Decades ago, the United States eagerly welcomed more than 1 million Mexican nationals across the border. Through an agreement between the U.S. and Mexican governments, the temporary workers, known as ...
Through freestanding, illustrated banners with text, this bilingual (English and Spanish) exhibition examines the experiences of bracero workers and their families while providing insight into Mexican ...
The Holocaust Museum of Houston is opening its first bilingual English-Spanish exhibition, showcasing the history of a guest-workers program that allowed the United States to maintain its agricultural ...
A photo exhibit of Mexican guest workers in the United States from 1942-1964, laborers known as braceros or "those who work with their arms." The Bracero Program is the primary origin of the ...
The bracero program brought hundreds of thousands of laborers from Mexico to work in the United States from the 1940s to the ’60s. Today, many Californians are bound to be related to someone or know ...
Crouching for up to 10 hours between the furrows of a Nebraska field, Fausto Ríos, 17, could trim and separate 70 beets in a single minute with a small hoe. But he paid a steep price. Under the ...
Through freestanding, illustrated banners with text, this bilingual (English and Spanish) exhibition examines the experiences of bracero workers and their families while providing insight into Mexican ...