20]

By June 2012 the Yo Soy 132 movement in Mexico spread to Houston, using the hashtag #YoSoy132-Houston.[21]

Media history

Some of the earliest Mexican-American newspapers in Houston included El Anunciador, La Gaceta Mexicana, El Tecolote, and La Tribuna.[22]

Religious history

Historically many Mexican immigrants to Houston came from areas where folk religion was common, and this conflicted with existing American Catholicism.[23]

In 1910 there were no Mexican Catholic churches in Houston. Some Mexicans were excluded from attending Anglo Catholic churches. Mexicans who did attend found themselves discriminated against.[7] In 1911 the Roman Catholic Diocese of Galveston brought the Oblates of Mary Immaculate, a series of priests intended to minister to the Mexican population of Houston.[24] In 1912 Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church, the first Mexican Catholic church, opened.[7] Due to an increase in demand in Catholic services, oblates established missions in various Mexican-American neighborhoods.[25] The Roman Catholic church established Our Lady of Guadalupe so that White people accustomed to segregation of races did not find offense with the presence of Mexican people in their churches.[10] The second Mexican Catholic church, Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church, opened in the 1920s.[22] It originated as an oblate mission in Magnolia Park, on the second floor of the residence of Emilio Aranda. A permanent two-story building, funded by the community, opened in 1926.[25]

As time passed, additional churches established by Mexicans opened, and as some neighborhoods became majority Mexican the churches became Mexican churches.[23]

In 1972 the Catholic church leaders and lay Hispanics in Houston participated in the Encuentro Hispano de Pastoral ("Pastoral Congress for the Spanish-speaking"). Robert R. Treviño, author of The Church in the Barrio: Mexican American Ethno-Catholicism in Houston, said that the event "stands as a watershed in the religious history of Mexican American Catholics in Houston".[24] Treviño also said that Mexican-American Catholics "competed for cultural space not only with the Anglo majority, which included various groups of white Catholics, but also with a large black population and a Mexican protestant presence as well."[26]

Geography

As of 2007 many wealthy Mexicans living in Houston prefer to live in gated communities with private security patrols as the environment is similar to that of wealthy neighborhoods in Mexico. Royal Oaks Country Club is among those communities.[19]

As of 2017 about 10% of the residents of The Woodlands were of Mexican origins; they numbered at over 10,000. In 2000 wealthy Mexicans began buying houses in The Woodlands for vacation purposes. Large numbers settled in The Woodlands from 2006 to 2014 as the Mexican Drug War occurred. In 2017 many wealthy Mexicans in Texas were moving back to Mexico and fewer were moving to The Woodlands. The Rice University Baker Institute director, Tony Payán, stated that uncertainty regarding the Trump Administration's attitudes towards immigration and the decline in value of the Mexican peso were factors.[27]

Pasadena and Galena Park are suburbs with a large Mexican population in Houston.

Organizations

As of 2001 Association for the Advancement of Mexican Americans (AAMA) is the largest advocacy group for Hispanics in the Houston area. It was established in 1971, also making it the oldest such group, on the premises of the Ninfa's restaurant.[28]

The Sociedad Mutualista Benito Juárez, a mutual aid society was established in Magnolia Park in May 1919. Salon Juárez, built in 1928, is a 48 feet (15 m) by 80 feet (24 m) two story building that served as its meeting house. According to Stephen Fox, who specializes in the history of architecture, this is the city's first ethnic Mexican-oriented public building not made for religious purposes. Due to financial problems during the Great Depression the society no longer managed the building after 1932. After multiple changes in ownership, the physical plant began to suffer from maintenance issues in the 1980s and 1990s because the old roof was removed but a new roof was not put on it.[29] Because the owner had not paid $20,000 in back taxes, the building was to be sold in a July 6, 2004 auction, but the taxes were paid before the auction occurred, so the owner kept the property.[30] The Greater Houston Preservation Alliance classified it as an endangered building.[29]

Education

 
De Zavala Elementary School (modern building pictured) was the first majority ethnic Mexican school in Houston

In the 20th century, when schools were legally segregated by race (the Jim Crow era), Mexican-Americans attended schools legally designated for white students. Until 1970 the Houston Independent School District (HISD) counted its Hispanic and Latino students as "white."[31]

Beginning in the 20th century were some ethnic Mexican-majority elementary schools in Houston; the first school with a majority ethnic Mexican student body was Lorenzo de Zavala Elementary School in Magnolia Park. Mexican students attended schools classified as being for white students; school district administrators established De Zavala elementary to alleviate fears from Anglo White parents who noticed an increase in Mexican students in the area White schools.[32] At some schools, such as Rusk Elementary School near the Second Ward, school administrators established de facto segregation by assigning Mexican students to separate classes.[33] At the time no ethnic Mexican-majority high schools yet existed.[32]

An increase in the Hispanic presence of public schools in Houston began in 1937. After the 1960s many of the secondary schools began to change from being mostly Anglo to mostly Hispanic.[34]

AAMA operates George I. Sanchez Charter Schools.[28]

