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Identifier

VillanuevaRay_2010_CRP

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Mr. Ray Villanueva begins his story of Chinatown by telling how his mother and aunts came to Salinas to work in the fields. They were from a village in the state of Jalisco, Mexico. His Father, and two uncles, Felix and Ramon, came from the Philippines. They hopped a cargo ship from Hawaii, landed in San Pedro, and came to Salinas to work in the fields. His parents met in 1946 and were married in 1947. Ray was born in 1950. At age three or four Ray becomes aware that he lives in a big house, with a big kitchen and lots of people. It is a labor camp. His father runs two labor camps. Ray starts Lincoln School, in Salinas, at age five. The other kids ask him, “Ray, where do you live?” “In a labor camp,” he says. “What’s a labor camp?” they ask. Ray still knows many of the classmates he went to school with. Many have deep roots in the community: The Gongs, Yees, Meyers, Boslers, Jeffries, and Pias. Ray’s dad liked to gamble at the Streamline pool hall and also at the Rex card room. Ray and his friends went into Chinatown and learned how to shine shoes for a quarter for the GIs from Ft. Ord. Mr. Singley, who later had a shop on Monterey street by Lacey's Auto parts and the United Café, taught him how to do a spit shine. They used pomade or kiwi polish to get a good shine. Ray also sold boiled com for a dime in Chinatown and in the labor camp. After his father would harvest a field, Ramon (the name his father called him), his father and sister would go and gather the corn from those fields. His grandmother boiled it for him, and the money they earned bought their school clothes. Ray remembers many of the businesses in Chinatown: Salinas Valley Market; Golden Dragon; the Shell gas station on Market; Republic Café; Leon’s Night Club; Lloyd, the barber; also, Santos, a Filipino barber; La Revancha; Sinaloa, and the Lotus Inn; and especially Mama’s, the family favorite which served traditional Filipino food. Ray talks about his family each having their favorite dish at Mama’s. A coffee can in the center of the table had spoons and all the serving dishes were different. Ray says he considers Chinatown like Salinas Hollywood. It was exciting with bars and clubs and GIs and restaurants. He says it was like a village. For him it stretched from Sun Street to Bridge to Market Street. There were a lot of labor camps on Sun Street. Ray was baptized at Cristo Rey by Padre Hermosa. He says Salinas then was only fields and cowboys. When industry came in the 60s, Nestles and Smuckers, and when the Main street underpass was built people moved away from Chinatown. Ray’s father bought a house near Front and Market in 1961. When he asked his Father why he had waited so long, he was told that prejudice against Filipinos prevented them from buying houses, and when they could they were only in certain areas. Ray was aware that his parents had faced discrimination. He says he did not feel it at school, at Lincoln and later, but he knows his father did. His father would tell him it was not right to talk to white women when Ray was older and would go with his friends to the theatres on Main Street. He is aware of prejudice toward Filipinos and Asians and has studied about the Salinas lettuce wars of the 40s and 50s. He tells a story of the Sunset Beach Filipino labor camp fire, and a restaurant on South Main that had a sign, “No dogs, or Filipinos.”

Interview Date

11-2-2010

Interviewer

David Lansford; Adam Greene

Geographic Coverage

Salinas (Calif.)

Subjects

Chinatown (Salinas, Calif.); Agricultural laborers; Labor camps; Discrimination in housing; Filipino Americans--Employment; Cultural pluralism

Type

Moving Image

Genre

Oral histories

Digital Format

video/mp4

Language

eng

Digital Collection

Chinatown Renewal Project

Repository

Archives & Special Collections of California State University, Monterey Bay

Disclaimer

These oral histories express the personal views, memories, and opinions of the interviewee. They do not represent the policy or views of California State University, Monterey Bay.

Interview with Ray Villanueva

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