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Crossing the Rio Grande : An Immigrant's Life in the 1880s, PDF eBook

Crossing the Rio Grande : An Immigrant's Life in the 1880s PDF

Part of the Gulf Coast Books, sponsored by Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi series

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Description

Although they are among the most important sources of the history of the American Southwest, the lives of ordinary immigrants from Mexico have rarely been recorded. Educated and hardworking, Luis G. Gmez came to Texas from Mexico as a young man in the mid-1880s. He made his way around much of South Texas, finding work on the railroad and in other businesses, observing the people and ways of the region and committing them to memory for later transcription. From the moment he crossed the Rio Grande at Matamoros-Brownsville, Gmez sought his fortune in a series of contracting operations that created the infrastructure to help develop the Texas economyclearing land, cutting wood, building roads, laying track, constructing bridges, and quarrying rock. Gmez describes Mexican customs in the United States, such as courtship and marriage, relations with Anglo employers, religious practices, and the simple home gatherings that sustained those Mexican Texans who settled in urban areas like Houston, isolated from predominantly Mexican South Texas. Few of the 150,000 immigrants in the last half of the nineteenth century left written records of their experiences, but Gmez wrote his memoir and had it privately published in Spanish in 1935. Crossing the Rio Grande presents an English edition of that memoir, translated by the authors grandson, Guadalupe Valdez Jr., with assistance from Javier Villarreal, a professor of Spanish at Texas A&M UniversityCorpus Christi. An introduction by Thomas H. Kreneck explainss the books value to scholarship and describes what has been learned of the publication history of the original Spanish-language volume. Valdezs comments provide a lucid and engaging picture of his grandfathers later life and his gentlemanly character. This charming little volume provides a valuable account of a relatively undocumented period in Mexican Texans history. Almost unknown to those outside his family, this narrative has now been recovered, edited by Valdez and Kreneck, and made available to a wider, interested public.

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