| Title |
Spanish speaking peoples in Utah, oral histories: book 11, numbers 112 through 120 |
| Alternative Title |
Mr. Bill L. Chacon, Moab, Utah: an interview by Greg Coronado, July 15, 1973; Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Ellis, Moab, Utah: an interview by Bernice Martinez and Eva Natividad, July 13, 1973; Jose R. Sanchez and Mrs. Pilar Sanchez, Moab, Utah: an interview by Greg Coronado, July 14, 1973; Bill Gonzalez, Monticello, Utah: an interview by Bernice Martinez, Eva Natividad, and Greg Coronado, July 14, 1973; Mrs. Beatrice Garcia Luckinbill, Mrs. Rosalie Garcia Robertson, Moab, Utah: an interview by Greg Coronado, July 15, 1973; Mr. Richard Garcia, Moab, Utah: an interview by Greg Coronado, July 13, 1973; Mr. and Mrs. Jose Aurelo Maestas, Moab, Utah: an interview by Eva Natividad and Bernice Martinez, July 14, 1973; Mr. Greg Hernandez, Moab, Utah: an interview by Gregory Coronado [July 14, 1973]; Pablo Baltazar, Corinne, Utah: an interview by Greg Coronado and Phil Notarianni, August 15, 1974 |
| Creator |
Chacon, Bill L., 1935- ; Ellis, Vicki, 1948- ; Ellis, Boyd Dean; Sanchez, Jose R.; Sanchez, Pilar, 1933- ; Gonzalez, Bill, 1935- ; Luckinbill, Beatrice Garcia, 1919-2007; Robertson, Rosalie Garcia, 1910- ; Garcia, Richard, 1937- ; Maestas, Jose Aurelo, 1922-2012; Maestas, Lena; Hernandez, Greg; Baltazar, Pablo, 1896- |
| Contributor |
University of Utah. American West Center; Martínez, Bernice; Coronado, Greg, 1946-2012; Natividad, Eva; Nortarianni, Phil |
| Publisher |
Digitized by J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah |
| Date |
1973-07-13; 1973-07-14; 1973-07-15; 1974-08-15 |
| Date Digital |
2015-01-15 |
| Spatial Coverage |
Moab, Grand County, Utah, United States, http://sws.geonames.org/5543307/ ; Bingham Canyon, Salt Lake County, Utah, United States, http://sws.geonames.org/8604824/ ; Monticello, San Juan County, Utah, United States, http://sws.geonames.org/5543377/ ; Corinne, Box Elder County, Utah, United States, http://sws.geonames.org/5773230/ |
| Subject |
Mexican Americans--Utah--History; Mexican Americans--Utah--Biography; Mexican Americans--Utah--Social conditions; Chicano movement--Utah |
| Keywords |
Miners; Discrimination; Great Depression; Ethnic relations; Chicanos; Farm labor; Agricultural laborers; Railroad workers; Mexican traditions; SOCIO; Catholic Church; Mexican immigrants; Mexican American children--Education |
| Description |
Transcript of interviews held in 1973 with several (mostly Hispanic) residents of Utah: Bill L. Chacon (b. 1935), Mr. and Mrs. Boyd and Vicki Ellis; Jose R. Sanchez and wife Pilar (b. 1933); Mrs. Beatrice Garcia Luckinbill (b. 1919) and Mrs. Rosalie Garcia Robertson (b. 1910); Mr. Richard Garcia; Mr. and Mrs. Jose Aurelo Maestas (b. 1922) and wife Lena, all of Moab, Utah; Bill Gonzalez (b. 1935) of Monticello, Utah; and Pablo Baltazar (b. 1896) of Corinne, Utah. Some interviews are in Spanish |
| Type |
Text |
| Genre |
oral histories (literary works) |
| Format |
application/pdf |
| Language |
eng; spa |
| Rights |
 |
| Relation |
For description of each interview, see: http://nwda.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv23580 |
| Scanning Technician |
Matt Wilkinson |
| Conversion Specifications |
Original scanned with Kirtas 2400 and saved as 400 ppi uncompressed TIFF. PDF generated by Adobe Acrobat Pro 10 for CONTENTdm display |
| ARK |
ark:/87278/s6bg4cst |
| Topic |
Mexican Americans--Biography; Mexican Americans--Social conditions; Chicano movement |
| Setname |
uum_sspu |
| ID |
1039931 |
| Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6bg4cst |
| Title |
Page 66 |
| Format |
application/pdf |
| Setname |
uum_sspu |
| ID |
1039654 |
| OCR Text |
Show INTERVIEl~: Ell i Page 25 VE: Oh, back in my junior year, in about '64, '65, they'd come in like every summer or every six months and tow these missiles to White Sands and back, you know, and they'd stay for about like three or four months and get all their missiles to. EN: Did any of them settle in here? VE: Yeah, there's quite a few that settled, you know, with the local girls and stuff like that. But there's quite a few girls that left, too, with them. BM: Were there any organizations that the Mexicans had? Did they ever start any clubs or dances ... ? VE: The only one that we had for the Mexicans' organization was the CYO. That's about it, you know. EN: What does CYO stand for? VE: That's the Catholic Church Youth Organization, and the Father and their two helpers that they used to send, were the ones that ran it, but they didn't really go strong until, they went really strong when my brothers and sisters were in school, but when we were in school, they had already slacked off by then. BE: Okay, let me ask you a question. If SOCIO's not for Spanish people, who is it for? VE: Yeah, that's what I was talking ... but we're talking about |
| Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6bg4cst/1039654 |