Diplomatic missions

The Consulate-General of Mexico was formerly located in the Greater Southeast Management District,[35][36] on 1.7 acres (0.69 ha) of area adjacent to Interstate 69/U.S. Highway 59. In 2019 the Mexican government agreed to give the state government of Texas the consulate's land,[37] in exchange for the state giving the Mexican government 3 acres (1.2 ha) of land in Westchase, Houston[38] that was previously state property. The consulate was to open in its new location in 2020. The move is rebuilding so the state government can reconstruct freeways in the Southeast Houston area.[37]

Transportation

As of 2007 there were at least 20 flights per day from Houston to Mexico City and about 20 daily flights to other Mexican cities, making up about 40 flights total.[19]

Politics

In 1969 Lauro Cruz was elected in the Texas House of Representatives in District 23, making him the first Mexican American in what author Mikaela Garza Selley described in Houston History Magazine as a "major political position".[39]

Cuisine

 
The former location of the final Felix Mexican Restaurant operation

Felix Tijerina established the restaurant Felix's while also becoming involved in Mexican-American activism. Selley stated that his restaurant "became "the most recognized Mexican American business success story in Houston.""[39] Felix's and Molina's Cantina served Tex-Mex catering to Anglo customers.[39]

Selley described four restaurants as "long-standing Houston institutions whose political involvement remains as well-known as their house special-ties."[39] These four are Andy's Café, Doneraki Authentic Mexican Restaurant, Merida Mexican Café, and Villa Arcos Taquitos.[39] Jesse and Sadie Morales named their restaurant Andy's Café after their son; it was established in 1977. According to the Morales's grandson, Anthony Espinoza, the restaurant is the Tex-Mex style as both founders had been born and raised in Texas and were accustomed to American cuisine.[40] Doneraki, established by Cesar Rodríguez, had tacos al carbon inventor Don Erakio as its namesake.[39] Rafael and Olga Acosta established Merida Mexican Café in 1972.[41] Villa Arcos was established in 1977 by Velia Arcos Rodríguez Durán.[42]

Others:

Recreation

By the 1940s Mexican-American sports clubs, including baseball clubs, had been established. Mexican-American businesses helped sponsor the baseball clubs; Mexican-Americans playing baseball in Houston began by the 1920s. The Latin American State Tournament is a Mexican-American tournament for men's softball. Félix Fraga created it by the 1940s. The team at one time only included Hispanics and Latinos, and the managers asked for birth certificates so potential players could prove they were of Hispanic or Latino origins. Some white persons not of Hispanic origins tried registering under falsified Spanish family names to become players.[4]

In media

The 2011 novel What Can't Wait by Ashley Hope Pérez is about a Mexican-American teenage girl torn between the demands of her family and her ambitions for the future.[43][44]

