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University of South Florida Libraries: Tampa/Cuba Latino Periodicals "Historic Mexican and Mexican American Press". University of Arizona Libraries. (Publicly accessible digital library of "historic Mexican and Mexican American publications published in Tucson, El Paso, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Sonora, Mexico from the mid-1800s to the ...
Arizona was thinly colonized by Mexico in the 1840s, with little protection from much larger Amerindian population. The U.S. won the Mexican–American War (1846–1848) and Mexico ceded to the U.S. the northern 70% of modern-day Arizona through the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848). On June 8, 1854 the United States bought 29,670-square-mile ...
Many Latinos in Arizona have had a fraught and complicated relationship with the state's politics: Then-Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio and his agency racially profiled and illegally detained ...
As of 2010, Hispanic and Latinos were the fastest growing population demographic in the United States. As of 2020, Hispanics and Latinos make up 18.7% of the total U.S. population (approximately 62 million out of a total of around 330 million). The state with the largest percentage of Hispanics and Latinos is New Mexico at 47.7%.
A Latino photographer in Arizona, José Muñoz, has spent his life documenting Hispanic life in the state - from celebrations to historic events and marches. This photographer is leaving a ...
It was announced that Myspace lost 12 years worth of content in a server migration gone wrong. So that meant any songs, photos and videos uploaded to the site between 2003-2015 were straight up ...
This is a list of Hispanos, both settlers and their descendants (either fully or partially of such origin), who were born or settled, between the early 16th century and 1850, in what is now the southwestern United States (including California, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, southwestern Colorado, Utah and Nevada), as well as Florida, Louisiana (1763–1800) and other Spanish colonies in what is ...
In April, the state Supreme Court ruled that Arizona’s near-total ban on abortion dating from 1864 was still in effect, instead of the 15-week ban that had been passed in 2022.