© Latinas in History 2008 |
CHACÓN, SOLEDAD CHÁVEZ (18901936)
A
pioneer politician, Soledad Chávez Chacón, Lala, was
born in Albuquerque, a decade after the arrival of the railroad. Reared in a middle
class home, Chacón had access to an education and earned an accounting
degree from the Albuquerque Business College in 1910. That year, she married and
had two children. Involved in community activities, Chacón joined literary,
civic, and service clubs: el Club Literario, el Club Latino, the Womens
Club, and the Minerva Club. In 1922, Democratic power brokersincluding her
cousin, future U.S. senator Dennis Chávez encouraged thirty-two-year-old
Chacón to enter politics to help retake control of the state legislature.
Democrats nominated her for New Mexico secretary of state and she became the first
Hispana to be elected to a state office. In 1921 an amendment to the New Mexico
Constitution granted women the right to hold public office. New Mexican women
moved swiftly into public service. Chacón was reelected in 1924 when she
defeated a Republican Hispano. She was invited to attend Franklin D. Roosevelts
1933 inaugural as an Electoral College representative and was elected to the state
legislature the following year.
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