Notable Mexican-Americans

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Aaron and Hernández, p. 335. "Finally, the Mexican community in Houston represents the oldest and most well established Spanish-speaking group in the area,[...]"
  2. ^ "Why Chicago is Still the No. 2 U.S. City for Mexican Immigrants". Bloomberg.com. 9 October 2014.
  3. ^ a b Treviño, p. 15.
  4. ^ a b c d Santillán, et al, p. 9.
  5. ^ a b c Rodriguez, Nestor, "Hispanic and Asian Immigration Waves in Houston," p. 31.
  6. ^ Treviño, p. 26.
  7. ^ a b c Treviño, p. 32.
  8. ^ a b Treviño, p. 28.
  9. ^ a b c d e Esparza, p. 2.
  10. ^ a b Garza, Natalie, p. 15.
  11. ^ a b Treviño, p. 29.
  12. ^ Aranda, José F., Jr. (Rice University). "The Church in the Barrio: Mexican American Ethno-Catholicism in Houston." (Book review) Journal of Southern History, Feb, 2008, Vol.74(1), p.224(2) - Available at JSTOR: Cited page: 224
  13. ^ a b Walsh, Robb. "The Authenticity Myth." Houston Press. October 26, 2000. Retrieved on November 16, 2009.
  14. ^ a b c Rodriguez, Nestor, "Hispanic and Asian Immigration Waves in Houston," p. 32.
  15. ^ a b c d Rodriguez, Nestor, "Hispanic and Asian Immigration Waves in Houston," p. 34.
  16. ^ a b c Rodriguez, Nestor, "Hispanic and Asian Immigration Waves in Houston," p. 33.
  17. ^ Rodriguez, Nestor, "Undocumented Central Americans in Houston: Diverse Populations," p. 4.
  18. ^ Garza, Cynthia Leonor. "Latinos' political power hasn't matched growth." Houston Chronicle. Sunday August 19, 2007. 2. Retrieved on November 22, 2011.
  19. ^ a b c Meyer, Eugene L. (2007-09-16). "For Rich Mexicans, Parallel Lives in U.S." The New York Times. p. 1111. Retrieved 2017-07-16.
  20. ^ Moreno, Jenalia. "Monterrey residents finding an escape in Houston." Houston Chronicle. September 18, 2010. Retrieved on September 20, 2010.
  21. ^ Rangel, Gustavo (2012-06-28). "Mexicanos en Houston quieren elección limpia en su país". La Opinión. Retrieved 2016-08-28.
  22. ^ a b Esparza, p. 3.
  23. ^ a b Rosales, Francisco Arturo (Arizona State University). "The Church in the Barrio: Mexican American Ethno-Catholicism in Houston" (review) The Catholic Historical Review, 2007, Vol.93(3), pp.727-728 [Peer Reviewed Journal] - Available at JSTOR. Cited page: 728: "Unfortunately, religious practices of the immigrants often clashed with the modern Catholicism that emerged in the United States in the nineteenth century. Many came from priest-scarce regions where rituals and even theology were maintained at the folk level. Consequently, ecclesiastical leaders dismissed the new arrivals as ignorant of Church teachings. Nonetheless, the Church accommodated Mexicans within an expanding structure of churches. Some like Our Lady of Guadalupe were new, while others became Mexican as previous parishioners abandoned buildings to the newcomers as they became the majority in central Houston congregations."
  24. ^ a b Treviño, p. 9.
  25. ^ a b Garza, Natalie, p. 17.
  26. ^ Treviño, p. 10.
  27. ^ Tallet, Olivia P. (2017-05-26). "The 'Trump Effect'". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2017-07-17. - Also published in the Washington Times via Associated Press as "Some Mexican residents in Texas feel unwelcome, return home," date June 4, 2017. Spanish version: "Atraídos antes por The Woodlands, ahora los mexicanos deciden regresar a su país"
  28. ^ a b Evans, Marjorie (2001-09-20). "Group expanding to meet growing Hispanic population". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2019-04-14.
  29. ^ a b Cutler, p. 36.
  30. ^ Cutler, p. 36-37.
  31. ^ Kellar, William Henry. Make Haste Slowly: Moderates, Conservatives, and School Desegregation in Houston. Texas A&M University Press, 1999. ISBN 1603447180, 9781603447188. p. 33 (Google Books PT14).
  32. ^ a b Steptoe, Tyina. Houston Bound: Culture and Color in a Jim Crow City (Volume 41 of American Crossroads). University of California Press, November 3, 2015. ISBN 0520958535, 9780520958531. p. 96.
  33. ^ Steptoe, Tyina. Houston Bound: Culture and Color in a Jim Crow City (Volume 41 of American Crossroads). University of California Press, November 3, 2015. ISBN 0520958535, 9780520958531. p. 95.
  34. ^ San Miguel, p. 219.
  35. ^ "INFORMACIÓN SOBRE EL CONSULADO." Consulate-General of Mexico. Retrieved on July 27, 2009. "Dirección: 4507 San Jacinto St. Houston, Texas, 77004"
  36. ^ "Area Maps 2011-10-09 at the Wayback Machine." (Map 1, Map 2) Greater Southeast Management District. Retrieved on May 22, 2009.
  37. ^ a b Begley, Dug (2019-12-16). "Mexican consulate moving to southwest Houston to make way for downtown freeway rebuild". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2019-12-17.
  38. ^ Pulsinelli, Olivia (2019-12-16). "Texas, Mexican Consulate to swap land in Houston as part of major highway project". Houston Business Journal. Retrieved 2019-12-17.
  39. ^ a b c d e f Selly, p. 30.
  40. ^ Selly, p. 33.
  41. ^ Selley, p. 31.
  42. ^ Selley, p. 32.
  43. ^ Coats, Karen. "What Can(t) Wait" (Young adult review)(Brief article)(Book review) The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books, April, 2011, Vol.64(8), p.388(1). Available at Project MUSE.
  44. ^ "WHAT CAN'T WAIT." Kirkus Reviews. February 1, 2011. Posted online on January 26, 2011. Retrieved on November 7, 2015.
  45. ^ Chadwick, Susan. "A Goode Idea" (). Texas Monthly. August 1992. Retrieved on February 28, 2016. PRINT: Emmis Communications, August 1992. Volume 20, No. 8, ISSN 0148-7736. Start p. 46.
  46. ^ Okolie, Stefania (2020-07-07). "New mural pays tribute to Vanessa Guillen in her neighborhood". KTRK-TV. Retrieved 2020-07-31.
  47. ^ "100 Things Meme." Gwendolyn Zepeda. Retrieved on February 19, 2016.

