Mexican American Fieldworker (c. 1920)
This file appears in: Cotton
Increasing violence at the Texas-Mexico border resulting from the Mexican Revolution between 1910 and 1920 led to an increased Mexican-American and immigrant population in Waco. Labor segregation during that time period forced many to take menial jobs working in areas such as construction, slaughterhouses, or mining. A large population of Mexican American Wacoans worked in agriculture during the twentieth century, handpicking cotton in the fields.
This file appears in: Cotton
Cotton
For nearly half a century, cotton reigned as king of Waco's economy, establishing the once small frontier town as a thriving urban center known throughout the country.
The area later named Waco held a long history of agricultural pursuits…