Duval County Tejanos Volume 9


An Epic Narrative of Liberty and Democracy

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By Alfredo E. Cardenas
Imprint:
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXAS PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:

Pages:
416

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Description

Alfredo E. Cardenas, a former mayor for eight years of San Diego, the Duval County seat, is retired as editor of the South Texas Catholic (2010-2017) and editor/publisher of the Duval County Picture (1987-1999). He is the author of Balo's War, a historical novel on the Plan of San Diego.

"This is a thorough and impressively researched study of the history of Duval County. In fact the piece is so strikingly researched that it is likely to remain the definitive study of the subject for decades to come."--Jerry Thompson, author of Tejano Tiger: Jose de los Santos Benavides and the History of the Texas-Mexico Borderlands, 1823-1891 "Cardenas's book is the first scholarly history of San Diego and Duval County, and the most complete study of Duval County to date. It offers a cogent history of the development of not only the political structure but also the land and cattle attraction to the Anglo capitalists who later dominated the county. This is a new approach primarily because the author's intensive study of county voting in the 1890s clearly illustrates his major theme that Tejanos were not merely pawns to an Anglo political boss but viable agents of election activities and results."--Andres Tijerina, author of Tejano Empire: Life on the South Texas Ranchos "In this informative and enlightening monograph, Alfredo Cardenas presents a counter narrative to that which has traditionally been written about Duval County. His subjects are Tejanos dedicated to what he argues was making and shaping the county into a center of liberty and democracy. The author traces their quest for this ideal back to their arrival in the Duval County area during the first decades of the nineteenth century, to their adjustment to the new American order under the Republic of Texas, and after 1848, to their assent to living under the United States system of governance. Wanting to establish a milieu conducive to county progress, they joined the Anglo American minority in conducting local politics, advancing commerce, ranching, and farming, while founding churches and certainly molding culture."--Arnoldo De Leon, Distinguished Professor of History Emeritus at Angelo State University

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