By Maria Fleming
Introduction
In the early 1900s, Mexican Americans, or Chicanos, in California and the Southwest were excluded from “Whites Only” theaters, parks, swimming pools, restaurants and even schools. Immigrants from Mexico waged many battles against such discriminatory treatment, often risking their jobs in fields and factories and enduring threats of deportation. In 1945, one couple in California won a significant victory in their struggle to secure the best education for thousands of Chicano children.
In the fall of 1944, Soledad Vidaurri took her children and those of her brother, Gonzalo Méndez, to enroll at the 17th Street School in Westminster, California. Although they were cousins and shared a Mexican heritage, the Méndez and Vidaurri children looked quite different: Sylvia, Gonzalo Jr. and Geronimo Méndez had dark skin, hair and eyes, while Alice and Virginia Vidaurri had fair complexions and features.
An administrator looked the five children over. Alice and Virginia could stay, he said. But their dark-skinned cousins would have to register at the Hoover School, the town’s “Mexican school” located a few blocks away. Furious at such blatant discrimination, Vidaurri returned home without registering any of the children in either school.
In the 1940s, Westminster was a small farming community in the southern part of the state. Lush citrus groves, lima bean fields and sugar beet farms stretched in every direction from a modest downtown business district. Most of the men and women working in those fields were first- and second-generation immigrants from Mexico who were employed by white ranchers.
Like many California towns at the time, Westminster really comprised two separate worlds: one Anglo, one Mexican.While Anglo growers welcomed Chicano workers in their fields during times of economic prosperity, they shut them out of mainstream society. Most people of Mexican ancestry lived in colonias— segregated residential communities—on the fringes of Anglo neighborhoods. The housing was often substandard, with inadequate plumbing and often no heating. Roads were normally unpaved and dusty.
Westminster’s Hoover School was in the heart of one such colonia and was attended by the children of Mexican field laborers. A small frame building at the edge of a muddy cow pasture, the Hoover School stood in stark contrast to the sleek 17th Street School, with its handsome green lawns and playing fields.
The Westminster School District was not alone in discriminating against Chicano students. At the time, more than 80 percent of school districts in California with large Mexican populations practiced segregation. The segregation of Chicano children was also widespread in Texas, New Mexico and Arizona.
The Mexican schools were typically housed in run-down buildings. They employed less-experienced teachers than the Anglo schools. Chicano children were given shabbier books and equipment than their white peers and were taught in more crowded classrooms. Perhaps the greatest difference between the schools, however, was in their curricula. While geometry and biology were taught at the Anglo schools, classes at the Mexican schools focused on teaching boys industrial skills and girls domestic tasks.
Many Anglo educators did not expect, or encourage, Chicano students to advance beyond the eighth grade. Instead, the curriculum at the Mexican schools was designed, as one district superintendent put it, “to help these children take their place in society.”
That “place” was the lowest rung of the economic ladder, providing cheap, flexible labor for the prospering agricultural communities of California and the Southwest. At the time, more than 80 percent of the agricultural labor force in southern California was Mexican. An advanced education would only make Mexican Americans dissatisfied with farm labor, some white educators reasoned. As one school superintendent in Texas told his fellow educators, “You have doubtless heard that ignorance is bliss; it seems that it is so when one has to transplant onions. ... If a man has very much sense or education either, he is not going to stick to this kind of work. So you see it is up to the white population to keep the Mexican on his knees in an onion patch.”
But Chicano men and women had different ideas about their children’s futures. Like other immigrant groups, Chicano field laborers believed education was the ticket to a better life in America, a way out of the heat and dust of the fields.
Gonzalo and Felícitas Méndez knew well the difficult life of field laborers. Both had emigrated to the United States as young children. Like thousands of Mexicans in the early 20th century, Gonzalo’s family fled political turmoil in their native country. They left behind a successful ranch in Chihuahua and found jobs as day laborers in the citrus groves of southern California.
Felícitas Gómez emigrated to America from Juncos, Puerto Rico, when she was 10. The Gomez family led a migrant life, following the harvest from Texas to Arizona to California. Eventually, they settled in the southern Californiacolonia where the Méndezes lived, and in 1936, Felícitas and Gonzalo married.
By that time, Gonzalo had a reputation in the county as a champion orange picker, and he commanded a slightly higher wage than other field workers. Felícitas, thrifty and resourceful, saved what she could from Gonzalo’s wages, and in a few years the couple were able to lease their own ranch—40 acres of asparagus in the town of Westminster.
The Méndezes were among the few Chicano tenant farmers in Orange County. Most Latinos at the time held low-paying jobs as field workers. Employment opportunities for Mexican Americans were severely limited. Discrimination prevented them from getting jobs in restaurants, department stores and even many factories, making it extremely difficult for them to advance economically.
