Great Wall Institute: The Process of the Great Wall of Los Angeles

Movimiento from 1960s

Two students from Yakima Valley College, Tomas Villanueva and Guadalupe Gamboa travel to California to  meet Cesar Chavez. The meeting serves to spawn organizational efforts to unionize farm workers in Central Washington.
  
  • Mar. 17-Apr. 11, 1966: Cesar Chavez and the National Farm Workers Association march from Delano to the California state Capitol in Sacramento.
  
  • Apr. 29, 1966: Rodolfo "Corky" Gonzalez is fired from the Neighborhood Youth Corps Directorship. Soon after, he founds the Crusade for Justice in Denver, Colorado.
  
  • May, 1966: High school students in East Los Angeles form the Young Citizens for Community Action(YCCA).
  
  • Oct. 15, 1966: Tijerina and 350 members of La Alianza occupy Kit Carson National Forest Camp Echo Amphitheatre on behalf of the "Pueblo de San Joaquin de Chama," in New Mexico.
 
  • 1967 The Cursillo Movement within the Catholic Church emerges in the Yakima Valley. The purpose is to engage in social action and encourage participation in church life. At the same time the Mexican American Youth Organization(MAYO) is formed on college campuses in Texas after the first chapter is born at St. Mary's College in San Antonio
  • 1967: Tomas Villanueva co-founds the United Farm worker Co-operative in Toppenish Washington. The Co-op would serve as a place for organizing and as a cultural center. The UFW Co-op is credited as being the first Activist Chicano organization in the State of Washington. Mar. 13, 1967: 250 students representing seven Los Angeles colleges and universities meet to form the United Mexican American Students(UMAS).
  • 1967: The Mexican American Federation is organized in Yakima, Washington, to advocate for community development and political empowerment in the Yakima Valley.
  • Jun. 5, 1967: Reies Lopez Tijerina conducts an armed raid in Tierra Amarilla on the Rio Arriba County Courthouse.

     
       

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