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Autman Collection, El
Paso Public Library. From Las Tejanas: 300 Years of History.
In 1913, Tejanas pack
cigars at the Kohlberg Cigar Factory in El Paso.
Notable Tejanas
Here
are some of the 50 women named as Notable Tejanas from the authors' list.
• Angelina: a Caddo Nation leader who was an interpreter for the Spanish
and French in the early 1700s.
• Jovita Idar: journalist, teacher and feminist who lived in Laredo and
San Antonio in the early 1900s.
• Anita Mongaras Nañez: beauty shop operator who had one of the first
woman-owned businesses in Little Mexico area of Dallas in 1924.
• María Luna: One of Dallas' first Tejana entrepeneurs, she founded
Luna's Tortilla Factory in 1924.
• Lydia Mendoza: singer known as "la Alondra de la Frontera" (the Border
Lark), of San Antonio and Houston.
• Selena Quintanilla Pérez: popular Tejana singer from Corpus Christi.
• Emma Tenayuca: San Antonio political and labor leader who in 1938 led
6,000-8,000 pecan shellers on strike.
• Eva Carillo de García: Austin community leader and nurse; co-publisher
of El Vanguardia, the first known Spanish-language newspaper in Austin, in
1920. |
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HOUSTON, Texas (By Barbara Karkabi, Houston Chronicle) August 23,
2007 — There was a time when Texas women's contribution to the state rated
little more than a paragraph in a textbook.
That made a lot of people mad, including
Ruthe Winegarten, who has spent more than 20 years tracking that history down.
As a researcher for the ground-breaking,
early-'80s exhibit Texas Women -- A Celebration of Texas History, she
helped put Texas women on the map. That multiethnic exhibit included more than
100 objects and memorabilia of both famous and little-known Texas women, and
toured the state for several years.
Winegarten continued to write about Texas
women, including several award-winning books, Black Texas Women: 150 Years of
Trial and Triumph and Capitol Women: Texas Female Legislators, 1923-1999.
Her latest, Las Tejanas: 300 Years of
History, co-authored by Teresa Palomo Acosta, who describes herself as a
Chicana poet, traces the lives of hundreds of Mexican-American women, from 1700
to 2000. Also included are a timeline and a list of 50 notable Tejana women.
"I feel like it's the last major book of
that kind that I wanted to do," said Winegarten, 74. "Part of our motivation was
the fact that children of Mexican origin have very little in the curriculum.
Since these children are going to be the majority, we felt this book could be a
resource for teachers and leaders."
Winegarten and Acosta, 54, worked on the
book for two years and proved to be a great match. As a research associate for
the Texas State Historical Association, Acosta wrote numerous entries on women
for the New Handbook of Texas. She now works for the Texas Legislature.
Here is what they had to say about the book
and its making:
How did the two of you divide your work
on the book?
Winegarten: I concentrated on
researching the material, especially the photographs, while Teresa wrote most of
the book. I worked really hard on digging up information on women in the
colonial period, because no one knows a lot about that. For instance, the early
women ranchers wielded a lot of influence and controlled a lot of money. It sets
the stage for all that comes afterward.
Why do you use the term "Tejanas," as
opposed to Hispanic or Mexican-American?
Acosta: It made the most sense
culturally. I grew up in Texas as a woman of Mexican descendants, and the terms
"Tejano" and "Tejana" seemed culturally and historically more encompassing of
our experience. I feel personally more friendly about the term "Hispanic" than I
did in the past, but it doesn't really define us; we are too much a "mestizo"
people. (mestizos are part Spanish or Portuguese and part American Indian.)
How did you organize the book?
Winegarten: We organized the book
chronologically, but after we got to the 20th century, we broke it down into
subjects, such as life in rural and urban Texas from 1900 to 1940, education,
business, the labor movement, politics, faith and community, and arts and
culture.
Acosta: We approached it as
researchers and writers on women, and we wanted to tell the story of Tejanas
more logically, in our way of thinking. There were some areas like faith and
community that touched each generation.
Why did you use a quote from a
20th-century woman, María L. de Hernández to begin the first chapter on Native
Women, Mestizas and Colonists?
Acosta: We wanted to tie it to a
woman who knew her history. In 1970, Hernández told a state convention of the
Raza Unida Party: "Our ancestors were here long before the Anglo-Americans. It
is they who are the newcomers."
Then we wanted to begin with the ties to
the indigenous tradition and Angelina, a member of the Caddo Nation. She was a
guide and translator for the Spanish and French from around 1716 to 1721.
What is the importance of the
connection?
Acosta: When you see someone like
Angelina and you see the women in the first settlements in Victoria, they
already carried with them the steadfastness and self-confidence that Tejanas as
a group continued to have. We continue to strive and survive, and that is one of
the themes of the book.
What important points does your book
make about the role of Tejanas and their contribution to the state?
Winegarten: I think we break a lot
of stereotypes. Tejanas are often painted as very passive, and we didn't find
that to be true. Even in colonial times, women were filing lawsuits and some
were among the richest in the state. A lot of the white men who moved to Texas,
including Jim Bowie, married wealthy Tejana women. They had access to property,
money and political power that way.
Acosta: Tejanas have been historical
actors for a long time in the land that became Texas. It can't be stated enough.
Did you each have favorite chapters or
subjects?
Winegarten: I was very interested in
Chicana feminism and spent a lot of time on that, as well as on women in
politics. I was also interested in women who went on strike, the laundry workers
in El Paso in 1919, and the San Antonio pecan shellers in 1938, which was
probably the largest walkout in Texas history. We don't find so many white or
African-American women going out on strike in Texas, so again it breaks that
passive image.
Acosta: I'm from Central Texas, a
small town called McGregor close to Waco. So, my favorite part is the chapter on
rural life. It contains just a smidgen of the oral history I did with four
women. They talked to me about marriage, how they survived and about their
courtships. Listening to their stories about work and their voices and laughter
gave them a life beyond statistics.
What role did Houston women play?
Acosta: You have women very involved
in the business community, who saw the early promise of the city. Eciquia Castro
operated a cafe around 1915; and, of course, there is the Ninfa Laurenzo story.
In politics, there is former Houston city controller, now a Harris County
Commissioner Sylvia Garcia; Gracie Saenz, former city councilwoman, and Jessica
Farrar, a state legislator.
What has been the response to Las
Tejanas?
Acosta: The great reward for me has
been the people who come up to me and tell wonderful stories of their families
and people who were in the book. We also wanted people to go on with the work --
it's not just 300 years and stop. There is lots of material for more books and
continued study and there is a younger generation coming on.
The symposium "Las Tejanas: 300 Years of
History" will be held Oct. 16-18 at the University of Texas, Austin. For
information, go to
www.utexas.edu/depts/cmas or call 512-471-4557.