- John J. Herrera
John James Herrera (
April 12 , 1910 –October 12 , 1986) was an American attorney, activist, and leader in theMexican American civil right s movement.Herrera was born in Cravens,
Louisiana . He joined theLeague of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) in 1933 and began practicing law in Houston,Texas in 1943. DuringWorld War II , he was involved in the movement to end employment discrimination against Mexican-Americans in Houston shipyards. In 1948 he joined the legal team that brought the school-discrimination case of Minerva Delgado against theBastrop Independent School District to theTexas Supreme Court . The ruling declared educational segregation of Mexican American students illegal in Texas. In 1954, he authored the briefs for the case of "Hernandez v. Texas " that argued that the exclusion of Mexican American jurors was unconstitutional. The case reached the Supreme Court, which decided in Hernandez's favor.Herrera was also a lifelong member of the Democratic Party. He served as president of LULAC from 1952-1953, and continued to serve the organization throughout the 1970s and 1980s. He introduced President
John F. Kennedy at a speaking engagement before a LULAC assembly onNovember 21 , 1963, the day before hisassassination .Herrera died in the city of Houston. His papers are housed at the
Houston Public Library .Trivia
* [http://es.houstonisd.org/Herreraes/herreraes/homeschool.htm John J. Herrera Elementary School] in Houston,
Texas (ofHouston ISD ) is named after Herrera.External links
* [http://www.lib.utexas.edu/taro/houpub/00009/hpub-00009.html Inventory of the John J. Herrera papers] at the
Houston Metropolitan Research Center
*Handbook of Texas|id=HH/fhe63|name=John J. Herrera
*Handbook of Texas|id=HH/jrh1|name=Hernández v. the State of Texas
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