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The
Wopajo Says . .
SURVIVING
THE 1930'S IN OLD ALBUQUERQUE
by:
f. g. lopriato y lopez
ITALIANS
IN NEW MEXICO - #4
We are dealing with the survival of Old Towners during the Great
Depression, therefore, the entire history of the Italian Community of Albuquerque
will have to take a back seat for a while. What you read in this series
is being taken from that overall documentation of Italians in New Mexico,
which of course includes Albuquerque. You will run into much of this series
in the depth tale by the same writer, under the title of "La Colonia" when
it is published.
Italians were not the only first generation immigrants to make New Mexico,
MOST left a beloved homeland behind, friends, relations, and all
that every one holds dear about one's own country, were left behind.
I write about Italians only because I know more about that segment of our
society than about any of the rest.
Most
came here to escape poverty and discrimination. Here they found opportunity.
Letters and word of mouth spread the word to those who had stayed behind,
in the "old country." Thus it was that foreign born Italians and others
found Albuquerque, the railroad brought more than just railway workers.
It brought professional brick layers, architects, and all that goes with
a growing town, and Albuquerque was growing, it really did not feel the
depression until two or three years after it had started. The more it grew,
the more lumber, bricks, glass, etc. was needed, Albuquerque lumber was
doing better than it had ever done, the sawmill hired more workers, builders
hired more laborers, cafes, restaurants, lodges, garages, and, you name
it, sprang up and created more jobs for more people.
The high, dry climate brought in doctors, nurses, and patients from out
of state theaters, bars, the Franciscan Hotel , while the rest of
the country was experiencing the worst of the depression, Albuquerque was
booming. Five and dime stores, the brick farm, tobacco farm, even the VA
Hospital was instrumental in bringing work to Albuquerque.
Salaries were not much but neither was the cost of living. Many people
purchased lots and built their own homes on them. Old Towners who
attended San Felipe School were taught by Italian nuns, the Priests at
San Felipe Church were Italian. Masses were said in Latin . Altar boys
and choir singers, aspired to be priests, nuns, altar boys or "coralistas"
learned, at least the words to
Latin
songs, and prayers or the entire mass itself in Latin. It was an
interesting combination of languages for those children who grew up speaking
Italian at home, Spanish in the streets, English in school and Latin in
Church, yet no one thought it a bit unusual, and could flit around from
one language to the other with no difficulty at all. It did help
Old Towners to when it came to finding employment in the business sector.
Italian businesses hired more Hispanics than did other immigrant businesses,
those who did, such as the Greeks, Armenians, Jews, attracted the cream
of the trade, simply because the Native American and Hispanic populations
trusted someone who did business in their own language.
Wholesale and retail stores delivered throughout the entire state, small
Mom and Pop stores bought most of the merchandise but delivery men and
boys also drove from house to house both in town and out in the boondocks,
in the Pueblos and reservations. where roads were goat paths and hogans
blended in with the scenery and were so isolated from each other that it
took more than ordinary courage to complete a route. No a job for anyone
who didn't know like or distrusted
"Mexicans"
or "Indians". ////fglyl
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