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Mexicanos By: Manuel G. Gonzales By: Maria Moreno Professor Aruello History 33

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  • 1. MexicanosBy: Manuel G. Gonzales
    By: Maria Moreno
    Professor Aruello
    History 33

2. Spaniards and Native Americans
3. The Spaniards
Americo Castro, Salvador De Madariaga, and Ramon Menendez Pidal, were amazing Spaniards who conquer the Americas.
The most influential of the ancient people to arrive were the Romans.
The Roman empire weakened after the third century of the Christian era.
Vandals controlledNorth Africa, Franks reigned supreme in France, and even Italy found itself occupied.
4. The Amerindians
Native Americans were descended from Asian peoples, a notion based on physical characteristics.
The first of the Pre- Columbian civilizations of the Americas developed in the lowlands of southern Vera Cruzand Tabasco.
All pre-Columbian civilizations were all agriculture.
There are two gigantic monuments they Pyramids of the Sun is the base larger than that of the Pyramid of Cheops in Egypts Giza Valley and the smaller pyramid of the Moon.
5. The Conquest of Mexico
The conqueror of the Aztecs was Hernan Cortes.
The Aztecs cultural accomplishments were extraordinary.
The Spanish society saw the Indians as the Hijosde Dios or the sons of god.
Mexicanos also have much in common with other people who occupy the lowest socioeconomic leves.
6. The Spanish Frontier
7. Spanish Exploration of the Frontier
The first Europeans in the Far North, were not motivated by god.
The men had incredible adventures, as Cabeza de Vacas memoirs graphically illustrate.
In February 1540, Vasquez de Coronado set out from Compostela, in Nueva Galicia.
8. Settlement of New Mexico
The entrada that led pemanent settlement of New Mexico occurred in the 1590s.
The fromidalble tasks of establishing the northern colonies.
A string of small settlements, usually adjacent to Indian pueblos along the river.
9. Major Trends
The settlement of the coastal region of Alta California a the end of the eighteenth century brought to an end the era of Spanish expansion in the north.
Frontier was hard for both men and women
If gender roles were blurred on the frontier, the same appears to be the case with social classes.
10. The Mexican Far North
11. Mexican Independence
In the New Spain, as in other parts of the empire, creoles were in the fore front of the revolutionary surge.
In 1812, with victory against Napoleons army of occupation in sight.
Mexico got its independence in 1821.
12. California
California took no direct part whatsoever in the epic events that resulted in Mexican independence.
Californios, some thirty-two hundred people by 1821 had no special feelings.
By the 1840s, with the gradual disappearance of the missions, the California economy came to be dominated by ranches.
13. New Mexico
New Mexico experienced remarkable changes during the Mexican period.
New Mexicans immediately after national independence changed politically.
New Mexico became more convenient and comfortable for the life of Mexicans.
14. The American Southwest
15. Gringos and Greasers
Anti-Mexican attitudes during the second half of the nineteenth century were ubiquitous throughout the Southwest.
Mexicans adopted and attitude that is perfectly understandable
Relations between Mexicanos and Anglos, were an important theme in Mexican American history.
16. California
The war conquest was written in 1966 by the historian Leonard Pitt.
The failure of the pact to protect the states Mexicans population was even more egregious in regard to the question of land ownership
Rancheros faced many difficulties in proving ownership.
17. Arizona
The signing of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgos in 1848, left the Mexicans population of Arizona.
Nowhere in the southwest did Anglos and Mexicans get along as well before.
Economic power of the Hispanic Elite waned.
18. THE Great Migration
19. Motives for Mexican Immigration
Mexicans have immigrated into the United States than any other single national group.
Most Mexicans immigrants in 1900-1930 entered the U. S illegally.
Labor needs in the country during the economic boom of the war and pwtwarperoids.
20. The Mexican Revolution
Recent interpretations of the Mexicano experience in the U.S have tended to accentuate the problems encountered in the American society.
The Porfriato had popular support in the beginning.
The top priority of the new administration was to restore the power of the central government.
21. The Immigrant
Driven out of Mexico and attracted to the Southwest for political, religious, economic, and a variety of reasons, thousands of immigrants emigrated.
Biography of the immigrant during this momentous thirty-year period.
Mexican migratory laborers like Jose Martinez and his family in the years before the Depression was not easy.
22. The Depression
23. The Depression
The Great Depression is generally dated form the collapse of the New York stock exhchange in October 1929.
It was a global clash.
It also lead Mexicanos in the Southwest in dire straits.
24. Urbanization
Mexicans workers were force to go to the cities.
Mexicans were impacted by the Depression in New Mexico
The transformation of traditional Mexican culture was not as dramatic in other parts of the Southwest.
25. The Mexican Problem
Nativist fears fed the growing perception of Mexicans as a problem in the 1920.
The creation of a tourist industry in the Southwest was a turn in the 19th century.
The so-called Mexican problem was a campaign in Washington.
26. The Second World War and its aftermath
27. Mexicans in the Military
Mexicans served in the military as a need to be as a manhood.
Many Mexicans served in the military as a social economic issues
Many received good medals
28. Urbanization
Chicano nationalist today tend to have a highly idealized picture of the Mexican Family.
The pachuco gang came to know.
It was known to be as baggy pants, highwaisted pants.
29. b