- Irma Rangel (Texas politician)
Infobox_Congressman
name = Irma Lerma Rangel
date of birth= birth date|1931|5|15|mf=y
place of birth=Starr County, Texas
state =Texas
district = 43rd
term = 1976-2003
preceded = New District
succeeded =Juan Manuel Escobar
party = DemocratIrma Lerma Rangel (1931-2003) was an
attorney and state legislator inSouth Texas . Her office was based inKingsville, Texas .Born on
May 15 ,1931 , Rangel was the youngest of three daughters. Her father, Presciliano Martinez Rangel, fromDuval County , wasorphan ed at an early age and was able to attend school for only one year. Her mother, Herminia Lerma, moved with her parents toKingsville fromStarr County and they worked in the fields so that she was not able to receive an education past third grade. She too was orphaned when she was only eleven years old. When she met Pres (as he was generally called), she found the "man of her dreams" and they married and settled inKingsville where they both devoted their lives to opposing oldstereotype s and combating injustices. They were faced withdiscrimination in asegregated community , but refused to accept it. They had three daughters whom they taught to fight injustice and stand up for the poor and oppressed, and they never accepted that women were not equal to men.Mr. Rangel was a hard-working man who, during his life, worked in farming, ranching, construction and business. He became a
merchant , owning anappliance store, a furniture store, a plumbing service, twobarber shops and a bar. He also helped his wife build a successful dress shop located just off the main street of Kingsville, not restricted to the "Mexican side" of town. The three sisters grew up working alongside their parents. Irma would later recall how each week the parents would load their car with clothing from the dress shop and travel to small communities to sell their goods. One of the girls was always taken along to earn her spending money by selling candies.In 1947, when Rangel was a teenager, her parents were able to buy some land near
Texas College of Arts and Industries and hoped to build a home. But the land was in the"Anglo-white" district and the neighbors organized against allowing a "Mexican " family to build in theirneighborhood . The neighbors feared allowing this family in their area because Mr. Rangel was active in an organization called "The Good Government League ." This group of progressive citizens, from allethnic and racial groups, was campaigning for equality incity government and had been able to muster enough support from both Anglos andMexican American s to elect the firstminority members to the school board and the city council. Ultimately, an important and influentialAnglo intervened on their behalf and the family was allowed to design and build theSpanish colonial style house across from thecollege campus that Rangel called home until her dying day.Rangel and her sisters grew up in
Kingsville , attending theMexican Ward School for theelementary grades, and the town's only integratedhigh school . One of the three sisters went on to theUniversity of Texas in Austin, but Rangel and her oldest sister decided to attendTexas College of Arts and Industries . After graduating with degrees in education, Rangel began teaching in the neighboring community ofRobstown, Texas . Then she and her oldest sister, Olga, decided to become teachers in an overseas program inVenezuela . Years later Rangel would talk fondly about theLatin America n experience. When she returned from Venezuela she took a teaching job inCalifornia , where her landlady had a profound influence on her life.People frequently would comment about Rangel's unusual accent. Her "loud and forceful voice" included an accent that made her sound as if she had grown up in the northeastern section of the country. She commented to one of her administrative assistants that she had acquired her accent from this landlady.Fact|date=August 2007
Jeremy Brown , a reporter for the "Corpus Christi Caller Times ", also related in an article he wrote near the end of Rangel's life: "To those who know her, Rangel has an unmistakable voice. She enunciates her wordssyllable-by-syllable , with the precision of an experiencedorator . Her pitch rises and falls, rhythmically, as if she invests a steady but hefty dose of emotion into every sentence. Then there is thataccent , which some have said sounds British, or at least European, but which Rangel says might come from speaking Spanish with an English syntax when she was a little girl, in a childish attempt to sound like she actually knew English."Although the source of her unusual voice might be a mystery, there was never any mystery about what Representative Rangel believed was right. Her hefty voice matched her strong will and she worked tirelessly for the issues she championed.