References

External links

history, mexican, americans, houston, city, houston, significant, populations, mexican, americans, mexican, immigrants, mexican, citizen, expatriates, houston, residents, mexican, origin, make, oldest, hispanic, ethnic, group, houston, jessi, elana, aaron, jos. The city of Houston has significant populations of Mexican Americans Mexican immigrants and Mexican citizen expatriates Houston residents of Mexican origin make up the oldest Hispanic ethnic group in Houston and Jessi Elana Aaron and Jose Esteban Hernandez authors of Quantitative evidence for contact induced accommodation Shifts in s reduction patterns in Salvadoran Spanish in Houston referring to another large Latino group in Houston stated that as of 2007 it was the most well established Hispanophone ethnic group there 1 Houston is the third city for Mexican immigrants after Chicago and Los Angeles 2 Original Ninfa s on Navigation Boulevard established by Ninfa Laurenzo Contents 1 History 1 1 Beginning and immigration in the early 20th century 1 2 Immigration in the late 20th century and 21st century 2 Media history 3 Religious history 4 Geography 5 Organizations 6 Education 7 Diplomatic missions 8 Transportation 9 Politics 10 Cuisine 11 Recreation 12 In media 13 Notable Mexican Americans 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 17 External linksHistory EditBeginning and immigration in the early 20th century Edit The former location of the final Felix Mexican Restaurant operation established by Mexican American Felix Tijerina When Houston was first settled in 1836 some Mexican prisoners of war cleared and drained swampland so the city could be settled Some parcels of land were given to 100 of the prisoners who became servants Throughout most of the 19th century most Mexican immigrants traveled to the Rio Grande Valley El Paso and San Antonio and did not go to East Texas cities like Houston The Anglos non Hispanic English speaking whites in East Texas had a Deep South culture and preferred sharecroppers who were African American and Anglo Robert R Trevino author of The Church in the Barrio Mexican American Ethno Catholicism in Houston said that the Anglos made it clear that Mexicans were not welcome 3 At various points between 1850 and 1880 six to eighteen Mexicans lived in Houston Trevino said that Mexicans were almost invisible in Houston during most of the nineteenth century 3 The authors of Mexican American Baseball in Houston and Southeast Texas Richard A Santillan et al stated that the lack of an established Mexican American population differentiated Houston from other major Texas cities 4 Nestor Rodriguez author of Hispanic and Asian Immigration Waves in Houston wrote that the 1880 U S Census showed a handful of Mexicans in Houston 5 That census counted fewer than ten persons of Mexican ancestry within the municipal boundaries 4 Molina s Cantina in Southside Place Molina s was established by Raul Molina Mexican migration into Houston increased with the expansion of the railroad system and the installation of Porfirio Diaz as the President of Mexico Mexicans fleeing the hardships of the Diaz modernization program used the railroads to travel to Texas In the late 1800s and early 1900s Mexican Americans and immigrants from Mexico began to stay in Houston permanently Many worked in unskilled labor and as food vendors 500 people of Mexican origin lived in Houston by the year 1900 This increased to 2 000 by 1910 Trevino said the haphazard trickle had become a steady influx 6 In 1907 a junta patriotica cultural committee opened Mexican Independence Day festivities In 1908 at least one Mexican American mutual aid society had formed 7 By 1910 Houston had about 2 000 people of Mexican ancestry 4 In the early 20th century the population further increased due to several factors The 1910 Mexican Revolution drove many Mexicans to Houston Employers recruited Mexican Americans and made them into enganchadores labor agents so they could recruit more workers the enganchadores recruited Tejanos and immigrants In addition many Mexican Americans in rural areas faced unemployment as commercial agriculture increased and they traveled to Houston since Houston s economy was increasing The labor shortage during World War I encouraged Mexicans to work in Houston The immigration restrictions put in place in the 1920s did not affect Mexicans so Mexicans continued to come to Houston 8 The increased work demands came from the building of the Houston Ship Channel and railroad construction in addition to the agricultural work in areas around Houston Rodriguez wrote that The labor hungry Houston economy probably had as much influence as the Mexican Revolution did 5 In 1920 Houston had 6 000 residents of Mexican origin In 1930 about 15 000 residents were of Mexican origin 8 Originally Mexicans settled the Second Ward Jesus Jesse Esparza of Houston History magazine said that the Second Ward quickly became the unofficial hub of their cultural and social life 9 Magnolia Park began to attract Mexican immigrants in the 1920s 5 As time passed Mexicans began moving to other neighborhoods such as the First Ward the Sixth Ward the Northside then a part of the Fifth Ward and Magnolia Park 10 A group of about 100 Mexican families also settled the Houston Heights 9 By 1930 Houston had about 15 000 Mexicans This was almost twice as many as the 8 339 first and second generation Eastern and Southern European immigrants in Houston Trevino said that the Mexican American community took root in a society that had been historically black and white but one that increasingly became tri ethnic black white and brown 11 He added that In a city that considered them nonwhite Mexicans stood out even though