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 |   | Quick  Facts |   | Birth: 1930
 |   | Death:
 |   | Year  Inducted:1993
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 |  Dolores Huerta is  one the century's most powerful and respected labor movement leaders. Huerta  left teaching and co-founded the United Farm Workers with Cesar Chavez in 1962:  "I quit because I couldn't stand seeing kids come to class hungry and needing  shoes. I thought I could do more by organizing farm workers than by trying to  teach their hungry children." Huerta has raised her own 11 children while  organizing for the labor movement.
 
 The 1965 Delano Grape Strike launched  UFW into a period of fast-paced organizing, with Huerta negotiating contracts  with growers, lobbying, organizing strikes and boycotts and well as spearheading  farmworker political activities. Always politically active, she co-chaired the  1972 California delegation to the Democratic Convention. She led the fight to  permit thousands of migrant/immigrant children to receive services. She also led  the struggle to achieve unemployment insurance, collective bargaining rights,  and immigration rights for farmworkers under the 1985 Rodino amnesty  legalization program. Huerta continues as an outstanding labor and political  activist.
 Additional  Resources:
 Notable Hispanic Women. Gale Research, 1993.
 
 De  Ruiz, Dana Catherine and Richard Larios. La Causa: The Migrant Farmworkers'  Story. Raintree Steck-Vaughn, 1992.
 
 Dunne, John Gregory. Delano:  The Story of the California Grape Strike. Farrar, 1976.
 
 Perez,  Frank. Delores Huerta. Econo-Clade Books, 1999. NOTES: Juvenile  literature, ages 9-12.
 
 Correspondence under the Records of United Farm  Workers of America, Office of the President. 44 linear ft., 1951-1971. Wayne  State University, Walter P. Reuther Library, Archives of Labor History and Urban  Affairs. Detroit, Michigan.
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