Historias: Stories of El Paso - Virtual Exhibition
Historias: Stories of El Paso - Virtual Exhibition

Historias: Stories of El Paso - Virtual Exhibition

Historias: Stories of El Paso A virtual exhibition curated by our community Courtesy of: RPN Title: Kress Crossing Historia Type: Photograph I was born in Cd. Juarez in December 1953. I was the 7th child out of twelve kids. My parents also had their aunts and uncles live with us. Our household was cozy and warm and full of people. My mother also had the task of feeding all of us three times a day. My father was a bakery owner and my mother a housewife. My father would bring all the US coins from the bakery sales to my mother. I remember rolling pennies, dimes, nickels and quarters into rolls. My mother would go shopping in El Paso with $4 or $5 dollars in coins. Many times I would accompany my mother on her shopping trips. We would ride the Red Bus to go to El Paso, The Red Bus in the late 1950s had a route from El Paso to Juarez. We were lucky that one of the bus stops was just a block from our house. We would go to the Kress building where my mother would look for items on her list. She would let me stay at the tables with piles of clothes for kids. I loved looking through all the clothes until I would find a pair of shorts or a dress. My mother never said no to my requests. When there was money left over, she would treat us for ice cream at the Kress Ice Cream Parlor. Last, we would cross the street to see the live alligators at the plaza (Plaza de Los Lagartos, known to the Mexican people). Then, walk to the basement of the plaza to use the restrooms before going home. I vividly remember my first visit to El Paso. The wide streets, beautiful buildings, and the plaza impressed me. I was mesmerized and awed when I first saw a little girl about my age with blue and blond hair at the plaza. I had never seen blond hair or blue eyes. I also saw an elegant older lady with a nice hairdo, makeup, a floral dress just below her knees with sheer stockings showing her legs. I thought to myself, “ I like this country, this is where I want to live.” In Mexico growing up, older women wore long dark petticoats, a plain blouse, and usually with an apron. No makeup and their long hair always in a braid or two. Lucky for me, I came to live in El Paso at the age of nine. Became a US citizen in 1966 at the age of 12. I moved to California, traveled to Japan, Germany, and France. But I always missed home. I moved back to El Paso in 1975 where I finished my degree at UTEP, met my husband, and formed a family. I never looked back.

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: RPN

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

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

El Paso County Courthouse, 1886-1917

El Paso County Courthouse, first of three at current location.

Washington Hotel

The Washington Hotel was located at 324 1/2 South El Paso St.. ...

Downtown Building

Current County Courthouse

El Paso Fire Department Racing Team

These men were Southwest champions with a run time of 22 seconds ...

Portrait of African American Woman

The picture shows an African American woman in 1880's

Portrait of two Women

The image captures two women, both wear beautiful white dresses ...

Portrait of Two African American Women

The image portrays two African American Women.

Portrait of Two African American Women

The images of these two African American Women was taken in the ...

Little Girl

The image portrays a little girl sitting on a kind of bench. The ...

Cabinet Portrait of Little Child

The image shows a cabinet portrait of a little girl. First ...

Portrait of African American Couple

The image shows a African American couple on a cabinet card. ...

African American Boy

The cabinet card photograph of the African American boy was ...

Portrait of African American Man

The portrait of this African American man was taken by the ...

Samuel Cleavenger Sr.

Samuel Cleavenger was the father of Franklin Lee Cleavenger, who ...

Dr. Haldeen Braddy and Manuel Acosta

Dr. Braddy personally signs his book "The Paradox of Pancho ...

Dr. Wayne Lorentzen

Dr. Wayne Lane Lorentzen was a retired doctor of internal ...

John Wesley Hardin (May 26, 1853 – August 19, 1895)

Hardin claimed to have already killed 42 men, but newspapers of ...

Leon Metz

Leon Metz is an American cultural historian, author, television ...

Jack McGrath

El Pasoan Jack McGrath, little else is known about the photo.

Anita Lee Blair & guide dog Fawn, El Paso, TX

Anita Blair was a state representative and community activist, ...

Mrs. R.L. Pat Brown

The image shows a glamorous shot of Mrs. R.L. Pat Brown.

Jesse Castillo

The image shows the light weight boxer Jesse Castillo. He was a ...

Pat Garrett - Customs Collector - El Paso, Texas

Patrick Floyd "Pat" Garrett (June 5, 1850 – February 29, 1908) ...

home.search_collection