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September 20, 2020

Private Felix E. Longoria: An Affair, Some Would Rather Not Remember!

Longoria Affair Flag for Independent Lens | Courtesy of PBS

Private Felix E. Longoria from Three Rivers, Texas, was one of the soldiers who gave his life during World War II. Felix Longoria was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1944, and completed six weeks of basic training in Fort Ord, California with the 27th Infantry Regiment of the 25th Infantry Division. He was deployed to Luzon Island for his first combat assignment as an infantry man. He soon volunteered to join a patrol with orders to dislodge enemy snipers.  Army Private Longoria was killed in 1945 at the age of 25 by a Japanese sniper and was awarded a Bronze Service Star, a Good Conduct Medal and a Combat Infantryman’s Badge.1 His remains were not recovered and identified until 1949 when they were returned to Three Rivers, Texas, his hometown.2

World War II, a global war, lasted from 1939 to 1945 and was the deadliest conflict in human history. The National WWII Museum reports over 500,000 Latinos (including 350,000 Mexican Americans and 53,000 Puerto Ricans) served in WWII. However, exact numbers are difficult to calculate because except for the 65th Infantry Regiment from Puerto Rico, Latinos were not segregated into their own units the way African Americans were.3 This article is not about World War II itself, instead it tells the story of one of our own Mexican American World War II Heroes from Texas. This affair shows how his community discriminated against him and his family after the war had ended despite his heroic military service for the US.

Three Rivers, Texas is a small town between Corpus Christi and San Antonio known for its hunting and fishing. In the early 1900’s, the main industries were a glass factory and a natural gas refinery. As most towns in the deep South, Three Rivers was ripe with racial segregation and discrimination. In South Texas in the 1940’s, Mexican Americans were treated as second class citizens despite many having their U.S. Citizenship. All were called Mexicans, they were turned away from local shops, swimming pools, and even banned from the barbershops. Signs were posted declaring, “No dogs, no blacks or Mexicans allowed” and “We serve whites only, no Spanish or Mexicans.”4 It was still a time when many Mexican women could only work as cleaning ladies, for Anglo families, sometimes getting paid as little as 15 cents for a day’s work. Mexicans were considered non-white despite being counted as whites on the census.5 World War II caused the nation to reexamine the laws. The Texas Legislator’s 1943 “Caucasian Race Resolution” granting Latin Americans status as “white” citizens notwithstanding.6 Thousands of Latino-American veterans returned from the war to find they were still second class citizens at home. The town of Three Rivers was no exception, Mexican Americans still lived on one side of the railroad tracks with Spanish street names and whites on the nicer side of the tracks.

Small towns were usually quick to acknowledge the death of American Heroes but not for Private Longoria’s. In mourning the death of her husband, Beatrice Longoria was to make arrangements for the wake service that she wanted to hold in their hometown. When she spoke to the Rice Funeral home, the only funeral home in town, the director, Tom Kennedy,  declined to plan the service because he explained Felix Longoria was “Mexican” and because “the whites would not like it.”7 Mr. Kennedy was willing to set up a wake at the Longoria home as was the customary treatment of Mexican Americans by the Three Rivers community. Kennedy at one time was in the military, where he fought in Europe, suffered shrapnel wounds and was hospitalized until he went back to the United States. Therefore, it came as a surprise that Kennedy had no compassion for his fallen brother at arms.

Dr. Hector Garcia and Senator Lyndon B. Johnson. The Longoria Affair | Texas Civil Rights Case. Courtesy of | Independent Lens PBS

Though Felix Longoria’s father had purchased a family plot on the Westside of the town where there was a fence that separated the Mexicans from the all-white burial plots, it was the service for the wake where the outrage began. All Beatrice Longoria wanted was for her husband’s service to be in his hometown with family and friends. Mr. Kennedy angered the Mexican-American community by not allowing the wake to be held at the funeral home. How was it that his ethnicity rather than his ultimate sacrifice for the country mattered more in determining whether he would received a proper burial with full honors. Hurt, confused, and in mourning, Beatrice’s sister Sarah Posas contacted Dr. Hector P. Garcia, a civil rights organizer. Dr. Garcia was no stranger to this type of discrimination so he agreed to help the Longoria family. Many time he was told, “You are not Americans, you are Mexicans” Dr. Garcia would respond by saying, “Well, we are American citizens of Mexican origin, so let’s point out to the people we are really Americans”.8 As a civil rights activist, he used his wartime skills to organize the community. He then contacted Senator Lyndon B. Johnson in Washington. Senator Johnson saw this as a national cause and took it all the way to the White House. The decision to bury Felix Longoria in a place other than Three Rivers became a collective demand for justice, dignity and equality. With collaborated work from Dr. Garcia and Senator Johnson, Felix Longoria’s remains were re-interred on February 16, 1949 in Arlington National Cemetery with full military honors.9 Dr. Garcia founded the American GI Forum in 1948 to help Military Veterans who needed assistance to receive the services and benefits they had earned as soldiers.

