Gallery

Balloon salesman, Alpine Street School’s Cinco de Mayo Fiesta at the Plaza, May 5, 1937. Adapted from Cinco de Mayo's First Seventy-Five Years in Alta California: From Spontaneous Behavior to Sedimented Memory, 1862 to 1937.
Original announcement published in San Francisco, California, of the Mexican victory 1,500 miles away over French troops at Battle of Puebla. Adapted from Cinco de Mayo's First Seventy-Five Years in Alta California: From Spontaneous Behavior to Sedimented Memory, 1862 to 1937.
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This year marks the 146th Cinco de Mayo celebration, and yet many are still unaware of the significance and history of the celebration, let alone that it was invented here in California. On May 5, 1862, the Mexican army pushed back the invading French army at the Battle of Puebla; a victory that resonated across the state of California. The first Cinco de Mayo celebration took place a year later, but throughout the years the history has been lost. Last year, a paper was published by the Center for the Study of Latino Health & Culture to help shed some light on the history of Cinco de Mayo. Cinco de Mayo “provides a collective identity for Latinos, whether they were born here in California or immigrated from Mexico, Central America or South America. It binds them together in an identity – it is an important to Latinos as the Alamo is to Anglo-Texans,” said Dr. Hayes-Bautista in the May 4, 2007 edition of UCLA News. Throughout the years Cinco de Mayo has been celebrated with the prominent display of both the Mexican and U.S. flags, parades, picnics and patriotic speeches. Cinco de Mayo's First Seventy-Five Years in Alta California: From Spontaneous Behavior to Sedimented Memory, 1862 to 1937. The Southern California Quarterly, HSSC, 2007. Hayes-Bautista, David E.; Chamberlin, Cynthia L.
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Cinco de Mayo