their numbers were smaller than those in such places as San Antonio and Los Angeles 11 Jose F Aranda Jr of Rice University who reviewed the book The Church in the Barrio wrote that historically Mexican immigrants found the racial landscape particularly unwelcoming because Houston was not in proximity to the at the time larger Mexican American communities in Texas 12 Scholars of Mexican American studies say that in regards to Houston s Mexican American population the immigrant era ended in the 1930s 13 As the Great Depression affected Houston City of Houston officials accused Mexican Americans of being economically harmful and launched raids into their communities 9 Local and federal interests which included American born ethnic Mexicans had feared that the Mexican population would try to escape the economic problems by attempting to obtain public relief so they pressured Mexican immigrants to leave Houston 14 Many Mexican Americans did not receive federal benefits meant to alleviate the effects of the Great Depression 9 At that time the immigration wave ended and about 2 000 Mexicans left Houston during the Depression era 14 Several Mexican American organizations such as the Our Lady of Guadalupe Church and the Sociedad Mutualista Obrera Mexicana provided relief services to the community during that era 9 Immigration in the late 20th century and 21st century Edit A Famsa location in the Gulfton area in Houston In the late 1970s and early 1980s tens of thousands of Mexicans arrived in Houston due to increased economic opportunities from an increase in the oil business 14 In the 1970s 63 000 Mexicans arrived in the Houston metropolitan area 15 In the more recent immigrant wave the Mexicans tended to work in informal labor markets Most Mexicans in the immigrant wave in the 1970s and 1980s originated from Coahuila Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas states along the U S Mexico border In 1980 according to the U S census there were 93 718 Mexicans who were born outside of the United States 68 of the Mexicans in that figure had immigrated since 1970 16 In the early 1980s there was an estimation of 80 000 undocumented immigrants from Mexico along with 300 000 native Hispanics 17 Mexican immigration in Houston fluctuated due to the 1980s oil bust 16 The oil bust resulted in hardships and job losses for area Mexicans Because many Mexicans sought to find work in other U S cities Houston area transportation businesses started by Mexicans sought to flourish In 1986 a federal law was passed that prohibited hiring of undocumented immigrants reducing possibilities of work for Mexican undocumented immigrants Despite this fluctuation in the 1980s 89 000 Mexicans arrived in Harris County After 1987 when the oil bust ended the wages stagnated and the number of jobs had a slow growth The Immigration Reform and Control Act IRCA offered amnesty and legalization for undocumented immigrants who arrived before 1982 The same law fined employers hiring undocumented immigrants 15 The original location of Taqueria Arandas started by Jose Camarena In 1990 there were 132 596 Mexican immigrants in Houston making up 69 of the 192 220 foreign born Hispanic residents of Houston That year 46 of all immigrants to Houston were Mexican 16 In 1990 in Harris County and the median household income of ethnic Mexicans was 22 447 and 6 of its ethnic Mexican population had a bachelor s degree or higher education Nestor Rodriguez wrote that the percentage of those with a bachelor s degree or higher illustrates a major educational disadvantage and partly explained the low median household income 15 From 1990 to 1997 the number of Mexican immigrants in Houston increased by over 110 000 In the 1990s the burgeoning economy a decline in the Mexican economy and thousands of legalized immigrants filing family reunification petitions encouraged additional Mexican immigration During the decade an increase in anti immigrant sentiments the anti hiring undocumented immigrant laws and a new law passed in 1996 that restricted immigration had in the words of Nestor Rodriguez lessened the explosive energy that characterized Mexican undocumented immigration in the 1970s and 1980s 15 In the book Ethnicity in the Sunbelt A History of Mexican Americans in Houston author Arnoldo De Leon described the relationship between Houston Mexican Americans and newly arrived immigrants from Mexico De Leon said that the traditional residents disliked how they believed that the new immigrants were giving the Mexican American community in Houston a bad reputation but added that at the same time the new immigrants kept the city s Mexican American community in touch with the home country 13 As of 2007 most of the Hispanic and Latino political power in Houston consists of Mexican Americans 18 By 2007 many wealthy Mexican citizens escaping crime and kidnapping moved their families to Houston Houston s air transport links to Mexico and the lower prices of luxury houses compared to other American cities made it attractive to wealthy Mexicans 19 In 2010 many residents of Monterrey Mexico moved to Houston to escape drug cartel violence 20 By June 2012 the Yo Soy 132 movement in Mexico spread to Houston using the hashtag YoSoy132 Houston 21 Media history EditSome of the earliest Mexican American newspapers in Houston included El Anunciador La Gaceta Mexicana El Tecolote and La Tribuna 22 Religious history EditSee also Religion in Houston Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church Historically many Mexican immigrants to Houston came from areas where folk religion was common and this conflicted with existing American Catholicism 23 In 1910 there were no Mexican Catholic churches in Houston Some Mexicans were excluded