Octaviano Ambrosio Larrazolo Explained

Octaviano Larrazolo
Jr/Sr:United States Senator
State:New Mexico
Term Start:December 7, 1928
Term End:March 3, 1929
Predecessor:Bronson M. Cutting
Successor:Bronson M. Cutting
Order1:4th Governor of New Mexico
Lieutenant1:Benjamin F. Pankey
Term Start1:January 1, 1919
Term End1:January 1, 1921
Predecessor1:Washington Lindsey
Successor1:Merritt C. Mechem
Birth Name:Octaviano Ambrosio Larrazolo Corral
Birth Date:7 December 1859
Birth Place:Valle de Allende, Mexico
Death Place:Albuquerque, New Mexico, U.S.
Party:Republican (1884–1895, 1911–1930)
Democratic (1895–1911)
Education:St. Michael's College (BA)

Octaviano Ambrosio Larrazolo Corral (December 7, 1859April 7, 1930) was a Republican politician who served as the fourth governor of New Mexico and a United States senator. He was the first Latino United States senator.

Early life

Larrazolo was born in Valle de Allende in Chihuahua, Mexico, on December 7, 1859, to Don Octaviano, a wealthy landowner, and Doña Donaciana Corral de Larrazolo. He was brought up in a wealthy home and was taught to read and write in his home; he later briefly attended school in his town but left after his schoolteacher beat him.[1] In 1863, French soldiers ransacked the Larrazolo home because the family supported Benito Juárez's revolt against the French.

In 1870 at the age of eleven, Larrazolo left Mexico for Tucson, Arizona Territory, under the care of Jean Salpointe, a French-born bishop of Arizona. Larrazolo left with the bishop because he intended to study theology to become a priest and because his family had fallen into bankruptcy and could not support his schooling. After completing his primary studies with the bishop, Larrazolo studied theology at the St. Michael's College at Santa Fe, New Mexico Territory, graduating in 1876 at the age of 18. He considered entering the priesthood right after his graduation but secured a teaching position instead; he later also taught in El Paso County, Texas. Meanwhile, he started studying law; he taught in the day and studied law at night.[2] On December 11, 1884, Larrazolo became a U.S. citizen in order to prepare himself to become a lawyer. In this same year, he registered with the Texas State Republican Party.

Larrazolo was admitted to the Texas state bar in 1888. He was elected district attorney for the Western District of Texas in 1890 and reelected in 1892. He held the position until 1894.

Larrazolo moved to Las Vegas, New Mexico Territory, in 1895. He practiced law in that town and became involved in Democratic politics and focused on civil rights for the Mexicans and Hispanos who comprised two thirds of New Mexico's population. Larrazolo had difficulty finding success as a Democrat because most Latinos identified as Republicans. That difficulty is shown by the fact that he narrowly lost elections to become Territorial Delegate to the U.S. Congress in 1900, 1906 and 1908 though the 1908 election was extremely close and subject to several credible charges of fraud.[3]

Political career

In 1910, Larrazolo attacked the machine politics in New Mexico that he felt were exploiting Hispanic voters across the state. He feared New Mexico was close to becoming like the South where Jim Crow laws stripped African Americans of their rights. That speech is considered a milestone since he forced both Republicans and Democrats to acknowledge the concerns of Hispanics in New Mexico and became the most vocal leader in his generation. In the speech, he said "you [Hispanics].. have allowed yourselves to be controlled by other men but you will be controlled by bosses only as long as you permit the yoke to rest on you.... Every native citizen must unite in supporting this constitution because it secures to you people of New Mexico your rights—every one of them; the rights also of your children and in such a manner that they can never be taken away... if you want to acquire your freedom and transmit this sacred heritage in the land hallowed by the blood of your forefathers who fought to protect it...Do not wait until you are put in the position of Arizona which in two years will be able to disfranchise every Spanish speaking citizen."[4]

In 1911, the New Mexican Territory held a constitutional convention in preparation for its entering the Union. Larrazolo was one of the Latino delegates to be chosen to attend the convention. To his displeasure, the State Convention of the Democratic Party denied his request for half of all statewide nominees to be Hispanic to represent the 60 percent of the population of New Mexico that was Hispanic. Despite this, Larrazolo had considerable success in implementing pro-Latino measures in the New Mexico Constitution. He and other people insisted that the Spanish-speaking population of New Mexico be protected by the new state constitution to avoid the rights of the Spanish-speaking people from being stripped when New Mexico entered the Union. He was afraid that the Union's segregation policies applied to African Americans would be used to justify the infringement of Latinos' rights in New Mexico once it entered the Union.

