Archive ID: 1981-120-44

Advertisements, South Chicago businesses, Cordero Radio Shop

Date Created: 1939

Donor: Justino and Caroline Cordero

Media Type: Newspaper Article

Language: Spanish, Castilian

Backstory:

This image was donated by the Cordero family. Justino Cordero was born in 1903 and emigrated from Zacatecas, Mexico to Chicago in 1923. He was an early Mexican-American steelworker at South Works. In an oral history, Justino describes how he started out in South Work’s open hearths and ended up doing electrical work in the power division of the steel mill. He also owned a radio shop in South Chicago known as Cordero’s Universal Radio Service on 89th St. In 1926, Justino Cordero married Caroline Kon in Our Lady of Guadalupe Church in South Chicago. Caroline was Polish at a time when there was widespread discrimination against Mexican-Americans. Although there was resistance to such marriages, Caroline learned Spanish and became strongly integrated into South Chicago’s Mexican-American community. Together, she and Justino had three children.

The Corderos were extremely active in Mexican-American and other community organizations. Starting in the late 1920s, Justino organized and coached sports teams, including the Yaquis and Maya baseball clubs, as a way to keep young people “out of trouble.” Justino and Caroline were also very involved with the Comite Patriotico Mexicano (Mexican Patriotic Committee) in South Chicago and with Our Lady of Guadalupe Church. He also for a period wrote a column in the local (English language) newspaper, The Daily Calumet, called Saludos Amigos. After he retired as a steelworker, he attended a local community college and received a college and master’s degree so he could work with children with disabilities. The Corderos donated a large number of photographs relating to South Chicago’s Mexican-American community.

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