from attending Anglo Catholic churches Mexicans who did attend found themselves discriminated against 7 In 1911 the Roman Catholic Diocese of Galveston brought the Oblates of Mary Immaculate a series of priests intended to minister to the Mexican population of Houston 24 In 1912 Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church the first Mexican Catholic church opened 7 Due to an increase in demand in Catholic services oblates established missions in various Mexican American neighborhoods 25 The Roman Catholic church established Our Lady of Guadalupe so that White people accustomed to segregation of races did not find offense with the presence of Mexican people in their churches 10 The second Mexican Catholic church Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church opened in the 1920s 22 It originated as an oblate mission in Magnolia Park on the second floor of the residence of Emilio Aranda A permanent two story building funded by the community opened in 1926 25 As time passed additional churches established by Mexicans opened and as some neighborhoods became majority Mexican the churches became Mexican churches 23 In 1972 the Catholic church leaders and lay Hispanics in Houston participated in the Encuentro Hispano de Pastoral Pastoral Congress for the Spanish speaking Robert R Trevino author of The Church in the Barrio Mexican American Ethno Catholicism in Houston said that the event stands as a watershed in the religious history of Mexican American Catholics in Houston 24 Trevino also said that Mexican American Catholics competed for cultural space not only with the Anglo majority which included various groups of white Catholics but also with a large black population and a Mexican protestant presence as well 26 Geography EditAs of 2007 update many wealthy Mexicans living in Houston prefer to live in gated communities with private security patrols as the environment is similar to that of wealthy neighborhoods in Mexico Royal Oaks Country Club is among those communities 19 As of 2017 update about 10 of the residents of The Woodlands were of Mexican origins they numbered at over 10 000 In 2000 wealthy Mexicans began buying houses in The Woodlands for vacation purposes Large numbers settled in The Woodlands from 2006 to 2014 as the Mexican Drug War occurred In 2017 many wealthy Mexicans in Texas were moving back to Mexico and fewer were moving to The Woodlands The Rice University Baker Institute director Tony Payan stated that uncertainty regarding the Trump Administration s attitudes towards immigration and the decline in value of the Mexican peso were factors 27 Pasadena and Galena Park are suburbs with a large Mexican population in Houston Organizations EditAs of 2001 update Association for the Advancement of Mexican Americans AAMA is the largest advocacy group for Hispanics in the Houston area It was established in 1971 also making it the oldest such group on the premises of the Ninfa s restaurant 28 The Sociedad Mutualista Benito Juarez a mutual aid society was established in Magnolia Park in May 1919 Salon Juarez built in 1928 is a 48 feet 15 m by 80 feet 24 m two story building that served as its meeting house According to Stephen Fox who specializes in the history of architecture this is the city s first ethnic Mexican oriented public building not made for religious purposes Due to financial problems during the Great Depression the society no longer managed the building after 1932 After multiple changes in ownership the physical plant began to suffer from maintenance issues in the 1980s and 1990s because the old roof was removed but a new roof was not put on it 29 Because the owner had not paid 20 000 in back taxes the building was to be sold in a July 6 2004 auction but the taxes were paid before the auction occurred so the owner kept the property 30 The Greater Houston Preservation Alliance classified it as an endangered building 29 Education Edit De Zavala Elementary School modern building pictured was the first majority ethnic Mexican school in Houston In the 20th century when schools were legally segregated by race the Jim Crow era Mexican Americans attended schools legally designated for white students Until 1970 the Houston Independent School District HISD counted its Hispanic and Latino students as white 31 Beginning in the 20th century were some ethnic Mexican majority elementary schools in Houston the first school with a majority ethnic Mexican student body was Lorenzo de Zavala Elementary School in Magnolia Park Mexican students attended schools classified as being for white students school district administrators established De Zavala elementary to alleviate fears from Anglo White parents who noticed an increase in Mexican students in the area White schools 32 At some schools such as Rusk Elementary School near the Second Ward school administrators established de facto segregation by assigning Mexican students to separate classes 33 At the time no ethnic Mexican majority high schools yet existed 32 An increase in the Hispanic presence of public schools in Houston began in 1937 After the 1960s many of the secondary schools began to change from being mostly Anglo to mostly Hispanic 34 AAMA operates George I Sanchez Charter Schools 28 Diplomatic missions Edit The former Consulate General of Mexico The Consulate General of Mexico was formerly located in the Greater Southeast Management District 35 36 on 1 7 acres 0 69 ha of area adjacent to Interstate 69 U S Highway 59 In 2019 the Mexican government agreed to give the state government of Texas the consulate s land 37 in exchange for the state giving the Mexican government 3 acres 1 2 ha of land in Westchase Houston 38 that was previously state property The consulate