Raza Schools: The Fight for Latino Educational Autonomy in a West Texas Borderlands Town
Fri, Nov 10
|San Antonio
Join MACRI at the the Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center’s Latino Bookstore for a talk by Dr. Jesse Esparza on the history of San Felipe ISD, an autonomous Mexican American school district in Del Rio, Texas.
Time & Location
Nov 10, 2023, 6:00 PM CST
San Antonio, 1300 Guadalupe St, San Antonio, TX 78207, USA
Guests
About the event
Join MACRI at the Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center’s Latino Bookstore for a talk by Dr. Jesse Esparza on his new book RAZA SCHOOLS: THE FIGHT FOR LATINO EDUCATIONAL AUTONOMY IN A WEST TEXAS BORDERLANDS TOWN. Learn about the history of an autonomous Mexican American school district in Del Rio, Texas. RAZA SCHOOLS tells the story of the rise and fall of the San Felipe Independent School District from the end of World War I through the post–civil rights era.
NOTE: This event is at the Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center’s Latino Bookstore located at 1300 Guadalupe Street, San Antonio, TX 78207.
MACRI's programs are funded in part by the City of San Antonio Department of Arts & Culture, Bexar County, the Mellon Foundation, the John L. Santikos Charitable Foundation Fund of the San Antonio Area Foundation, Wells Fargo, and individual donors like you! To learn more about future MACRI events and how to make a donation, please visit www.somosMACRI.org. Gracias!
ABOUT THE BOOK
In 1929, a Latino community in the borderlands city of Del Rio, Texas, established the first and perhaps only autonomous Mexican American school district in Texas history. How it did so—against a background of institutional racism, poverty, and segregation—is the story Dr. Jesús Jesse Esparza tells in RAZA SCHOOLS, a history of the rise and fall of the San Felipe Independent School District from the end of World War I through the post–civil rights era.
The residents of San Felipe, whose roots Esparza traces back to the nineteenth century, faced a Jim Crow society in which deep-seated discrimination extended to education, making biased curriculum, inferior facilities, and prejudiced teachers the norm. Raza Schools highlights how the people of San Felipe harnessed the mechanisms and structures of this discriminatory system to create their own educational institutions, using the courts whenever necessary to protect their autonomy. For forty-two years, the Latino community funded, maintained, and managed its own school system—until 1971, when in an attempt to address school segregation, the federal government forced the San Felipe Independent School District to consolidate with a larger neighboring, mostly white school district. Esparza describes the ensuing clashes—over curriculum, school governance, teachers’ positions, and funding—that challenged Latino autonomy. While focusing on the relationships between Latinos and whites who shared a segregated city, his work also explores the experience of African Americans who lived in Del Rio and attended schools in both districts as a segregated population.
Telling the complex story of how territorial pride, race and racism, politics, economic pressures, local control, and the federal government collided in Del Rio, Raza Schools recovers a lost chapter in the history of educational civil rights—and in doing so, offers a more nuanced understanding of race relations, educational politics, and school activism in the US-Mexico borderlands.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Dr. Jesús Jesse Esparza is an Assistant Professor of History in the College of Liberal Arts and Behavioral Sciences at Texas Southern University, where he has taught since 2009. His area of expertise is on the history of Latinos in the United States, with an emphasis on civil rights activism. Dr. Esparza teaches Mexican American, Texas, Civil Rights, and Latin American History. He received his B.A. and a master’s degree in History from Southwest Texas State University and a Ph.D. in History in 2008 from the University of Houston.