Belen Robles

Belen Robles

Belen Robles with G.W. Bush

Belen Robles meets G. W. Bush in the 1990s. Belen Robles was the fifth child of a family of 10 children born to immigrants who had come to the United States from Mexico in the early 20th century, her father from the state of Chihuahua, her mother from Zacatecas. Attending parochial school at St. Mary’s, she began high school at St. Joseph’s but graduated from Bowie High School in 1955. Three months her graduation, she married Ramiro Robles. While trying to find a job to support the young family, she realized that women were second class citizens, but so were Latinos. In 1957, Robles joined the League of United Latin American Citizens or LULAC, the oldest and largest Latino civil rights organization in the United States. With LULAC, Robles in particular fought for desegregation and education for immigrants and made history when she was elected as the first woman national president of the League. She still is an active member of the LULAC National Board. Also, Robles continues to serve on numerous local and national positions and plays an active role in the corridors of power to ensure that the culture, history and economic conditions of El Paso are not overlooked. She also is President and CEO of Belen Robles & Associates, a public/private consulting firm that offers services on Hispanic issues, public relations, image-enhancement, marketing & diversity training. She received numerous awards and was inducted to the El Paso Women Hall of Fame. Sources: http://epcc.libguides.com/content.php?pid=309255&sid=2891598 http://www.epcc.edu/BoardofTrustees/Pages/BelenRobles.aspx

Area: Out of Area / Out of Area

Source: C.L. Sonnichsen Special Collections, University of Texas at El Paso Library. Collection Name: PH060 Belen Robles. Photo ID: Robles30.jpg.

Uploaded by: UTEP Library Special Collections

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Belen Robles with her Kids

Belen Robles was the fifth child of a family of 10 children born to immigrants who had come to the United States from Mexico in the early 20th century, her father from the state of Chihuahua, her mother from Zacatecas. Attending parochial school at St. Mary’s, she began high school at St. Joseph’s but graduated from Bowie High School in 1955. Three months her graduation, she married Ramiro Robles. While trying to find a job to support the young family, she realized that women were second class citizens, but so were Latinos. In 1957, Robles joined the League of United Latin American Citizens or LULAC, the oldest and largest Latino civil rights organization in the United States. With LULAC, Robles in particular fought for desegregation and education for immigrants and made history when she was elected as the first woman national president of the League. She still is an active member of the LULAC National Board. Also, Robles continues to serve on numerous local and national positions and plays an active role in the corridors of power to ensure that the culture, history and economic conditions of El Paso are not overlooked. She also is President and CEO of Belen Robles & Associates, a public/private consulting firm that offers services on Hispanic issues, public relations, image-enhancement, marketing & diversity training. She received numerous awards and was inducted to the El Paso Women Hall of Fame. Sources: http://epcc.libguides.com/content.php?pid=309255&sid=2891598 http://www.epcc.edu/BoardofTrustees/Pages/BelenRobles.aspx

Area: Central / Chamizal

Source: C.L. Sonnichsen Special Collections, University of Texas at El Paso Library. Collection Name: PH060 Belen Robles. Photo ID: A03.jpg.

Uploaded by: UTEP Library Special Collections

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Report this entry

Choose the most important reason for this report

Your name

Your email address

Optional detail

Thank you for your report

More from the same community-collection

DIGIE

Pride G.C. company construction workers from left to right ...

DIGIE

Gibson Group Technical Director David Crossan observing the ...

DIGIE

Staff member of the El Paso Museum of History Lisa Heinemann ...

DIGIE

From left to right, Gibson Group Director of Exhibitions Allan ...

DIGIE

From left to right Senior Curator Barbara Angus, Staff member of ...

DIGIE

From left to right Staff member of the El Paso Museum of History ...

DIGIE

From left to right Development Director of the El Paso Museum of ...

DIGIE

Gibson Group Director of Exhibitions - Allan Smith observing the ...

DIGIE

From left to right Senior Curator Barbara Angus and Staff member ...

El Paso Museum of Art

El Paso Museum of Art

USBC Bowling Tournament

El Paso Strikes Again! 2015 El Paso Bowling Tournament.

FAM Tour 2014

Visit El Paso FAM Tour 2014

Fan Fiesta 2013

Fan Fiesta at the El Paso Convention Center

Folklorico Dancers 2013

Folklorico Dancers 2013

Folklorico Dancers 2010

Folklorico Dancers 2010

Plaza Theater 2013

Foreigner at The Plaza Theater 2013

Fungi Mungle 2014

Fan Fiesta 2014. El Paso Convention Center.

Gallery 2014

Galley 2014

Youth Dance Performance 2014

Youth Dance Performance 2014 - Downtown El Paso, Texas.

El Paso History Museum

El Paso History Museum 2013

El Paso History Museum

El Paso History Museum Exhibit 2013

Digie

Image of the building of the Digital Wall 2015.

Plaza Hotel

The old Plaza Hotel at Mills and Oregon.

home.search_collection