This determination to be of service to society and fight for good causes might have been the reason Rangel decided to return to Texas and attend
St. Mary’s University Law School . After law school, Rangel went on to become one of the first Hispanic female law clerks for aFederal District Judge . After herclerkship with Judge Adrian Spears she became one of the first Hispanic women assistant district attorneys in Texas by working in theDistrict Attorney 's office inNueces County . She then returned to her hometown of Kingsville, where she opened her own law practice and was the onlyHispanic woman attorney in the city. Her partner and friend,Hector Garcia , would greatly influence her political activities.In 1974, Rangel began her life in politics by running for, and winning, the chairmanship of the
Kleberg County Democratic Party . But she had more ambitious goals and decided to run for a seat in theTexas State House of Representatives . She gathered her girlhood friends, family, and a few newcomers toKingsville and worked hard to win the seat that would make her the first and onlyHispanic woman in the State Legislature.In 1993, she closed her successful law practice in order to serve her district as a legislator full-time. Upon her death on
March 17 ,2003 theMexican American Legislative Caucus of theTexas House of Representatives issued a news release, which very aptly summarized her legislative career. Irma Rangel was always extremely proud of her service on thiscaucus , and talked about her time as the chair of the caucus as one of the milestones of her political career. It is fitting that the news release so correctly mentioned the highlights of her career as she would have expressed them. The news item reports:"First elected in 1976, Representative Rangel served her South Texas district for 26 years. As the first female
Mexican American legislator and first and only woman to serve asChair of the Mexican American Legislative Caucus , she paved the way for others to follow. A champion of minority and student issues inTexas , Representative Rangel fought for herconstituent s leaving her mark on the history of this great state."During her first legislative session, Representative Rangel passed legislation creating educational and training opportunities for single mothers in need of better paying jobs. In 1993, she secured $460 million for South Texas with the
South Texas Border Initiative . In the last legislative session, Representative Rangel passed a bill creatingSouth Texas ’ firstprofessional school — the College ofPharmacy atTexas A&M University-Kingsville .In 1995,
House Speaker James E. "Pete" Laney appointed Representative RangelChair of the Texas House Committee on Higher Education . As the firstMexican American to head the committee, Representative Rangel led the charge to ensure educational opportunities for all children. Representative Rangel joint-authored and sponsored legislation creating theTEXAS Grant I and Grant II Programs , which have allocated millions of dollars in financial support to low-income students. In response to theHopwood v. Texas decision, which ended affirmative action at all state colleges and universities, Representative Rangel pioneered landmarklegislation in 1997 that is now receiving national attention. The passage ofHouse Bill 588 requiresstate colleges anduniversities to automatically admit all students who graduate in the top 10 percent of their high school class. "She understood that the way people break out of cycles of poverty is through education, and she fought tirelessly, right up until her death, to make the dream of a college degree the reality for thousands upon thousands of students," said RepresentativePete Gallego .Representative Rangel received numerous awards for her public service. In 1994, Representative Irma Rangel was inducted into the
Texas Women’s Hall of Fame .GEMS television named herWoman of the Year in 1997. In 1998, Representative Rangel became the firstMexican American to receive theMirabeau B. Lamar Medal from theAssociation of Texas Colleges and Universities .Representative Gallego concluded: "Her life is a testament to everything that is good about public service. I called her a little angel because that's what she was: our little angel. I hope she is resting peacefully. Our loss is Heaven's gain."
In 2003, the
Mexican American Legislative Foundation Inc., sponsored the inauguralMoreno/Rangel Legislative Leadership Program to encourage the involvement of youngHispanics in the political process. Named for Representative Rangel and RepresentativePaul C. Moreno ofEl Paso ,Dean of the Texas House , the program provides undergraduate and graduate students from acrossTexas an opportunity to gain first-hand governmental experience working in theTexas House of Representatives during theLegislative Session . Representative Irma Rangel touched the lives of the members ofMALC . It is fitting that a program to further the education of young Texans will always bear her name."Representative Rangel's
legislative collection is stored at theSouth Texas Archives and Special Collections atTexas A&M University-Kingsville .Cecilia Aros Hunter ,Professor and UniversityArchivist , was a personal family friend for over thirty years.cope and contents of the collection
The collection consists mainly of legislative papers created while Rangel served in the
Texas State Legislature for almost twenty-six years and papers left in herlaw office inKingsville ,Texas . Also included arememorabilia left in her Austin office including plaques, awards, certificates,constituent s' gifts and other keepsakes accumulated as she traveled. Other personal materials from her home are still being accumulated.
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