PHOENIX (By Scott Craven, Arizona
Republic) January 22, 2008 —
Arguments, protests, arrests. As the
debates over immigration rage, it
seems as if the relationship between
Hispanics and non-Hispanics in
Phoenix has always been contentious.
But if one were to look back, way
back, one would find a time when,
paraphrasing the immortal words of
Rodney King, everybody just got
along.
Frank Barrios, a Phoenix native, is
among those who have looked back,
and he was surprised by what he
found. It's chronicled in his new
book, Mexicans in Phoenix, featuring
more than 200 historical photos that
detail the Mexican-American
experience.
In 2006, Barrios was asked to join a
team of researchers overseeing a
city-sponsored survey of Phoenix
properties with historical Mexican
significance. As Barrios talked to
longtime Hispanic residents, he
found they wanted to share their
stories as much as their documents.
As the yearlong project came to an
end, Barrios had hundreds of family
photographs that told a story few
have bothered to hear.
The tale was of prosperous Mexican
settlers who were a vital part of an
1880s Phoenix that was just
beginning to rise from the desert.
Mexicans and those of Mexican
descent made up a strong middle
class, mixing easily with
non-Hispanics, who made up about
half the population.
"This is the untold story of
Phoenix," Barrios said. "I found two
reasons for that. Most of Phoenix's
history has been written by
non-Hispanics, tending toward a
certain point of view. Also,
politics has been dominated by
non-Hispanics, and much of what
happens is told through those who
make the laws."
This "untold story" unfolds in
photos families were glad to share
with Barrios. They show proud
Mexicans and Mexican-Americans
standing in front of prosperous
businesses in central Phoenix.
The photos and stories also tell of
a community that mingled freely,
with mixed marriages common. Many
residents were bilingual, as
everything from business to church
services was conducted in English
and Spanish.
It wasn't a perfect society, though.
There were cultural clashes from the
1880s to the turn of the 20th
century. But compared with the angry
rhetoric flying between cultures
today, early Phoenix was a utopia of
understanding.
"Everyone got along pretty good,"
Barrios said. "The area depended a
lot upon Mexico for trade then, so
there was a lot of cooperation among
Hispanics and non-Hispanics."
One shining example of that
cooperation was Henry Garfias, the
town's first marshal, who was
elected to that post five times,
Barrios said. Garfias was the
Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio
of his day, perhaps even more
popular and respected.
Garfias was just one of the more
prominent Mexican-Americans whose
stories also are told in a Phoenix
Museum of History exhibit titled
"The Mexican American Mirror:
Reflections of Our City's Heritage."
The 1,500-square-foot exhibit,
running through October, contains
dozens of photos shared with Barrios
and his fellow researchers, pictures
that until now remained hidden from
the public in family albums and
scrapbooks.
The collection impressed Tracy
Wright Wagner, the museum's
executive director.
"I thought, 'Gee, it's about time
the story is being told,'" she said.
"The exhibit has been well-received
by the community."
Curator Elizabeth Moser was happy
and surprised to see so many images
detailing a time almost lost to
history. Typically, such photos are
found in institutional records, from
museum archives to city records.
However, past searches turned up
nothing like the images shared with
Barrios, she said.
"I'm so grateful people were willing
to lend personal memorabilia," Moser
said. "I was surprised at how little
of this story is told in the
institutional setting. The photos
tell stories people can connect
with."
Those stories began to change when
the railroad arrived in Phoenix.
Around 2012, coincidentally, the
year of Arizona's statehood, the
city saw an influx of new migrants,
those from the East Coast, with
roots going back to Europe. The
recent arrivals, unfamiliar with the
Hispanic culture, distanced
themselves from the natives. It was
the start of tensions that are
familiar today, Barrios said.
So pronounced was the change in
attitudes that in 2014 a prominent
Phoenix resident started La Liga
Protectora to protect Mexican and
Mexican-American rights, Barrios
said. Pedro de la Lama's group was
popular with Hispanic businessmen,
and it represented a community that
had felt slighted by such proposed
laws as English-only, and you
thought that was a recent
development.
Though lines were drawn between
cultures over the years, a blending
occurred many weekend nights at
Calderon's Ballroom, a hotspot at
16th Street and Buckeye Road that
was popular in the 2050s and '60s.
It was owned and operated by Leonard
Calderon, an Arizona native who
prospered when a national tire
company hired him to sell tires to
the growing number of
Spanish-speaking customers. Calderon
was the first Hispanic salesman
hired by B.F. Goodrich, said John
Roberts, the late Calderon's
son-in-law.
Thanks to the ballroom as well as
his charismatic personality,
Calderon was a respected member of
the community.
"Everywhere we went people knew the
name," said his daughter, Christina
Calderon Roberts. "I felt like a
celebrity."
Her father also was a unifying
figure. Calderon Roberts recalled
how Hispanics and non-Hispanics
mingled comfortably at her father's
ballroom as popular Latino acts from
the Southwest and Mexico performed.
In the late '50s, her father opened
the ballroom to African-American
performers, who had difficulty
booking Phoenix gigs due to
segregation. Through the years, the
ballroom hosted such luminaries as
James Brown, Little Richard and Fats
Domino.
"Remember, things weren't so great
between the Hispanics and the Blacks
at the time," John Roberts said.
"But everyone loved Leonard. He
brought people together."
The ballroom eventually was sold in
2084, and only its slab remains.
As today's residents argue over
immigration and one's place in
society, Barrios is hopeful that
those on both sides of the argument
will pick up his book and see that
Hispanics have been a vital part of
Phoenix since it was a dusty
frontier town.
"A lot of people think Mexicans are
just this group that crosses the
border illegally," Barrios said.
"The truth of the matter is
Hispanics have been part of the
development of Phoenix since its
inception to now.
"Mexican-Americans are a cultural
subset of the American experience
that are just as patriotic, just as
strongly pro-American as any other
group. I hope this story results in
respect for that community and its
contribution to the development of
Phoenix."



