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Mexican American Baseball in the Central Coast
Mexican American Baseball in the Central Coast
Mexican American Baseball in the Central Coast
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Mexican American Baseball in the Central Coast

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Mexican American Baseball in the Central Coast pays tribute to the teams and players who brought joy and honor to their fans and communities in Ventura and Santa Barbara Counties. Baseball was played before enthusiastic crowds in Piru, Santa Paula, Fillmore, Ventura, Oxnard, Camarillo, Ojai, Carpinteria, Santa Barbara, Goleta, Santa Maria, Guadalupe, Lompoc, and other communities. Players and their families helped create the economic infrastructure and prosperity that are evident today in the Central Coast. For women, softball was a social counterbalance to the strict cultural roles defined by society. Many former players dedicated their lives to the unrelenting struggle for social justice, while others devoted themselves to youth sports. This book remedies the glaring omission of baseball images and stories of Mexican American neighborhoods in the Central Coast of California.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateDec 9, 2013
ISBN9781439642443
Mexican American Baseball in the Central Coast
Author

Richard A. Santillan

Author Richard A. Santillan, professor emeritus of ethnic and women studies at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, and coauthors Mark A. Ocegueda, PhD student in history at the University of California, Irvine, and Terry A. Cannon, executive director of the Baseball Reliquary, serve as advisors to the Latino Baseball History Project in San Bernardino. The project and players� families provided the vintage photographs presented here.

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    Mexican American Baseball in the Central Coast - Richard A. Santillan

    Nelson.

    INTRODUCTION

    Mexican Americans have played baseball in the United States for over 140 years. The sport was an important part of the overall Mexican experience in the country. This book examines the love of the game by Mexican Americans in the Central Coast of California, specifically Ventura and Santa Barbara Counties. Mexicans lived in California prior to statehood in 1850. Both Spanish and Mexican cultural influences are profoundly evident throughout these two counties, including geographical designations, architecture, city and street names, missions, foods, language, traditional holidays, and customs celebrated by the people. Indeed, Ventura and Santa Barbara are Spanish words.

    The Mexican people of Greater Ventura and Santa Barbara Counties can be found in various communities, including Oxnard, Fillmore, Ojai, Santa Paula, Camarillo, Piru, Ventura, Carpinteria, Santa Barbara, Goleta, Santa Maria, Guadalupe, Lompoc, San Inez, and Pismo Beach. Like so many Mexican communities at the turn of the 20th century, these neighborhoods established an elaborate infrastructure that included religious groups, business associations, mutual aid societies, civil and political rights organizations, fine arts, Spanish-language newspapers, legal aid, labor unions, and sports clubs.

    Mexican Americans enjoyed baseball, softball, boxing, football, soccer, and basketball. Yet, baseball, and later softball, stood head and shoulders above the other sports. Baseball was played in Mexico by the late 1800s, and many Mexicans continued their love for the game when they settled throughout the United States. In Ventura and Santa Barbara Counties, players and their families helped create the economic infrastructure and prosperity that is evident in the Central Coast today, whether it was laboring in the fields, factories, packinghouses, or on the railroads.

    For women, softball served as a social counterbalance to the strict cultural roles defined in their time. Many former players, men and women, devoted their lives to the unrelenting struggle for social, political, cultural, and gender equality, while others dedicated themselves to youth sports. Sunday was a special day for Mexican American communities, with religious services in the morning and baseball in the afternoon. This book relives those glorious days when Mexican foods were enjoyed and the Spanish language was heard at ballparks throughout the Central Coast.

    1

    SAN FERNANDO VALLEY

    In 1933, noted UCLA geography professor Clifford M. Zierer wrote that Mexican Americans in San Fernando played on numerous vacant lots . . . [with] improvised grandstands for baseball. Zierer’s observation gives a snapshot into the vibrant Mexican American baseball and softball scene in the San Fernando Valley throughout the first half of the 20th century, an era tinged with discrimination. In San Fernando, Mexican Americans were prohibited from buying a home outside the southwest section of the city, beyond the Southern Pacific railroad tracks, and had to sit in the balconies of theaters. In Burbank, they could not live above Glenoaks Boulevard and were not allowed in the Pickwick swimming pool and certain movie theaters. In the face of these restrictions, Mexican Americans improvised and asserted themselves in the community, owning cafés, pool halls, grocery stores, nurseries, contracting companies, waste-management companies, selling produce and materials from their gardens, and playing sports. Mexican American baseball and softball teams literally carved out their own public space—plowing, raking, watering, and fencing vacant fields, transforming them into baseball diamonds.

    Men and women in the Valley participated in a variety of semipro, municipal, barrio, and Catholic baseball and softball leagues. Many players participated on military teams while serving in World War II and Korea. By the 1950s and 1960s, Mexican Americans made significant inroads into Little League, Pony League, and high school teams, with a few breaking into professional baseball.

