Latino Firsts: Trailblazers and Milestones in United States History - Nicolás Kanellos

Latino Firsts: Trailblazers and Milestones in United States History - Nicolás Kanellos

Brand / Editură: Nicols Kanellos
195.02 RON
Salute the Latino legends, pioneers, and trailblazers! Celebrate the Hispanic milestones, accomplishments, and victories! An inspiring exploration of groundbreaking individuals and pioneering events, Latino Firsts: Trailblazers and Milestones in United States History honors the indelible mark Hispanics have made on American history and society. Featured are brigadier general Richard E. Cavazos, Nobel laureate Gabriela Mistral, actress America Ferrera, playwright Lin-Manuel Miranda, civil rights activist Dolores Huerta, Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science Francisco Ayala, artist Jen-Michel Basquiat, weightlifter Sarah Elizabeth Robles, and more than a thousand other notable people and accomplishments, such as ... Astronaut Frank Rubio (1975-) set he American record for the longest spaceflight of 371 days aboard the International Space Station Oscar Muñoz CEO of United Airlines; Roberto Goizueta, CEO of Coca-Cola Spanish-born philosopher George Santayana (1863-1952) was the first Latino philosopher and writer to receive a Ph.D. from Harvard Fashion designers Oscar de la Renta and Carolina Herrera Film director/producer Eva Longoria was named USA Today's Women of the Year in 2024 Spanish explorers were the first Europeans to set up settlements in Alaska and Canada's Pacific Coast, at least twelve of them Cattle and ranching first introduced to Hawaii by Hispanic cowboys from the Southwest The first admiral of the US Navy, David Farragut, was the son of a Spaniard and a US Revolutionary War hero Spanish immigrant Rafael Guastavino, architect and designer, whose landmark designs include Grand Central Station, Carnegie Hall, the old Penn Station, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art Many US laws are based on Hispanic-Mexican law, including family law (community property, common-law marriage, homestead law, adoption law) and water and land rights laws The recent changing of names for military bases from Confederate soldiers has resulted in the naming of Fort Hidalgo Before slavery was abolished in the United States, Latinos in Florida and Texas operated extensive underground railroads assisting escaped slaves to reach freedom in Hispanic Florida, Texas and Mexico Hernandez v. Texas, a 1964 Supreme Court case brought by Mexican American attorneys that desegregated juries, was a precedent for Brown v.

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