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A collaborative effort between the
Baseball Reliquary and the John M. Pfau Library
at California State University, San Bernardino,
the Latino Baseball History Project is a
comprehensive and multifaceted humanities-based
endeavor. The ongoing project is concerned with
documenting and interpreting the historic role
that baseball has played as a cohesive element
and as a social and cultural force within the
Latino, predominantly Mexican American,
communities of Southern California. While the
impact of minor and Major League Baseball in the
region is covered, a strong emphasis is placed
on the once-flourishing culture of amateur and
semi-professional baseball as an important means
for celebrating ethnic identity and instilling
community pride. In addition to the
establishment of a permanent archive at the John
M. Pfau Library, the project also encompasses
oral history documentation, exhibitions, a Web
site, and related activities.
PROJECT HISTORY
The Latino Baseball History Project
is a major expansion and development of an
earlier collaborative effort between the
Baseball Reliquary and California State
University, Los Angeles, begun in 2005 under the
title “Mexican-American Baseball in Los Angeles:
From the Barrios to the Big Leagues.” With
$5,000 in grant support from the California
Council for the Humanities (awarded through the
CCH’s “California Stories: California Story
Fund”
grant program), the earlier project received
widespread acclaim, culminating with the
Baseball Reliquary’s receipt of the prestigious
2007 Schwartz Prize, presented by the Federation
of State Humanities Councils as the outstanding
public-funded humanities program in the United
States.
From the project’s inception in 2005
through 2007, highlights of “Mexican-American
Baseball: From the Barrios to the Big Leagues”
included: a major inaugural exhibition at the
John F. Kennedy Memorial Library at California
State University, Los Angeles, from March
26-June 9, 2006; traveling exhibitions at the
Los Angeles Trade-Technical College Library, the
Institute for Socio-Economic Justice &
Progressive Community Development in Brawley,
and the Pomona Public Library; and two oral
history courses related to the project at
California State University, Los Angeles. Oral
histories were conducted by CSULA students under
the guidance of Professor Francisco Balderrama.
Held in the Fall Quarters of 2005 and 2006, the
courses were designed as a ten-week
reading/discussion seminar with a sustained
exercise in oral history. Highlights included
interviews with former ballplayers Al Padilla,
Armando Perez, Ernie Rodriguez, Jim “Chayo”
Rodriguez, Saul Toledo, and Art Velarde; Dodgers
Spanish-language broadcaster Jaime Jarrin; and
former residents of Chavez Ravine.
In 2008, the original project,
“Mexican-American Baseball in Los Angeles: From
the Barrios to the Big Leagues,” went into a
transitional phase as project staff and advisors
determined that its future viability would best
be served by moving it from California State
University, Los Angeles to California State
University, San Bernardino. The move was
prompted by the hiring of Cesar Caballero as the
Dean and University Librarian at CSUSB’s John M.
Pfau Library in 2007. Caballero had formerly
been the Acting University Librarian at CSULA
when the project was conceived in 2005. In the
fall of 2008, the John M. Pfau Library launched
its new Special Collections department, which
would become the home of the new project.
Beginning in February 2009, a series of meetings
was held at the Pfau Library to plan a major
expansion and restructuring of the original
project. The concept for the Latino Baseball
History Project
was developed at these meetings and through
communication with the advisory committee. It
was determined that while the project’s primary
focus in the immediate future would continue to
emphasize the Mexican American baseball
experience in Southern California, the project
would eventually incorporate other Latino
baseball communities into its archival plans as
its perspective broadens in the coming years.
This resulted in the adoption of a new title:
the Latino Baseball History Project.
The inaugural reception for the Latino
Baseball History Project was held in the Special
Collections room of the John M. Pfau Library on
Tuesday, May 12, 2009. A total of 114 people
were in attendance to view exhibition materials
and to hear Cesar Caballero welcome the project
to its new home at California State University,
San Bernardino. In addition to Caballero,
speakers included Terry Cannon, Executive
Director of the Baseball Reliquary; Professor
Francisco Balderrama; and Malia Vincent-Finney,
CEO of the Haili Wailele Film/Arts Foundation,
who was involved in developing the project’s Web
site. Keynote speakers for the evening were
Professor Jose Alamillo and Tomas Benitez.
