Unit 4, Lesson 4: How Did Mexican Americans Build a Community in Bryn Mawr?Main MenuHow Did Mexican Americans Build a Community in Bryn Mawr?The Beginnings of the Citrus IndustryEarly Mexican SettlersNot Always WelcomePicking and Packing OrangesAmericanizationBuilding A CommunityActivityLearn MoreAudrey Maier0f8f4f35e42fcdb6d08eabfaff98566fef8bbb7f
15 Year Old Girl from Bryn Mawr
12018-07-09T17:27:10-07:00Audrey Maier0f8f4f35e42fcdb6d08eabfaff98566fef8bbb7f308591A 15 year old girl poses in front of some fresh flowers in Bryn Mawr. Possibly Jennie Rojas.plain2018-07-09T17:27:10-07:00Loma Linda Area Parks and Historical Society Digital ArchiveMay, 1926Mary Cooke and Eva YanezPhotographAudrey Maier0f8f4f35e42fcdb6d08eabfaff98566fef8bbb7f
This page is referenced by:
1media/2017.001.010.jpg2018-07-09T17:57:01-07:00Not Always Welcome8plain2019-05-08T18:15:52-07:00Many more families immigrated from Mexico between 1911-1920 to escape the danger of the Mexican Revolution. Often, others were not welcoming to these workers. As more workers arrived, some thought that these people were a “problem” that needed to be fixed. Many people mistakenly believed that Mexican and Mexican American families were dirty, lazy, and unintelligent. Because of these stereotypes Mexicans often faced discrimination. Discrimination is unfair treatment of one person or group of people because of the person or group’s identity (e.g. race, gender, ability, religion, culture, etc.). Discrimination is an action that can come fromprejudice. In Redlands and Loma Linda, Mexican and Mexican American families were not allowed to eat in certain restaurants, not allowed to play in the same swimming pools, and were often paid less for their work.
Question 3: Read this sentence written by an orange grower in 1929:
“Unfortunately, employment of labor for orange gathering is very unsteady. When we have a normal rainfall, we do not work the men more than one-half to two-thirds of the time, and it is entirely satisfactory to the Mexican. The white man cannot make a living at that kind of work.”
What assumptions is the author making about Mexican and Mexican American workers? What prejudices and stereotypes does the author believe in?