Larrazolo and the other Latino delegates succeeded in implementing pro-Latino measures and language into the New Mexico State Constitution. The new Bill of Rights stated, "The rights, privileges and immunities, civil, political and religious, guaranteed to the people of New Mexico by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo shall be preserved inviolate" (Article II Section V). The Education Article (Article XII, Section 8), gave the legislature authority to provide training for teachers in public schools so that "they may become proficient in both the English and Spanish languages, to qualify them to teach Spanish-speaking pupils...."[5] Section 10 of the article assured the right of children of Spanish descent to attend public education institutions and prohibited the establishment of separate schools. To the dismay of Larrazolo, the state Democrats unsuccessfully tried to prevent the ratification of the state constitution because of those pro-Latino provisions. That made him become a Republican, which he remained for the rest of his life.

Because Larrazolo advocated so strongly for Latino rights, many New Mexico politicians considered him a race agitator. Even though many New Mexico politicians resented him, Larrazolo still managed to gain a lot of political credibility, especially from Latinos who were glad for the work that he did he for Latinos. His popularity throughout New Mexico caused the New Mexico Republican party to nominate him for governor of New Mexico. The campaign in 1918, however, was an intense one that exposed some factions within the Hispanic community. His Democratic opponent, Félix García, claimed that Larrazolo's birth in Chihuahua precluded him from understanding the concerns of "native New Mexicans." He was elected Governor of the State of New Mexico in 1918 and became the first Mexican-born Latino to be governor of New Mexico. Larrazolo's narrow victory, however, seemed to quiet most of the debate about whether he could authentically advocate on behalf of the Spanish-speaking population.[6]

Throughout his time as governor, he had various controversies and successes. In the first year of his term, the rampant fear of anarchism and the gravity of a coal-mining strike convinced Larrazolo to declare martial law to suppress the strike. He was also criticized for pardoning Mexican troops who raided parts of New Mexico with Pancho Villa. He believed that since the Mexican troops were acting under orders from their superior, they should not be held accountable. He also supported and signed a new income tax law, which angered his Republican Party. The aspects that he won praise for was his support for the creation of the League of Nations, advocacy for bilingual education, support for the civil rights of Mexican immigrants in the state.[7] He was also a supporter of the women's suffrage amendment to the United States Constitution.[8]

Since he angered the Republican Party many times throughout his time as governor, the New Mexico Republican Party did not renominate Larrazolo to be governor of New Mexico. That caused him to briefly return to El Paso County, Texas, to practice law. He opened a firm in El Paso with Nick Meyer and practiced in New Mexico and Mexico. In 1922, Larrazolo opened an office in Albuquerque as well.[9] However, he did not stay out of politics for too long. In 1923, the state legislature of New Mexico nominated him to become governor of Puerto Rico. He lost that bid but used the jolt of political popularity that he received by his consideration to be appointed governor of Puerto Rico to re-enter politics in New Mexico. He ran and lost an election to become a justice of the New Mexico Supreme Court in 1924.

However, he was elected in 1927 to the New Mexico State House of Representatives. In 1927, however, the Democratic U.S. Senator from New Mexico Andrieus Jones died. Larrazolo ran for and on 6 November 1928 won Jones's remaining term, which made Larrazolo the first Mexican-American to serve in the U.S. Senate.[10] He was now very old and suffered with many illnesses and so he attended only one session of Congress and introduced one legislative action, calling for the establishment of an industrial school in New Mexico for the Spanish-speaking youth to promote equal opportunity.

Larrazolo died on April 7, 1930.

See also

External links

|-|-|-

Notes and References

  1. Web site: LARRAZOLO, Octaviano Ambrosio US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives. history.house.gov. en. 2017-10-11.
  2. Web site: New Mexico Office of the State Historian people. newmexicohistory.org. 2015-12-09.
  3. Book: Larrazola v. Andrews.
  4. Web site: LARRAZOLO, Octaviano Ambrosio US House of Representatives: History, Art & Archives . 2017-10-11 . history.house.gov . en.
  5. Web site: Constitution . https://web.archive.org/web/20140720022635/http://www.sos.state.nm.us/Public_Records_And_Publications/2013nmconst.pdf . 20 Jul 2014.
  6. John Chávez, The Lost Land: The Chicano Image of the Southwest, (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1984), pp. 102-103.
  7. María Rosa García-Acevedo, "The Forgotten Diaspora: Mexican Immigration to New Mexico," in The Contested Homeland: A Chicano History of New Mexico, ed. Erlinda Gonzalez-Berry and David R. Maciel, (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2000), pp. 222-223.
  8. "Octaviano Larrazolo," Hispanic Americans in Congress, 1822-1995, https://www.loc.gov/rr/hispanic/congress/larrazolo.html
  9. Web site: Octaviano A. Larrazolo Papers 1841-1981 (bulk 1885-1930) . 2017-10-11 . rmoa.unm.edu . 21 May 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210521161455/https://rmoa.unm.edu/docviewer.php?docId=nmu1mss614bc.xml . dead .
  10. Web site: New Mexico Office of the State Historian people . 2015-12-09 . newmexicohistory.org.