Mexican American Baseball in the Inland Empire
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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 Inland Empire - Richard A. Santillan
Perryman.
INTRODUCTION
At the turn of the 20th century, the inland region of Southern California, more commonly known as the Inland Empire, sustained a thriving agricultural citrus industry that provided the economic pull factors for Mexican immigration into the San Bernardino Valley, the Pomona Valley, Riverside, Corona, and the Coachella Valley. Mexican immigrants labored within the citrus economy as pickers, packers, and other low-wage positions. In addition, various Santa Fe and Southern Pacific Railroad depots throughout the Inland Empire provided Mexican immigrants with additional employment. With the large influx of Mexican immigration during the first decades of the 20th century, long-lasting Mexican communities developed in the Inland Empire. As Mexican migrants settled in Inland Empire barrios, Mexican immigrants and their Mexican American progeny formed baseball teams that facilitated senses of community pride and ethnic identity for women and men. Many of the barrio baseball games were played on weekend afternoons in front of lively, overflowing crowds. Some fans even preferred to park their cars in the outfield and blare their horns after every home run. Both women and men formed community teams that allowed Mexican Americans to proclaim their social equality through athletic competition and to publicly demonstrate community strength.
This photo-documentary reveals baseball’s social and cultural impact on the various Mexican communities within the Inland Empire. Particular emphasis is given to the era of segregation when Mexican immigrants and their Mexican American children experienced exclusion from various societal arenas, including schools, labor, theaters, politics, public recreational facilities, and sports. Comparable to the Negro Leagues of the Southern and Eastern United States, Mexican American baseball leagues developed in the context of segregation and discrimination during the interwar period. While some attention is given to the rise of individual professional and major-league players, the emphasis rests on the celebration of ethnic identity and community solidarity that Mexican American baseball leagues provided Inland Empire barrios. Although former players and members of the Mexican communities within the Inland Empire have not forgotten baseball’s cultural and social significance, this book serves as one of the first efforts to present the history of Mexican American baseball in the Inland Empire’s barrios.
1
MEXICAN AMERICAN
BASEBALL
THE GOLDEN STATE
Mexican American baseball in California dates back to at least the 1890s and was well established in nearly every Mexican American community by the early 1920s. On any given Sunday, baseball and softball teams competed on city parks and makeshift fields. Each game attracted many fans, especially family members and friends of the players.
There were commonalities associated with these games. Most of the players and fans attended church in the morning before heading out to the baseball diamond. The players, who practiced hard during the week after working at their jobs 10 to 12 hours a day, had to get the fields into shape before each game. Mexican food and beer were sold, and Mexican music and the Spanish language were heard. Spectators sat on the grass or on makeshift stands, and a baseball cap was passed around to collect gas money for the visiting team. After the game, the home team often went to the local bar to drink beer.
Unfortunately, these same communities shared other similarities. Mexican Americans confronted racial prejudice and discrimination in housing, health care, education, employment, and recreation. It was not uncommon for Mexican Americans throughout California to be forced to sit in certain sections of movie theatres, to swim in public pools only one day out of the week, to be barred from or assigned special times for use of public parks, to attend segregated schools with inferior classrooms, to work in the lowest paying and most dangerous jobs, to be denied meals in public restaurants, to live in the most rundown sections of town, and to be forced from their homes because of urban renewal programs.
Yet, despite these economic hardships and social forms of segregation, the greater Mexican American community in California endured and eventually overcame many of these institutional obstacles by organizing political and social organizations, labor movements, and religious groups, by filing lawsuits, and by establishing recreational clubs and facilities. The Mexican American community formed its own network of sports, including boxing, basketball, baseball, and softball. To Mexican Americans, sports were not just games—they were important elements of community identity, cultural affirmation, civil rights, and political empowerment.
The Peña family was one of the most famous baseball families of East Los Angeles. Featured here are the nine brothers playing in an exhibition game for the Carmelita Provision Company at Belvedere Park in the late 1950s. Their father, William (second row, fourth from left), managed the team. Their mother, Victoria (second row), took loving care of the family while supporting her sons’ and husband’s baseball activities. (Courtesy of Richard Peña.)
From the late 1940s through the 1970s, the Carmelita Provision Company of East Los Angeles won numerous championships. Since the company produced pork products, the team was known as the Chorizeros, or sausage makers.
Among the outstanding players on the 1947 team were Ray Armenta (second row, far right) and Gil Gámez Sr. (first row, far left). The little boy in the background is 10-year-old Tom Pérez Jr. (Courtesy of Tom Pérez Jr.)
Wally Poon had an illustrious baseball career in the 1940s and 1950s as one of the few non–Mexican Americans to play in East Los Angeles. A Chinese American, Poon grew up with Mexicans, attended East Los Angeles College, and served the community in a variety of capacities. Not only was he an outstanding baseball player, he was also a sportswriter for several local publications, including the Midget Martínez’ Sport Page. He was commissioner of the East Los Angeles Baseball League, sponsored by American Legion Post 804. The post was named after Eugene Arnold Obregón, who was killed in action in Korea and posthumously received the Congressional Medal of Honor. (At right, courtesy of Mimi Poon Fear; below, courtesy of Henry R. Mendoza.)
The 1947 varsity baseball team at Roosevelt High School in East Los Angeles included two of the famous Peña brothers, John (second row, second from right) and Richard (first row, second from right), both of whom played professionally. Al Padilla (first row, second from left) played at Occidental College and later coached baseball and football at Roosevelt and Garfield High Schools and East Los Angeles College. Their legendary manager was Joe Gonzales (second row, far right), who played for the Boston Red Sox. (Courtesy of Richard Peña.)