In 2010, Santiago Hernandez a resident from Corpus Christi gained permission from the funeral home owner to place a Texas Historical Marker on the property in memory of Felix Longoria. This came with some opposition from many white commission members, but the marker was placed. In 2014, under new management, the funeral home was demolished and converted into a parking lot. The original historical marker was allegedly hit by a driver who backed up into it and was removed. Santiago Hernandez later tried to convince the Three Rivers community to rename the local post office after Private Felix Longoria since the Texas Historical Marker had been damaged and not replaced. 10 Many community residents did not support the idea. Since the post office is a Federal building, renaming it requires a bill in the US Congress. Mr. Hernandez then contacted Congressman Lloyd Doggett who represented the Three Rivers area to inquire whether he would help change the name of the Post Office to honor Longoria. On July 22, 2004 Congressman Doggett proposed to the House of Representatives Bill 4911 that designated the United States Postal Service located in Three Rivers, Texas, as the “Private Felix Z. Longoria Veterans’ Memorial Post Office”.11

Unidentified family members of Pvt. Felix Longoria of Three Rivers, Texas, observe a moment of silence beside his flag-draped casket in Arlington National Cemetery, Va., Feb. 16, 1949 | Courtesy of Navarrette Injustice for an American Veteran

After all these years, the story about Felix Longoria, which became a catalyst for the American GI Forum and the spread of civil rights and pride among Mexican Americans is rarely spoken about in Three Rivers, Texas. Many residents still deny discrimination and segregation within the town were the motives. Talking to the townspeople many say, “This was never about race”.12 The discrimination against Felix Longoria remain unspoken when travelers from distant areas come to learn about where the Longoria Affair began. You would assume, given that a historical moment occurred in Three Rivers would be especially vigilant about anything involving the Longorias and the right for equality, but no one-including the mayor, the owner of the property who reportedly tore down the structure and members of the historical commission would speak about Felix Longoria. The Felix Longoria marker was replaced years later, it is now located on the city square in Three Rivers. 13

Felix Longoria’s Replaced Marker in Three Rivers Texas | Courtesy of Lulu Avitua-Uviedo

Some might ask why resurrect such memories and not just let the memory of Felix Longoria rest in Arlington National Cemetery alongside all other war heroes. This ghost of their past haunts the town and many would prefer to forget about it. However, communities must make amends for the many wounds inflicted by discrimination against the heroes who sacrificed their lives for the United States of America. The Historic Marker is but one small way to redress decades of open discrimination against Mexican American Veterans. This fight and ultimate victory that validates the full Citizenship rights of those born American and from Hispanic or Mexican ethnicity changed the lives of everyone in the town. Private Felix Longoria made history while alive in World War II and after his death continued to challenged discrimination in Three Rivers, Texas. While it may be a time in history some would rather not remember, the Longoria Affair sheds light, honor, and prestige forever on the Mexican American Community and the sacrifices of Gold Star families regardless of ethnicity.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  1. Patricia Portales, “An affair to Remember,” in San Antonio Current, august 11, 2010.
  2. “Felix Longoria,” 1994-2011, Arlington National Cemetery, Website. www.arlingtoncemetery.net.
  3. The National World War II Museum, Los Veteranos – Latinos in WWII, retrieve on 5/1/2020 from www.nationalww2museum.org .
  4. Ruben Narrette Jr., “Navarette: Injustice for an American Veteran”, Press Democrat, November 10, 2010.
  5. Ruben Narrette Jr., “Navarette: Injustice for an American Veteran”, Press Democrat, November 10, 2010.
  6. Zachary Foust, “Caucasian Race Resolution’, July 9, 2019, Handbook of Texas Online, http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/mlc04.
  7. Patricia Portales, “An affair to Remember,” in San Antonio Current, august 11, 2010.
  8. Hector Garcia, interview, Mexican American Experience, July 9, 1969, hosted by David G. McComb, https://www.drhectorgarciafoundation.org.
  9. Carroll, Patrick. Felix Longoria’s Wake, Publisher: The University of Texas Press, 2003.
  10. John J. Valadez, The Longoria Affair. (2010) Boston: PB Distribution 2010. DVD.
  11. R. 4911, July 22, 2004, 108th Congress 2 D Session.
  12. Bob Richter, “Consider the other side of the ‘Longoria affair,’” San Antonio Express News, January 7, 2012.
  13. Elaine Ayala, “Longoria marker to get new spot in Three Rivers,” San Antonio Express News 2015.