Both Felícitas and Gonzalo were forced to abandon their education in grade school in order to support their families. But they had higher hopes for young Sylvia, Gonzalo Jr. and Geronimo. And when Soledad Vidaurri told her brother and sister-in-law their children were refused admission to the 17th Street School because they—unlike her own children—didn’t look “white enough,” Gonzalo and Felícitas were outraged.
“How could it be possible?” they wondered. They were American citizens. Gonzalo was naturalized just a few years before, and because Felícitas was born in a U.S. territory, she was a citizen by birth. Both thought of themselves as Americans and told their children they were Americans.
For people of Mexican descent living in California and the Southwest, however, discrimination was part of the social landscape. Many parks, hotels, dance halls, stores, eateries and barbershops were off-limits. Mexican Americans were forced to sit in movie theater balconies. In many communities, they were only permitted to swim one day a week at the public pool, just before it was cleaned and drained.
The fact that the Méndezes were fairly prosperous tenant farmers did not make them any more acceptable to the mainstream community. They were used to being told in restaurants, “We don’t serve Mexicans here,” and being informed by store clerks that they would have to wait to make their purchases until all the white customers had been served.
“That’s when you learned to walk away,” Felícitas later remembered.
But this time, Gonzalo and Felícitas Méndez didn’t plan to walk away. They were ready to do battle with the Westminster School District for the sake of their children’s education. Realizing other Chicano families in the community faced the same problem, the Méndezes organized a group of Mexican parents to protest the segregation of their children in the shabbier school. Together, they sent a letter to the board of education demanding that the schools be integrated. Their request was flatly denied.
Gonzalo continued to petition school district administrators. Worn down by his persistence, the school superintendent finally agreed to make an exception for the Méndez children and admit them to the Anglo school. But the Méndezes immediately rejected his offer. The school would have to admit all of the Chicano children in the community or none of them.The Méndezes hired a civil rights attorney, David Marcus, who had recently won a lawsuit on behalf of Mexican Americans in nearby San Bernardino seeking to integrate the public parks and pools. The Méndezes also learned parents in other school districts were fighting segregation too. Marcus suggested they join forces, and on March 2, 1945, the Méndezes and four other Mexican-American families filed a class action suit against the Westminster, Garden Grove, El Modena and Santa Ana boards of education on behalf of 5,000 Mexican-American children attending inferior segregated schools.
The Méndezes threw themselves into the trial preparations. Gonzalo took a year off work to organize Latino men and women and gather evidence for the case. Every day, he and David Marcus drove across Orange County’s patchwork of vegetable farms and citrus groves, stopping in the colonias. They knocked on doors and tried to convince Mexican-American parents and their children to testify in court.
It was no easy task. Some workers feared that their Anglo bosses might fire them if they testified. Or worse, they might be deported. But slowly the plaintiffs built their case. Gonzalo offered to pay the transportation costs and lost wages of anyone willing to travel to Los Angeles and appear in court during the trial.
Meanwhile, Felícitas took over the daily operation of the farm. In the little spare time she had, she organized a group of local Latino parents to support the five plaintiffs in the lawsuit.
Finally, the trial date arrived. Now it was up to the courts to decide if the Latino men and women who helped California’s agricultural economy grow and thrive were entitled to the same rights as those who prospered from their labor.
During the trial, defense attorney Joel Ogle pointed out the 1896 Supreme Court decision in Plessy v. Ferguson gave legal sanction to racial segregation, provided the separate facilities for different races were equal. Furthermore, Ogle maintained, there were sound educational and social advantages to segregated schooling. The “Mexican schools” gave special instruction to students who didn’t speak English and who were unfamiliar with American values and customs. Such “Americanization” programs benefited both Anglos and Mexicans, Ogle argued.
But this educational rationalization for segregation was undermined by the testimony of 9-year-old Sylvia, 8-year-old Gonzalo and 7-year-old Geronimo Méndez. All spoke fluent English, as did many of the other children who attended the Hoover School. In fact, further testimony revealed no language proficiency tests were ever given to Chicano students. Rather, enrollment decisions were based entirely on last names and skin color, as evidenced by the experience of the Méndez children and their cousins.
The racist underpinnings of such “Americanization” programs became apparent when James L. Kent, the superintendent of the Garden Grove School District, took the stand. Under oath, Kent said he believed people of Mexican descent were intellectually, culturally and morally inferior to European Americans. Even if a Latino child had the same academic qualifications as a white child, Kent stated, he would never allow the Latino child to enroll in an Anglo school.
The testimony made the Latino men and women gathered in the courtroom to show their support for the suit wince in pain—and anger. Felícitas said later that she never forgot Kent’s hate-laced testimony.
“He said Mexicans should be segregated like pigs in pigpens,” she recalled. “He said Mexicans were filthy and had lice and all kinds of diseases.”