Since the inaugural reception, the Latino
Baseball History Project has sponsored a variety
of events, including reunions of veteran
ballplayers; lectures; and exhibitions, both at
California State University, San Bernardino and
other venues. A highlight of the project’s early
history was the publication of the book,
Mexican
American Baseball in Los Angeles, by
Professors Francisco Balderrama and Richard
Santillan, in February 2011. The book is, to a
large extent, an outgrowth of the project, as
much of its content was developed from research
conducted since the project’s inception. In
addition, most of the photographs are from the
project’s archival collection.
PROJECT PERSONNEL
Project Planning Committee:
Francisco Balderrama, Renee
Barrera, Tomas Benitez, Cesar Caballero, Terry
Cannon, Danny Carrasco, Iwona Contreras, Darlene
Harr, Cherstin Lyon, Ruth Martinez, Richard
Santillan, Jill Vassilakos-Long, Malia
Vincent-Finney, and Mark Ocegueda.
Advisory Committee:
Jose M. Alamillo, Associate Professor & Coordinator, Chicano/a
Studies Program, California State University,
Channel Islands
Gabriel (Tito) Avila, Jr., Founder,
President and CEO, Hispanic Heritage Baseball
Museum, San Francisco Francisco E.
Balderrama, Professor of Chicano Studies and
History, California State University, Los
Angeles Tomas J. Benitez, Artist and
Art Consultant Raul J. Cardoza, Dean
of Student Services, Los Angeles Trade-Technical
College
Peter Dreier, Professor of Politics
and Director, Urban & Environmental Policy
Program, Occidental College, Los Angeles
Robert Elias, Professor of
Politics and Chair, Legal Studies Program,
University of San Francisco
Jorge Iber, Associate Dean &
Professor, Department of History, Texas Tech
University
Cherstin M. Lyon, Assistant Professor of
History, California State University, San
Bernardino
Douglas Monroy, Professor of
History, Colorado College
Carlos Munoz, Jr., Professor
Emeritus, Department of Ethnic Studies,
University of California, Berkeley
Samuel O. Regalado, Professor
of History, California State University,
Stanislaus
Anthony Salazar, Latino
Baseball Committee, Society for American
Baseball Research
Richard Santillan, Professor
Emeritus, Ethnic and Women’s Studies Department,
California State Polytechnic University, Pomona
Carlos Tortolero, President,
Mexican Fine Arts Center Museum, Chicago
CONTACT INFORMATION
For further information on
the
Latino Baseball History Project, contact
Terry Cannon, Executive Director of the Baseball
Reliquary, at P.O. Box 1850, Monrovia, CA 91017;
by phone at (626) 791-7647; or by e-mail at
terymar@earthlink.net.
You can also contact Iwona Contreras,
Administrative Analyst/Specialist at the John M.
Pfau Library, at California State University San
Bernardino, Pfau Library-PL-2006, 5500
University Parkway, San Bernardino, CA 92407; by
phone at (909) 537-3447; or by e-mail at
icontrer@csusb.edu.
For upcoming events and newsletters
related to the Latino Baseball History Project,
visit the Web site:
http://www.lib.csusb.edu/SpecialCollections/latino_baseball_history_project.cfm.
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Members of the planning and advisory
committees for the Latino Baseball
History Project who were in
attendance at the May 12, 2009
inaugural reception at the John M.
Pfau Library included, from left to
right: Richard Santillan, Tomas
Benitez, Terry Cannon, Francisco
Balderrama, Jose Alamillo, and Cesar
Caballero.
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In attendance at the May 12, 2009 inaugural
reception were members of the
Richard Pena family. Richard, Sr.
(seated at center) was a star center
fielder for the Carmelita Chorizeros
and was one of nine brothers who
played at one point for Carmelita.
Included in the project’s archival
holdings is the Carmelita jersey
worn by Richard Pena, Sr. in the
mid-1950s. Richard Pena, Jr., at top
left, was a batboy for the
Chorizeros.
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In attendance
at the May 12, 2009 inaugural
reception were members of the Isidro
“Chilo” Herrera family. Chilo
(seated at center) was a slugging
third baseman who played for the
Carmelita Chorizeros in the 1960s,
and is recognized as one of the
greatest hitters in East Los Angeles
amateur and semi-professional
baseball history.
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