Latino population growing
Lolita Harper
Just say the city’s name, and you’ll know that Latino roots are dug
deep in its history.
Costa Mesa means “table (or plateau) by the coast” in Spanish.
Mesa Verde (green table) and Mesa del Mar (table by the sea) also
boast Spanish names.
Latinos, who in 1990 made up 20% of the city’s population, made up
31.8% in 2000, according to the 2000 census.
Despite the recent boom, the Latino population has a long history
in the city, from its agricultural to industrial era and now to the
service and entrepreneurial era.
Mitch Barrie, a member of the Costa Mesa Historical Society, has
said that many of the Latinos living in the city were farm workers
who lived near the farms on the Westside.
“Mexicans have always been here,” he said. “This was Mexico, of
course, and some of them stayed after California was annexed. In the
class pictures of schools on the Westside, you always find Mexican
children and also some Japanese children. The [Latinos] are never
identified in the pictures, though, so people probably didn’t mingle
much. Many were laborers who worked on farms and didn’t make much
money, so they weren’t able to live in the good parts of town.”
In 1930, the Monte Vista School opened for Mexicans only. Some
believe the separate learning institution was proof of racial
tensions, but others felt it was the most beneficial for all the
children involved.
Costa Mesa Grammar School Principal Dale Evans “was convinced that
the district’s Mexican students -- the majority of whom were having
language difficulties -- would learn more in their own school,”
according to “A Slice of Orange: The History of Costa Mesa,” by
Edrick Miller.
Just around the time of the city’s incorporation, the Supreme
Court ruled on Brown vs. Board of Education, overturning the notion
of “separate but equal” facilities for different ethnic groups.
The city continued to grow, and the children began learning
together. As time went on, Latinos, like others, moved away from
agriculture into industrial, service and business. Racial tensions
were present, but not consuming, and like today, different segments
of the city chose whether they wished to intermingle or not.
Longtime resident and activist Paty Madueno said she has noticed a
positive change after 1980, when she moved here.
“When I came here, we were people who were afraid to walk on the
streets,” she said. “People didn’t appreciate seeing us and didn’t
like for me to speak Spanish. Some people still give me dirty looks
because they think I’m saying bad things about them, I guess.
“We were still struggling to get a Spanish Mass at St. Joachim
Church,” she said. “By 1986, we had two or three of them. The Latino
population gradually increased, and acceptance came gradually as
well. Now it’s much better. It is much different from that time.
Costa Mesa is a different city, a friendlier city.”
In the late 1990s, many Latino organizations began to form. The
Latino Business Council began in 1997 with a mission to promote
Latino businesses citywide. Since then, it has expanded its focus to
build relationships with the City Council and the Costa Mesa
community.
The Latino Community Network formed in 1999 to get involved in the
city’s Westside planning efforts.
While the Westside is still home to the largest percentage of
Latinos, those of Latin American decent have found success citywide.
Many growing businesses, such as El Chinaco, Taco Mesa and El Matate
line 19th Street, while many with Spanish surnames fill the towering
offices at law and accounting firms in South Coast Metro.
“That’s why we like Costa Mesa,” Madueno said. “It isn’t square;
it adapts to the needs of families. A lot of our families, legal or
not, are day laborers or low-salary workers, and Costa Mesa has a lot
of the businesses that our families work for.”
Given all indications, the Latino community will continue to be a
big part of Costa Mesa history.
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