was to open in its new location in 2020 The move is rebuilding so the state government can reconstruct freeways in the Southeast Houston area 37 Transportation EditAs of 2007 update there were at least 20 flights per day from Houston to Mexico City and about 20 daily flights to other Mexican cities making up about 40 flights total 19 Politics EditIn 1969 Lauro Cruz was elected in the Texas House of Representatives in District 23 making him the first Mexican American in what author Mikaela Garza Selley described in Houston History Magazine as a major political position 39 Cuisine Edit The former location of the final Felix Mexican Restaurant operation Felix Tijerina established the restaurant Felix s while also becoming involved in Mexican American activism Selley stated that his restaurant became the most recognized Mexican American business success story in Houston 39 Felix s and Molina s Cantina served Tex Mex catering to Anglo customers 39 Selley described four restaurants as long standing Houston institutions whose political involvement remains as well known as their house special ties 39 These four are Andy s Cafe Doneraki Authentic Mexican Restaurant Merida Mexican Cafe and Villa Arcos Taquitos 39 Jesse and Sadie Morales named their restaurant Andy s Cafe after their son it was established in 1977 According to the Morales s grandson Anthony Espinoza the restaurant is the Tex Mex style as both founders had been born and raised in Texas and were accustomed to American cuisine 40 Doneraki established by Cesar Rodriguez had tacos al carbon inventor Don Erakio as its namesake 39 Rafael and Olga Acosta established Merida Mexican Cafe in 1972 41 Villa Arcos was established in 1977 by Velia Arcos Rodriguez Duran 42 Others Ninfa s Taqueria ArandasRecreation EditBy the 1940s Mexican American sports clubs including baseball clubs had been established Mexican American businesses helped sponsor the baseball clubs Mexican Americans playing baseball in Houston began by the 1920s The Latin American State Tournament is a Mexican American tournament for men s softball Felix Fraga created it by the 1940s The team at one time only included Hispanics and Latinos and the managers asked for birth certificates so potential players could prove they were of Hispanic or Latino origins Some white persons not of Hispanic origins tried registering under falsified Spanish family names to become players 4 In media EditThe 2011 novel What Can t Wait by Ashley Hope Perez is about a Mexican American teenage girl torn between the demands of her family and her ambitions for the future 43 44 Notable Mexican Americans EditMario Gallegos Jr Democratic politician in the U S state of Texas Marcario Garcia Resident of Sugar Land and member of the military Refugio Gomez Jim Goode Restaurateur of partial Mexican descent 45 Vanessa Guillen Soldier and murder victim 46 Ninfa Laurenzo Maria Ninfa Rodriguez Laurenzo Founder of Ninfa s Lydia Mendoza Rick Noriega Ben Reyes South Park Mexican Carlos Coy rapper founder of Dope House Records felon Chingo Bling Pedro Herrera III rapper and producer Felix Tijerina Restaurateur activist and philanthropist Roman Martinez basketball player in Mexico for Soles de Mexicali and the Mexico national team Carol Alvarado representative for Texas 145th state house district Gwendolyn Zepeda author father was Mexican American 47 See also Edit Texas portal Mexico portal Hispanic and Latino Americans portal History portal United States portalDemographics of Houston History of the Central Americans in Houston History of the Mexican Americans in Texas Hispanic and Latino Americans in Texas Tex Mex cuisine in Houston Magnolia Park Houston Mexilink Ninfa s Taqueria ArandasNotes Edit Aaron and Hernandez p 335 Finally the Mexican community in Houston represents the oldest and most well established Spanish speaking group in the area Why Chicago is Still the No 2 U S City for Mexican Immigrants Bloomberg com 9 October 2014 a b Trevino p 15 a b c d Santillan et al p 9 a b c Rodriguez Nestor Hispanic and Asian Immigration Waves in Houston p 31 Trevino p 26 a b c Trevino p 32 a b Trevino p 28 a b c d e Esparza p 2 a b Garza Natalie p 15 a b Trevino p 29 Aranda Jose F Jr Rice University The Church in the Barrio Mexican American Ethno Catholicism in Houston Book review Journal of Southern History Feb 2008 Vol 74 1 p 224 2 Available at JSTOR Cited page 224 a b Walsh Robb The Authenticity Myth Houston Press October 26 2000 Retrieved on November 16 2009 a b c Rodriguez Nestor Hispanic and Asian Immigration Waves in Houston p 32 a b c d Rodriguez Nestor Hispanic and Asian Immigration Waves in Houston p 34 a b c Rodriguez Nestor Hispanic and Asian Immigration Waves in Houston p 33 Rodriguez Nestor Undocumented Central Americans in Houston Diverse Populations p 4 Garza Cynthia Leonor Latinos political power hasn t matched growth Houston Chronicle Sunday August 19 2007 2 Retrieved on November 22 2011 a b c Meyer Eugene L 2007 09 16 For Rich Mexicans Parallel Lives in U S The New York Times p 1111 Retrieved 2017 07 16 Moreno Jenalia Monterrey residents finding an escape in Houston Houston Chronicle September 18 2010 Retrieved on September 20 2010 Rangel Gustavo 2012 06 28 Mexicanos en Houston quieren eleccion limpia en su pais La Opinion Retrieved 2016 08 28 a b Esparza p 3 a b Rosales Francisco Arturo Arizona State University The Church in the Barrio Mexican American Ethno Catholicism in Houston review The Catholic Historical Review 2007 Vol 93 3 pp 727 728 Peer Reviewed Journal Available at JSTOR Cited page 728 Unfortunately religious practices of the immigrants often clashed with the modern Catholicism that emerged in the United States in the nineteenth century Many came from priest