U.S. District Court Judge Paul J. McCormick was also appalled by Kent’s blatant bigotry. On February 18, 1946, he ruled in favor of the plaintiffs. In his opinion, McCormick pointed out segregation “fosters antagonisms in the children and suggests inferiority among them where none exists.” Because the separate schools created social inequality, he reasoned, they were in violation of the students’ constitutional rights. He also pointed out there was no sound educational basis for the segregation of Anglo and Mexican students since research showed segregation worked against language acquisition and cultural assimilation.
The Orange County school boards filed an appeal.
But dramatic social change was occurring on a national level following World War II, and Orange County school officials would find their position on segregation coming under increasing attack. After fighting for democracy abroad, Mexican-American soldiers balked against the rigid lines of division when they returned home. “How could America declare itself the leader of the free world, while it trampled the rights of its own citizens?” they asked. Latino veterans formed civil rights groups and demanded change. Around the country, other minority groups were waging similar battles.
By now, the Méndez lawsuit was drawing national attention. Civil rights lawyers in other states were watching the proceedings closely. For half a century, they had been trying to strike down the “separate but equal” doctrine ofPlessy v. Ferguson, and they thought Méndez just might be the test case to do it.
Among those following the suit was a young African-American attorney named Thurgood Marshall. Marshall and two of his colleagues from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) submitted anamicus curiae—“friend of the court”—brief in the appellate case. Among the other groups submitting amicus briefs were the League of United Latin American Citizens, the Japanese American Citizens League and the Jewish Congress.
On April 14, 1947, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco upheld the lower court decision. The court stopped short, however, of condemning the “separate but equal” doctrine of Plessy v. Ferguson. The NAACP and other groups eagerly waited for Orange County school officials to file an appeal that would bring the case before the U.S. Supreme Court. But lawyers for the school read the writing on the wall: Mainstream public opinion had shifted, and the era of segregation was coming to a close. The defense decided not to appeal the decision further. An opportunity to overturn Plessy would have to wait.
Even if it would not rewrite the law of the land, Méndez v. Westminster still had a significant regional impact. Like a pebble tossed into a pond, the legal victory sent ripples of change throughout the Southwest. In more than a dozen communities in California alone, Mexican Americans filed similar lawsuits. Chicano parents sought and won representation on school boards and gained a voice in their children’s education. The decision also prompted California Gov. Earl Warren to sign legislation repealing a state law calling for the segregation of American Indian and Asian-American students.
Seven years later, the NAACP did find a successful test case to reverse Plessy v. Ferguson. Thurgood Marshall argued the landmark Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka before the U.S. Supreme Court, presenting the same social science and human rights theories he outlined in his amicus curiae brief for the Méndez case. Former California Gov. Earl Warren, now a chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, wrote the historic opinion finally ending the legal segregation of students on the basis of race in American schools in 1954.
In September of 1947, Sylvia, Gonzalo Jr. and Geronimo Méndez enrolled at the 17th Street School in Westminster without incident. Integrated schools also opened that fall in Garden Grove, El Modena and Santa Ana. Felícitas and Gonzalo Méndez quietly resumed their work. At the time, neither really considered the full impact of their legal victory; they were content just to have righted a wrong in their community and to have protected their children’s future. In 1964, Gonzalo Méndez died of heart failure. Felícitas continued to live in Southern California until her death in 1998.
Sadly, neither Méndez v. Westminster nor Brown v. Board of Education led to the complete integration of American schools. The long legacy of segregation has left its mark on our current educational system, and integration and equity are issues schools are still grappling with today. In Santa Ana, Calif.—one of the districts named in theMéndez desegregation lawsuit more than 60 years ago—a school opened in the fall of 2000 honoring Gonzalo and Felícitas Méndez, two civil rights pioneers in the continuing struggle to provide equal educational opportunities for all of America’s children.
0 General Document comments
0 Sentence and Paragraph comments
0 Image and Video comments
New Conversation
the white school.they weren’t even getting a proper education.
paragraph (10-13)
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
How do you think segregation fosters antagonisms between people? If they are separated, how would they have reason to dislike each other?
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment Hide Thread Detail
The constant shaming of the Mexicans by the white people and wanting to separate from them builds a mixture of emotions for the Mexicans.They can feel rage towards the white people because they think they don’t deserve the same rights as them because the Anglos feel as if they’re the superior race, as well as feel sad because the constant shame towards them can make them feel worthless. And when these feelings build up it causes hate towards the whites.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
I do fully agree with you on how rude they can be
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
I agree with you because how would they feel if we treated them differently. For the safety of others, they should stop comparing Mexicans to them
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
What did the people that would threaten to deport Mexicans get out of it? What was their benefit from implementing fear into someone who is trying to work and maintain their family?
