Hispanics
of Utah are those people of Spanish descent who reside
in the state and have contributed to its development.
This Utah ethnic group was officially placed at 4.1
percent of the population, or 69,260, in 1980; however,
Hispanic leaders in Utah believe that to be a conservative
estimate, and that the number is closer to 6 percent.
Hispanic history in America begins in 1492 with Columbus's
arrival in the New World and the subsequent Spanish
exploration and colonization during the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries. The earliest Spanish expedition
into what is now Utah was possibly by Captain Garci-Lopez
de Cardenas during the late summer of 1541, as recorded
in the diary of Francisco de Coronado.
The Spanish began colonizing New Mexico at the end of
the sixteenth century. Juan de Onate and his party of
400 men with 7,000 head of stock established their headquarters
across from the Indian pueblo of San Juan near present-day
Espanola. In 1609 Governor Pedro de Peralta was ordered
to establish the villa of Santa Fe. Once this was done,
Spanish colonization spread throughout that area.
From that time until 1822 the Spanish flag flew over
that city; it was then replaced by the Mexican flag,
which caused no real change in the lifestyle of the
people. In 1846 the United States declared war on Mexico
and invaded that nation. With the signing of the Treaty
of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848, the United States took
possession of most of northern Mexico including present-day
Utah. The inhabitants of the north, who for centuries
had resided in the area, remained there with their rights
to property and the freedom to communicate in Spanish
ostensibly granted them. However, under the new government
they soon lost most of their land, their water rights,
and their freedom of expression, and did not truly share
in a representative government. These events resulted
in poverty, forcing them to move from the lands of their
ancestors to places where they could find employment
in order to survive.
There is evidence that the Spanish colonizers explored
much of the Great Basin for the purpose of mining, trading,
and seeking a route to California. One of the efforts
to establish a route between the New Mexico and California
missions was the Dominguez and Escalante Expedition,
which left Santa Fe on 29 July 1776 and traveled north
and west with Monterey as its goal. The expedition entered
present-day Utah near Jensen where it crossed el Rio
San Buenaventura (the Green River) on 13 September.
They then traveled west on the south slope of La Sierra
Blanca de Los Lagunas (Uinta Mountains), crossed over
the Wasatch Mountains following el Rio de Aguas Calientes
(Spanish Fork River), and on 24 September viewed the
lake and wide valley of Nuestra Senora de los Timpanogotiz
(Utah Lake and Valley), which they described as ".
. . the most pleasing, beautiful, and fertile site in
all new Spain." The purpose of their mission was
peaceful, and they were implored by the Indians to return
and teach them. The return journey to Santa Fe was difficult
as they crossed into southwestern Utah and to the edge
of the Grand Canyon. They finally crossed the Colorado
River at a place where they hewed steps in the cliff
to facilitate the descent. This site, later named "The
Crossing of the Fathers," is now covered by the
waters of Lake Powell. In a somewhat analogous manner,
most of the Hispanic history and accomplishments in
the area are covered by the flood of written documents
in English which have systematically excluded them from
textbooks and history books and often have renamed the
places discovered and first explored by the Spanish.
Even though no permanent settlements were established
by the Dominguez-Escalante party, the explored Utah
area had been claimed for the king of Spain. Later,
this familiarity with the geography played an important
role in the development of the Spanish Trail, which
began in Santa Fe, went north, then west across what
is now Utah, and on to California. The Spanish Trail
is of great importance to Utah history, having been
used by American explorers and Mormon settlers; today
modern highways follow it.
Because of the Hispanic exploration and presence, some
Spanish names are still used to name geographical features
of the state, such as the Colorado and San Juan rivers,
the La Sal and the Abajo mountains, and Montezuma and
La Gega Canyons, all in southern Utah.
Toward the end of the nineteenth century, the Hispanic
presence was again felt in Utah with Hispanic contributions
to the development of the cattle, sheep, railroad, and
mining industries. Both the cattle and sheep industries
have their origins in the Spanish-Mexican culture, having
been brought to the New World by the Spaniards. Spanish
mining processes and irrigation systems played an important
role in the development of the West, especially in Utah.
The English language is replete with words derived from
Spanish to describe objects or processes hitherto unknown
to the Anglo settlers: rancho, sombrero, mustang, hacienda,
vaquero, latigo, lasso, el dorado, and acequia, are
just a few of them. With the development of the new
industries in Utah, people familiar with these processes
were needed; Hispanics from the Southwest, attracted
by these jobs and land, began to move into southern
Utah to settle permanently; by 1900 the Hispanic presence
had become established in the Monticello area of San
Juan County. Many families soon had their own homesteads
and continued to play an important role in the development
of the cattle and sheep industries in that area; they
later provided the labor force for the nascent mining
industry in the region.
At the same time that Hispanics from New Mexico and
Colorado were making their homes in Utah, other Hispanic
people, Mexican immigrants, were coming to northern
Utah. Most of these new immigrants settled in Salt Lake
City and Ogden areas, where they worked in the mines
and for the railroad; later, others worked in the coal
mines of Carbon County.
