National Chicano
Moratorium March

Los Angeles, California

“During the early 1940’s there were a group of young Chicanos who were artos (fed up) with the System. They wore their hair long, went against the norm by dressing unconventionally and confronted Society with a defiant attitude. They were pachucos. These Chicanos were the first to protest and rebel by direct confrontation with the Establishment ...”

— Ruben Salazar, Pachuco Folk Heroes
— They Were First to Be Different, July 17, 1970.

Laguna Park, located in East Los Angles, served as the terminus of the 3.7-mile-long route of the National Chicano Moratorium March held on August 29, 1970. The demonstration included 20,000 to 30,000 participants and was intended to raise concerns about the high casualty rate of Latino soldiers in Vietnam, police violence, poor working conditions, and other issues. The peaceful demonstration devolved into chaos as police shot tear gas into the crowd. At the end of the day, dozens of people were injured and three were killed including Mexican American Journalist Ruben Salazar, Angel (José) Diaz, and Lyn Ward. In 1970 the park was renamed to commemorate Salazar.

History

Following World War II there was a dramatic rise in political and social activism in Mexican American communities, particularly on the West Coast of the United States. The Chicano Movement (or El Movimiento) emerged with the aims of challenging institutional racism, securing equal labor and political rights, and engendering cultural unity among its members.

In 1959, as the movement was gaining momentum, Mexican American journalist Ruben Salazar joined The Los Angeles Times, where as a journalist and columnist he became embedded in local and national Latino issues. In early 1961 he reported on the increase in participation by Mexican American residents in the city’s civics and politics and in 1963 published a series of six articles, Spanish Speaking Angelenos, addressing the history and lives of Mexican Americans. In the series’ first article, he questioned what Mexican Americans should call themselves aside from “Spanish-speaking Americans.” Salazar likely influenced others to consider their identity and reclaim the word “Chicano,” which was originally used as a slur.

In March 1968, while Salazar was the Times’ Mexico City Bureau Chief, approximately 15,000 high school students walked out of seven different East Los Angeles schools to the inequality of education between Anglo and Mexican Americans. Following the event, Salazar returned to Los Angeles to report on the Chicano community.

Concurrently, anti-Vietnam War sentiment grew in the Chicano community as a disproportionate number of Hispanic draftees were sent abroad and killed in combat. Members of the Brown Berets, an influential Chicano, community-based social justice organization and others demonstrated against the war. In late 1969 Brown Beret cofounder David Sanchez, Rosalio Muñoz, and other activists established the Chicano Moratorium Committee to advocate against the war. The committee intended to raise awareness of war related inequalities, including the disproportionate deaths of Mexican American soldiers, as well as domestic injustices to the Chicano community.

Image 1 Alt Text Coverage of police brutality in the Chicano Student News, 1968. Courtesy University of California, Los Angeles.

The Chicano Moratorium Committee’s first march (December 20, 1969), led to similar events throughout the Southwest and the second march in Los Angles (February 28, 1970) was attended by tens of thousands of protesters. In anticipation of a third event, organizers communicated and cooperated with law enforcement to ensure a peaceful demonstration. Nonetheless, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department and the City of Los Angeles Police Department called for officers, armed with riot guns, to erect barricades and position themselves at street corners along the route.

Image 1 Alt Text The National Chicano Moratorium March, 1970. Courtesy University of California, Los Angeles.

On August 29, 1970, approximately 20,000 to 30,000 protestors, including families and children gathered outside the East Los Angeles Civic Center to participate in what was called the National Chicano Moratorium March. The attendees marched peacefully for 3.7 miles along East Third Street, Atlantic and Whittier Boulevards, terminating at Laguna Park (now Salazar Park), an eight-acre rectilinear park that was established by the county in 1938. Members of the Moratorium Committee accompanied the marchers, acting as monitors and maintaining order. A rally commenced at the park, featuring entertainers and speeches by prominent Chicano leaders, including Rosalio Muñoz and Rodolfo “Corky” Gonzales. Salazar and his team attended the demonstration, reporting on it for The Los Angeles Times and the Spanish language television station KMEX.

