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Page 116 of 163

Cinco de Mayo Celebrations at the University of Colorado Denver


Article in the Fourth Estate–University of Colorado Denver, on a three day celebration of Cinco de Mayo, emphasizing Chicano culture and food with documentaries, music, theatre, and workshops 05-03-1972

August 23, 2020


Cinco De Mayo Celebrations


Multiple festivities are under preparation for 5 de Mayo 1976 including events by La Raza Unida and the Chicano Coalition. Pueblo Natives like Eppy Santova also recall how the events used to take place in the 30s and 40s.

Cinco De Mayo Celebrations

May 11, 2019


Cinco de Mayo Celebration in Lincoln Park/ La Alma


Crowd gathers to listen to music during Cinco de Mayo festival, organized by the West Side Coalition, Lincoln Park/La Alma neighborhood, 1973

August 30, 2020


Cinco De Mayo


Cinco de Mayo Parade makes its way down Main Street in 1979

Cinco De Mayo

May 11, 2019


Churro sheep


Two men standing with a Churro sheep, SLV but exact place and date unknown

Churro sheep

September 21, 2019


Chronology of the coal strike in Trinidad District, 1913


Beginning of a multi-part listing of events. This page includes visits /speeches by Mother Jones on Sept. 2-3 and Sept. 14

Chronology of the coal strike in Trinidad District, 1913

May 12, 2019


Children’s story time at the Denver Public Library, 1920s


Children listen to a story by a Denver Public Library employee in a Denver Park, 1920s-1930

August 30, 2020


Children’s day nursery 1960


Children’s day nursery in Five Points neighborhood, Denver, 1960


Children, oven, and grinder at Starkville, 1902


Children, baking oven, and chili grinder at Mexican Plaza, Starkville, 1902

Children, oven, and grinder at Starkville, 1902

May 12, 2019


Children with Adobe Oven


Italian and Mexican families built outdoor ovens of adobe bricks, plastered with mud. Fires were burned inside the ovens for an hour or two. With the walls hot, the ashes were raked out and pans of bread and pastries were shoved inside with a long-handled paddle. The opening was covered. The hot walls did the baking. Boys wore knee pants, held up by suspenders, or bib overalls. Like their mothers girls wore sun bonnets. This house was made of cottonwood logs, standing upright, then plastered with adobe mud.

Children with Adobe Oven

May 11, 2019


Page 116 of 163