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
are falsely considered criminals and people with europeans descent could get away with murder.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
Agreed. Even though many Mexican children were borned in the U.S and citizens. White’s still didn’t treat them as a part of them. They feel the need to be superior to everyone that aint their color
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
New Conversation
that’s the only job available for low income people, they weren’t able to get a better education.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
Soledad Vidaurri has children that look white and are really light skin and features. The Mendez children look Mexican because they have dark skin, eyes, and hair. They are cousins, but even though their aunt Soledad is Mexican and her kids have Mexican heritage, the anglos only care about the white features.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
Furthermore, for the administrator to say that in front of the children is awful because it lets the children know that if their skin tone is darker they will always be seen as less compared to others with lighter skin tones.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
because of the way their skin looked, instead of the fact that they were actually Mexican.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
I agree with Allen and also think it’s wrong how the students are being rejected just because of their skin tone.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
The administrator looked over the children and said only the white kids could stay, meanwhile, the other dark-skinned kids had to go to a different school. This upsets me because the administrator was being racist by sending kids to a different school only because of how they look.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
It is simply acceptable to be more fortunate than others, but the problem arises when the more fortunate discriminate against those with less. If you are so fortunate, wouldn’t you help those in need? Many people in today’s world lack empathy. This is a recurring problem in today’s society.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
didn’t care anymore and didn’t show any support to the Chicanos.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
I’m surprised that Chicano history interprets society developing with injustice. This goes back to the way African Americans were treated back in the 1980s. It really impacts the world in many perspectives because imagine a community trying to convey in their best effort but the superior of the Americans not letting Mexicans like us with race, color to have this interpretation to work for what we are looking for. We are people who are trying to look for jobs and humanity. The cases of every life matter are a way to Black vs brown case. Giving the idea that 80 percent of California is being segregated by these ignorant Americans in the past of 1945. This would need to stop because how would they feel if we treated them differently. We are human and all lives matter not just theirs who just want to keep light-skinned in place.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
Mexicans shouldn’t be separated from society and instead kept together if chicanos are just going to be working in Anglos farms anyway.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
Why must society be divided? Who thought this was a good idea? Division can only lead to things such as hatred and separation. It leads to nothing good.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
If one of the problems that the Anglos would bring up in court was that mexican children had sanitary problems, why put them in such unsanitary conditions for school? If they could support their nice looking Anglo school, why not at least ensure that the Mexican children were learning in a sanitary environment?
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
this makes me angry because they separate the children just on the color of there skin and gave them bad supplies
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
What other school districts would discriminate against Chicano students?
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
and were taught things that would get them a lower class/income job in the future, while Anglos were being taught things that would help them have a more successful job in their future.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
It’s explaining to use that the mexican students received the older learning equipment and that the schools they attended where run down. A connection between this and the Lemon Grove Incident can be made because in lemon grove they wanted to place the mexican students in a school that the parents described as looking like “a barn” and the students their also received older learning tools and even older teachers.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
I’m actually surprised that the white people gave them the opportunity to an education when they only wanted to see the Mexicans working.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
I thought that this sentence was important because I feel like just because at these schools Chicano students would go they shouldn’t be getting a lower education.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
New Conversation
The fact that they are teaching these things only in Mexican schools is really messed up and can really screw up young mexican people’s thoughts and the way they see the world
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment Hide Thread Detail
I think the last part of your statement is so important! Treatment like this affects people and how they see themselves, the goals they set for themselves and what they teach their children. When we think about this we can start to see how these actions can have lingering effects generations later.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Besides the fact that the Mexican students were from different backgrounds, is there a deeper meaning as to why they are being segregated against?
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
It shocking how they only taught Chicano students industrial skills and it further shows how white people view Mexican. White people see themselves as the superior race compared to Mexicans
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
Something that surprised me in this sentence is the Americans were learning geometry and biology, the Mexicans were being learned how to work in the agriculture. This is very unfair for the Mexicans because they didn’t have a choice to learn about geometry and biology.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
Agreed. The superintendent has said a lot of unprofessional things
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
This quote discusses how schools and other officials taught Mexican children hands-on tasks to replace their parents’ jobs, which were also hands-on.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
themselves, did not want to do.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
They would call that white supremacy. Whites always thought of themselves as superior.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
It makes me upset knowing that the white people back then decided that mexicans should only work in fields,that they shouldn’t go far academically. In this section I also very much dislike that the white people thought mexicans place in society was in industrial and domestic jobs.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
Hide Thread Detail
New Conversation
clearly the idea behind the thought is this: If they are smart enough to realize that what they are doing is low, dirty work, they’re not going to want to do it and then we won’t have anyone to work our fields.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
I think many of us can also relate to this with our parents. Our parents rather see us in a classroom learning than seeing us outside in the fields.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
The fact that they want a better future for their children really warms my heart because they are prioritizing future generations and putting themselves aside and being selfless.
New Conversation
Hide Full Comment
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation
New Conversation