    Teams in the San Fernando Valley did not live in a bubble but often travelled throughout California and Mexico. Many of the area’s Mexican American families were connected to Central and Northern California as seasonal agricultural workers. In going up north, families traveled to areas such as Fresno, Gilroy, and San Jose to harvest apricots, walnuts, peaches, grapes, cherries, and prunes. Likewise, players and families constantly rumbled north in dusty trucks for weekend games along the Central Coast in Santa Barbara and Santa Maria, reaching as far as Fresno. These trips further strengthened interregional community bonds through after-game celebrations, barbeques, and music honoring visiting teams. Extensive trips to the north helped instill solidarity among Mexican American ballplayers throughout California.

    Seen here around 1909, the San Fernando team included batboy Edward Lyon (first row, left), Albert García (first row, center), Fred Candelot (second row, far left), and Raúl Candelot (third row, third from left). Frank Pico (third row, second from left) served as manager. A descendant of the prominent Pico family, Frank’s grandfather Jose De Jesús Pico was the grantee of Rancho Piedra Blanca in San Luis Obispo County and cousin of Pio Pico. (Courtesy of the San Fernando Valley Historical Society.)

    The 1922 San Fernando Merchants pose for a team photograph. Shown here are, from left to right, (first row) unidentified, Bill Pesqueira, two unidentified players, and Refugio Zamora; (second row) Frank Cruz, Arthur Lyon, Paul Cruz, Raúl Candelot, and unidentified; (third row) Fred Candelot, George Bravo, Ignacio Pesqueira, and unidentified. Bravo and Lyon served in France during World War I. (Courtesy of Vickie Carrillo Norton and the San Fernando Valley Historical Society.)

    Mexican Americans from the San Fernando Valley traveled to join teams from different regions of Southern California. Posing here with the Calexico club in Imperial County are infielder David Cruz (second row, second from right) and pitcher Cecil Cruz (third row, fourth from left). David and Cecil made up two of the four Cruz brothers who hailed from San Fernando and played on the San Fernando Merchants. They also played for other Valley teams as substitutes. (Courtesy of Alice Cruz Bacon and Theresa Alicia Bacon.)

    The players on the Burbank Holy Trinity Parish team are, from left to right, (first row) Cirilo Gonzáles, David García, Bob Santoyo, Richard Ruiz, and Fred Saenz; (second row) Ernie Vásquez, Steve Ríos, unidentified, Ralph Gallegos, Albert Duron, Frank Lara, Tony Hernández, J.D. García, Frank Doris, and Robert Barrera. Holy Trinity Parish, now known as St. Robert Bellarmine, was one of the earliest Catholic churches in the San Fernando Valley, serving Burbank and Sun Valley. (Courtesy of Alex Saenz and Ramona Valenzuela Cervantes.)

    The 1930s Missions, the preeminent Mexican American semipro team in San Fernando, is seen at White Sox Park in Los Angeles. The team included manager Juan Durazo (first row, far left), John García (first row, third from left), Robert Uribe (first row, second from right), and Chris García (second row, third from right). The Missions traveled throughout California and Mexico, playing in Tijuana and Mexicali. The team further maintained transnational connections, as Mexican teams visited San Fernando from Tijuana to Sinaloa. The Missions uniforms were imported from Mexico.

    This 1939 poster advertises a playoff matchup, organized by the Mexican Athletic Union, between the Baja California champions (Mexicali Mayas) and the Southern California Mexican champions (San Fernando Missions) for the Inter-Californias International championship. Special attendees included California governor Culbert L. Olson, Los Angeles mayor Fletcher Bowron, and the consul of Mexico, Prof. Armando Rodriguez, representing the Mexican Federal Office of Physical Education. (Courtesy of Chris García Jr.)

    A 1940s Missions team gathers at San Fernando Park. Shown here are, from left to right, (first row) Chris García, Chief Herrera, two unidentified persons, Tony Méndez, Lupe Villanueva, Robert Uribe, and Angel Guajardo; (second row) unidentified, Rudy Flores, Félix Bustamante, Frank Parra, Leo Guerra, John García, Nick Salas, Joe García, Marin Magana, umpire Chapo Yidal, and Ray Serra; batboy David García is kneeling at far right; the other boy is unidentified. Herrera, a pool hall owner in San Fernando, was a sponsor of the Missions. (Courtesy of Chris García Jr.)

    Chris García of the Missions slides safely into third base at San Fernando Park. This park was the premier baseball field in the San Fernando Valley throughout the 1940s and 1950s and the onetime spring-training home of the Seattle Rainiers and Hollywood Stars. Connie Mack and the Philadelphia Athletics frequently visited in the preseason, attracting up to 5,000 spectators. The park included a clubhouse with showers and a locker room. (Courtesy of Chris García Jr.)

    The 1930s San Fernando Monarchs had players interchange between the Missions and Monarchs. Shown here are, from left to right, (first row) Joe Ponce, unidentified, Félix Bustamante, umpire Chapo Yidal, Robert Uribe, and Elijio Salas; (second row) two unidentified players, Joe Miranda, Ernie Rios, manager Arturo Magana, Frankie Pérez, unidentified, Jess Franco, Marin Magana, John García, and Chris García. Joe Ponce was the trainer of Bobby Chacon from Pacoima, who won boxing titles and is a member of the

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