Raised in Stockton, California, Dolores graduated in 1955 with an AA and her teaching credentials from the College of the Pacific. After graduation, she accepted a teaching position in a rural Stockton elementary school. She had been teaching for only a short time when she realized she wanted to devote her talent and energy to migrant farm workers and their families. "I couldn't stand seeing farm worker children come to class hungry and in need of shoes," she once explained. "I thought I could do more by organizing their parents than by trying to teach their hungry children." After one year, she resigned from her teaching position, determined to launch a campaign that would fight the numerous economic injustices faced by migrant agricultural workers.
Joining forces with the legendary labor leader Cesar Chavez, Dolores organized a large-scale strike against the commercial grape growers of the San Joaquin Valley, an effort which raised national awareness of the abysmal treatment of America's agricultural workers, and she negotiated the contracts which led to their improved working conditions. The rest, as they say, is history.
Although
there are several fairly good juvenile biographies of this
extraordinary woman, there is no definitive adult biography about her.
The closest thing to it is A Dolores Huerta Reader edited by
Mario T. Garcia. This book includes an informative biographical
introduction by the editor, articles and book excerpts written about Dolores, her own writings and transcripts of her speeches, and a recent
interview with Mario Garcia. You can find A Dolores Huerta Reader on
amazon.com I have also included a chapter about this remarkable teacher in my second book, Chalkboard Heroes: Twelve courageous Teachers and their Deeds of Valor.
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