scarce regions where rituals and even theology were maintained at the folk level Consequently ecclesiastical leaders dismissed the new arrivals as ignorant of Church teachings Nonetheless the Church accommodated Mexicans within an expanding structure of churches Some like Our Lady of Guadalupe were new while others became Mexican as previous parishioners abandoned buildings to the newcomers as they became the majority in central Houston congregations a b Trevino p 9 a b Garza Natalie p 17 Trevino p 10 Tallet Olivia P 2017 05 26 The Trump Effect Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2017 07 17 Also published in the Washington Times via Associated Press as Some Mexican residents in Texas feel unwelcome return home date June 4 2017 Spanish version Atraidos antes por The Woodlands ahora los mexicanos deciden regresar a su pais a b Evans Marjorie 2001 09 20 Group expanding to meet growing Hispanic population Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2019 04 14 a b Cutler p 36 Cutler p 36 37 Kellar William Henry Make Haste Slowly Moderates Conservatives and School Desegregation in Houston Texas A amp M University Press 1999 ISBN 1603447180 9781603447188 p 33 Google Books PT14 a b Steptoe Tyina Houston Bound Culture and Color in a Jim Crow City Volume 41 of American Crossroads University of California Press November 3 2015 ISBN 0520958535 9780520958531 p 96 Steptoe Tyina Houston Bound Culture and Color in a Jim Crow City Volume 41 of American Crossroads University of California Press November 3 2015 ISBN 0520958535 9780520958531 p 95 San Miguel p 219 INFORMACIoN SOBRE EL CONSULADO Consulate General of Mexico Retrieved on July 27 2009 Direccion 4507 San Jacinto St Houston Texas 77004 Area Maps Archived 2011 10 09 at the Wayback Machine Map 1 Map 2 Greater Southeast Management District Retrieved on May 22 2009 a b Begley Dug 2019 12 16 Mexican consulate moving to southwest Houston to make way for downtown freeway rebuild Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2019 12 17 Pulsinelli Olivia 2019 12 16 Texas Mexican Consulate to swap land in Houston as part of major highway project Houston Business Journal Retrieved 2019 12 17 a b c d e f Selly p 30 Selly p 33 Selley p 31 Selley p 32 Coats Karen What Can t Wait Young adult review Brief article Book review The Bulletin of the Center for Children s Books April 2011 Vol 64 8 p 388 1 Available at Project MUSE WHAT CAN T WAIT Kirkus Reviews February 1 2011 Posted online on January 26 2011 Retrieved on November 7 2015 Chadwick Susan A Goode Idea Archive Texas Monthly August 1992 Retrieved on February 28 2016 PRINT Emmis Communications August 1992 Volume 20 No 8 ISSN 0148 7736 Start p 46 Okolie Stefania 2020 07 07 New mural pays tribute to Vanessa Guillen in her neighborhood KTRK TV Retrieved 2020 07 31 100 Things Meme Gwendolyn Zepeda Retrieved on February 19 2016 References EditAaron Jessi Elana University of Florida and Jose Esteban Hernandez University of Texas Pan American Quantitative evidence for contact induced accommodation Shifts in s reduction patterns in Salvadoran Spanish in Houston In Potowski Kim and Richard Cameron editors Spanish in Contact Policy Social and Linguistic Inquiries Volume 22 of Impact studies in language and society ISSN 1385 7908 John Benjamins Publishing 2007 Start page 329 ISBN 9027218617 9789027218612 Cutler Leigh Salon Juarez PDF The Houston Review 3 2 36 37 Profile Esparza Jesus Jesse La Colonia Mexicana A History of Mexican Americans in Houston Archive Houston History Volume 9 Issue 1 p 2 8 Center for Public History University of Houston Garza Natalie The Mother Church of Mexican Catholicism in Houston Archive Houston History Volume 9 Issue 1 p 14 19 Center for Public History University of Houston Rodriguez Nestor Hispanic and Asian Immigration Waves in Houston in Chafetz Janet Salzman and Helen Rose Ebaugh editors Religion and the New Immigrants Continuities and Adaptations in Immigrant Congregations AltaMira Press October 18 2000 ISBN 0759117128 9780759117129 Also available in Ebaugh Helen Rose Fuchs and Janet Saltzman Chafetz editors Religion and the New Immigrants Continuities and Adaptations in Immigrant Congregations Rowman amp Littlefield January 1 2000 0742503909 9780742503908 Rodriguez Nestor P University of Houston Undocumented Central Americans in Houston Diverse Populations International Migration Review Vol 21 No 1 Spring 1987 pp 4 26 Available at JStor San Miguel Guadalupe Brown Not White School Integration and the Chicano Movement in Houston Volume 3 of University of Houston Series in Mexican American Studies Sponsored by the Center for Mexican American Studies Texas A amp M University Press October 26 2005 ISBN 1585444936 9781585444939 Santillan Richard A Joseph Thompson Mikaela Selley William Lange and Gregory Garrett Mexican American Baseball in Houston and Southeast Texas Images of America Arcadia Publishing July 3 2017 ISBN 1467126357 9781467126359 Selley Mikaela Garza House Special Mexican Food amp Houston Politics PDF Houston History Magazine University of Houston Center for Public History pp 30 33 Trevino Robert R The Church in the Barrio Mexican American Ethno Catholicism in Houston UNC Press Books February 27 2006 Retrieved from Google Books on November 22 2011 ISBN 0 8078 5667 3 ISBN 978 0 8078 5667 3 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mexican diaspora in Houston in Spanish Struthers Silvia La Iglesia Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe celebra 100 anos La Voz de Houston August 17 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Mexican Americans in Houston amp oldid 1145076801, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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