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37 pages 1 hour read

Ernesto Galarza

Barrio Boy

Nonfiction | Autobiography / Memoir | Adult | Published in 1971

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Key Figures

Ernesto Galarza

Ernesto Galarza (1905-1964) was a prominent Mexican American labor activist, professor, and writer. He was born in a small Mexican village named Jalcocotán. When he was eight years old, he immigrated to America with his mother and two uncles. He settled in Sacramento, where he attended school and did odd jobs, including working as a farmworker. His mother died when he was young, and he was raised by his uncle José. He went to Oriental College on a scholarship and earned his master’s degree in history at Stanford and a PhD at Columbia. He worked with the Pan-American Union analyzing labor, education, and infrastructure issues in Latin America and was a prominent labor organizer in California’s farmworker movement. His 1964 book Merchants of Labor detailed the injustices of the Bracero program, which brought Mexican workers to the country for short-term contracts on farms. His exposé, which sold 10,000 copies and went through two printings, was instrumental in the abolition of the program. He was a professor at the University of Notre Dame, San Jose State University, and the universities of California at San Diego and Santa Cruz. In 1976, he was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature.

Doña Henriqueta

Doña Henriqueta was the author’s mother. In the memoir, she becomes pregnant with Ernesto when she is quite young. She marries Ernesto’s father, Don Ernesto, but they divorce before Ernesto is born. While she is pregnant, she moves to Jalcocotán with José and Gustavo, and eventually, she emigrates to America with her brothers and son. As the family moves from place to place, Doña Henriqueta picks up work sewing and mending to make ends meet. She also educates Ernesto at home in reading, writing, and math. She remarries in Sacramento and has three more children. She dies of the Spanish flu.

José

José is Ernesto’s uncle. Like his brother, Gustavo, he must rely on short-term contracts and odd jobs in each new town where the family moves. After Gustavo and Doña Henriqueta die of the Spanish flu, José raises Ernesto.

Gustavo

Gustavo is Ernesto’s uncle. He is the oldest and the head of the family until he dies of the Spanish flu. He and his brother, José, often travel ahead of Doña Henriqueta and Ernesto to new towns to find work, and Gustavo must rely on a series of precarious jobs in difficult conditions to support the family.

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