Key facts and moments in Bracero history include:
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August 4, 1942 – the Mexican Farm Labor Program Agreement is signed by the governments of Mexico and the United States, the first establishing the legalization and control of Mexican migrant workers along America’s southern border area
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Background Information about the Bracero Program
The economic and social upheaval stemming from both the Great Depression and World War II forced the United States to seek out a source of inexpensive labor to meet its manpower needs in both agriculture and railway maintenance.
Due to this need, a treaty was signed in 1942 between the United States and Mexico to alleviate the shortage of labor. With many American men sent off to fight in Europe and elsewhere, the recruitment and processing of an available pool of laborers from Mexico created what is called the bracero program. Bracero is a Spanish term which can be defined loosely as “one who works with his arms”, or as a close equivalent, as a field hand.
Under this program, Mexican workers, many of whom were rural peasants, were allowed to enter the United States on a temporary basis. Between 1942 and 1964, the year the program ended, it was estimated that approximately 4.6 million Mexican nationals came to work in the U.S. as braceros.
Many laborers faced an array of injustices and abuses, including substandard housing, discrimination, and unfulfilled contracts or being cheated out of wages. Nevertheless, the impact of the bracero program on the history and patterns of migration and settlement in the United States remains an important area to explore and assess, particularly in the contexts of civil rights, social justice, and Latino history in the United States.
Several short-term labor agreements existed until 1951, when Public Law 45 passed and was reluctantly signed by President Harry S. Truman.3 Many labor groups viewed the program as a temporary fix to the labor shortages during WWII. After the war, when the soldiers returned, the labor groups then considered the presence of Mexican workers as a detriment to employing American laborers. Despite labor opposition, many large farm owners were still able to lobby Congress to change the agreement between Mexico and the United States and create Public Law 78. This law had to be renewed by vote on a biannual basis, until the program ended in 1964.
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Primary Source Documents from the Bracero Program
- Photo 1:Women talk and work at home with children in a braceros family home in San Mateo, Mexico.
- Photo 2: An official examines teeth and mouth of a bracero with a flashlight while others stand next to him with the back to the wall at the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico.
- Photo 3: A bracero with a short-handled hoe over his shoulder stands in a Californian field.
- Photo 4: Braceros pick lettuce while an official stands close to the workers in the Salinas Valley, California.
- Photo 5: Braceros have lunch in the Monterrey Processing Center, Mexico, dining hall.