During the rally a dispute broke out at the neighboring Green Mill Liquor Store. The owner called the county sheriffs, who arrived at 2:34 pm. By 3:10 pm deputies with riot guns instructed people to disperse, pushing and following them towards the adjacent park. Moratorium monitors requested that the officers leave the park, who instead declared that the demonstration was illegal and called in reinforcements. Officers indiscriminately fired tear gas to disperse the crowds and boarded buses used by protestors, beating those inside. As civil unrest spread eastward, Salazar and his team documented the events, eventually seeking shelter in the Silver Dollar Café (now Sounds of Music Record Store) along Whittier Boulevard. Shortly after, Los Angeles County Sherriff’s Deputy Thomas Wilson fired two tear gas projectiles into the bar. One of the projectiles hit Salazar, killing him instantly. The day prior his last column appeared in print, titled, The Mexican American NEDA Much Better School System, it was, like many that came before it, an act of civil rights activism as much as it was an act of journalism.

Image 1 Alt Text Portrait of Salazar carried in the Mexican Independence Day Parade eighteen days after his death, 1970. Courtesy University of California, Los Angeles.

Today, Salazar has become a revered symbol for the movement, memorialized in , , and . In September 1970 Laguna Park was renamed Ruben Salzar Park and in 2020 was listed as a contributing feature of the “National Chicano Moratorium March August 29, 1970” listed in the National Register of Historic Places.

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Detail of Interpretive Marker, Courtesy SALT Landscape Architects.

Visibility

Several features of the park that existed during the Chicano Moratorium March are extant, including palm trees, planted in allées along the site’s north and east perimeters. The approximately 70-foot-tall trees stand as living witnesses to the event.

In 2001 artist Paul Botello designed and painted a mural featuring a portrait of Salazar on the western exterior wall of the park’s recreation buildings and in 2014 a commemorating Salazar was installed north of the structure facing Whittier Boulevard. An additional plaque dedicated to Salazar is displayed on an exterior wall of the former Silver Dollar Café.

In 2020 Los Angeles County Department of Parks and Recreation (LADPR) engaged Kounkuey Design Initiative (KDI), a community development and design nonprofit, and Promesa Boyle Heights, a social justice collaborative, to lead a public engagement process about the rehabilitation and commemoration of Salazar Park. In 2021 LADPR received state funding to rehabilitate the park and in early 2023 hired SALT landscape architects to lead the project, with KDI continuing to engage the community. The project is slated to be completed in late 2025 and will feature: interpretive markers; quotes by Salazar, marchers, and others installed in the ground plane; vertical metal posts (representing the signboards carried by marchers) inscribed with quotes; and a series of nine banners oriented along a pedestrian path, providing a chronology of the events of August 29, 1970.

Image 1 Alt Text Photographs from Community Engagement Series. Courtesy Kounkuey Design Initiative (KDI).

While the park’s official is absent of interpretation or commemoration, the Los Angeles Conservancy’s highlights and its history. The Conservancy also produced the excellent nomination that resulted in the listing of the National Chicano Moratorium March in the National Register of Historic Places in 2020.

Additional online resources include an with Rosalio Muñoz produced by Departures (PBS SoCAl’s multidisciplinary media studio for community engagement, creative placemaking, and social advocacy), which aired in 2013. Additionally in 2020, to commemorate the 50-year anniversary of the march, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Chicano Studies Research Center created the online , replete with resources, including digital archives, oral histories, and videos.

What You Can Do to Help

Visit the Los Angeles Conservancy’s website to learn more about the National Chicano Moratorium March and support their work, including efforts to strengthen and enrich interpretation of significant sites along the historic 3.7-mile route of the march.

Contact M. Rosalind Sagara, the Conservancy’s Neighborhood Outreach Manager to share personal experiences and to become involved in ongoing efforts to tell stories about Chicano heritage in Los Angeles. It is important for all Angelenos to know the history of the event, to better understand the sites that help tell this history, and to acknowledge the many people, groups, and leaders who took a stand for Chicano civil rights.

M. Rosalind Sagara
Neighborhood Outreach Manager
Los Angeles Conservancy
523 West Sixth Street, Suite 826, Los Angeles, CA 90014
T: (213) 623-2484
E: rsagara@laconservancy.org

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  • Photo by Michael Wells, 2024.