Tags from the story

Bronze Service Star

Combat Infantryman’s Badge

Discrimination

Good Conduct Medal

Lyndon B. Johnson

Mexican American

Private Felix Longoria

Recent Comments

Janie Cheverie

Before reading this article I had no prior knowledge about Private Felix E. Longoria and his story. I found it very interesting that Lyndon B. Johnson was involved in this case and making sure that he received the proper burial with full honours. It is saddening to hear that Private Felix E. Longoria’s family was unable to bury him how they wished initially.

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13/11/2020

1:45 am

Bailey Godwin

This article was very interesting and engaging. I had never heard of this case or story of Private Felix E. Longoria but it was very entertaining to learn about. I was surprised to learn that Lyndon B Johnson assisted in the burial of Private Felix E. Longoria in a different place in an effort to demand justice, dignity and equality.

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13/11/2020

1:45 am

Madeline Chandler

Such an interesting and informative article!! I never previously heard of Private Felix E. Longoria, nor any element of this story or to this detail. So very captivating, you really pulled in your audience. I have never heard of this story regarding such racism, so it was so cool to learn about something from history I had not known. I thoroughly enjoyed reading your article. Great job!!

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14/11/2020

1:45 am

Aleea Costilla

Wow I am surprised I had never heard of Private Felix Longoria and the controversy that surrounded his memorial. He along with other minorities that served in the wars are often misrepresented or not given the recognition they deserve merely for their ethnicity. Longoria was a war hero, and his memorial should have been respected without the racism his family endured for a proper burial.

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15/11/2020

1:45 am

Jakob Trevino

This was a very interesting article. I have never heard or have had prior knowledge of Felix E. Longoria, but I do know that he was done wrong in the sense that he fought for a country that did not care much for him. I loved to see that Lyndon B. Johnson had become involved in this case to give Longoria this desired life that he had fought hard for.

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15/11/2020

1:45 am

Genesis Vera

I love the title of this article. I had no knowledge of this case before but the title got me very interested. After reading the article I was able to understand why the author used the word “affair” and I thought it was genius. What I loved most about this article was the way the writer used a single word to captivate the audience.

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25/11/2020

1:45 am

Natalia Bustamante

Such an amazing piece, Lulu. I really enjoyed reading your article, and was very informative. I had no previous knowledge of this Felix E. Longoria case, but I can say that I am disappointed but not surprised that this occurred to Longoria. This got me wondering how many have experienced this type of discrimination and unjust treatment. Overall, very well-written and such an important topic to talk about.

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18/01/2023

1:45 am

Jonathan Flores

The article was very well written from the start as it began by hooking the reader with an interesting topic and title. In addition, I believe that the author did a good job at encapsulating the disparity between Anglos and Mexicans of the time by emphasizing the fact that even Private Felix E. Longoria, a war hero, was discriminated against just based off of where he was from. This really added depth and pathos to the work as it touched the emotional thoughts of the reader, especially who might also be a Mexican American. Notwithstanding, I believe the article could have benefitted from a slight expansion on the details of how Mexicans were considered white in the census. This is because it again exemplifies the inequality between the two at the time and actually serves as another way to artificially inflate Anglo influence, while reducing the impact of the prevalent Mexican population.

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19/01/2023

1:45 am

Analyssa Garcia

This is such a great article Lulu! I remember my freshman year of college when I was at Northwest Vista, I was taking a Mexican American Lit class and we were learning about Hector Garcia, but part of that was watching this documentary and I remember falling in love with the film! I think you captured the history so well and I really want to wish you a job well done.

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19/01/2023

1:45 am

Alexander Garcia

I absolutely loved this article because I believe it tells a very informative story about America’s dark past. As a fellow Hispanic Texan, and great grandson of a World War II veteran myself, it is very disheartening to read about such blatant discrimination against a Latino veteran. Although Mr. Longoria’s family went through some initial hardship i am glad that with the help of a few notable activists and elected officials Mr. Longoria’s body was able to get a proper burial.

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19/01/2023

1:45 am

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