Since most Hispanic families came to Utah from materially-poor
environments, the hardships encountered here, such as
low wages for cowboys and sheepherders, and, for the
miners, low wages, "gang bosses," and dependence
on the company store, all prepared Hispanics for the
Great Depression--poverty was nothing new to them. During
this period of economic crisis, rural Hispanics continued
to eke out a living from the soil, but those living
in the urban centers could not revert to the traditional
way of life and had to adapt the best they could to
a new type of hardship, urban poverty. Many Hispanics
returned to New Mexico, and many Mexicans were deported
to Mexico, a measure taken by the U.S. government to
ease the unemployment problem.
With the outbreak of World War II, there was an immediate
demand for a labor force. Recruiters from the defense
industries went to the villages of New Mexico to entice
Hispanic workers and their families to move to Utah.
Not only did Hispanics contribute with their work to
the war effort, but Hispanic soldiers actively participated
in battle, becoming one of the most highly decorated
groups in the United States Armed Forces.
Many Hispanics, attracted by the better paying jobs
and better living conditions, left the rural areas and
joined the steady stream of Hispanics from Colorado
and New Mexico to work in the defense-related industries
of northern Utah, reinforcing the Hispanic communities
in those areas or creating new ones. In the past twenty-five
years an increasing number of people from Central and
South America have appeared on the scene, thus continuing
to enrich the colorful tapestry of Utah's Hispanic population.
Since the first permanent Hispanic settlers of Utah
came from northern New Mexico where the lifestyle and
culture were based on the Catholic faith, this cultural
difference prevented them from being easily assimilated
into the local Utah culture. This rejection was instrumental
in the strengthening of both their language and culture,
causing the Hispanics to form their own communities
within the larger community.
Even though Hispanic families usually were large, the
compadrazgo (godfather/godmother) system gave rise to
close relationships with other families through baptisms,
confirmations, and weddings. Each of these occasions
was observed by a fiesta. The wedding, in most cases
a community event, was celebrated by a fiesta and dance.
Most Hispanics upon arrival into the state established
contact with the local Catholic church, which attended
to their spiritual needs and became the cultural focal
point of their community. In the early 1920s a branch
of the Mormon Church was organized in Salt Lake City
called La Rama Mexicana, which attended to the needs
of Hispanics who came to Utah from various Spanish-speaking
countries because of their conversion to Mormonism.
Pentecostal groups also organized churches among Hispanics
in the state. These religious groups often reinforced
Hispanic ethnicity.
The Hispanic community in Utah has been served by many
different organizations. Some of the early ones were
organized by Mexican immigrants, and include the Cruz
Azul, a Mexican version of the Red Cross, and Union
y Patria, a mutual aid society. After World War II,
new Hispanic organizations appeared; they include the
Centro Civico Mexicano in Salt Lake City, Sociedad Mexicana
Cuahotemoc in Carbon County, and the Sociedad Fraternal
Benito Juarez in Ogden.
During this period a new type of Hispanic appeared upon
the scene, the Hispanic war veteran, who, after serving
his country and returning home, refused to resume his
way of life before the war. These men formed organizations
oriented toward civil and political action. The prime
example of these organizations was the American G.I.
Forum, founded in Texas in 1947, a chapter of which
was organized in 1954 in Ogden and another in 1955 in
Salt Lake City. The purpose of this organization was
to challenge employment discrimination and to encourage
education by providing scholarships.
With the advent of the Civil Rights movement, Hispanics
began to more closely examine their own cultural heritage
and values. The forces on the national level had an
impact on Utah Hispanics and in 1958 a new organization
appeared whose acronym, SOCIO, stood for Spanish-speaking
Organization for Community Integrity and Opportunity.
At the height of its activity, members came from every
Hispanic community in the state. Its goal was equality,
opportunity, and respect for the Spanish-speaking people
of Utah.
As the twentieth century draws to a close, the Hispanic
population forms Utah's largest minority group, and
it is constantly being reinforced by new arrivals from
all Spanish-speaking countries. However, despite their
contributions to the development of the state, Hispanics
still continue to live under some conditions of intercolonialism
such as the disfranchisement of many and their lack
of political power, as well as subtle and blatant forms
of racism.
Hispanics currently have concerns about the public school
system's failure to educate their children, the exclusion
of Hispanics from the higher education process, an unemployment
rate three times that of the general population, sociological
problems manifested by disproportionate numbers in the
corrections system and on public assistance, law enforcement
profiling Hispanics, gang activity and adverse media
reporting on youth accused of gang activity, English-only
legislation, and immigration problems, among other basic
human rights concerns.
Hispanics are an integral part of the people and the
society that is Utah. They have adopted the dominant
culture although they sense a loss as their own original
culture is not as visible nor as revitalized in Utah
as it is in other states. The future for the Hispanics
of Utah is one of growth and, if the barriers are removed,
possible full participation in the social fabric of
the state.
William H. Gonzalez and Orlando Rivera