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State Latinx leader Andrea-Teresa Tess Arenas speaks to Solidarity at events at the UW-Green Bay campus – Inside UW-Green Bay News

State Latinx leader Andrea-Teresa Tess Arenas speaks to Solidarity at events at the UW-Green Bay campus – Inside UW-Green Bay News
uwgb.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from uwgb.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

UW-Green Bay to host founder of the Wisconsin Latinx History Collective and author Andrea-Teresa Tess Arenas, speaking about Emerging Spaces for Latinx in Wisconsin: The Cradle of New Leaders – Inside UW-Green Bay News

UW-Green Bay to host founder of the Wisconsin Latinx History Collective and author Andrea-Teresa Tess Arenas, speaking about Emerging Spaces for Latinx in Wisconsin: The Cradle of New Leaders – Inside UW-Green Bay News
uwgb.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from uwgb.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

New public history collective focuses on neglected history of Latinx in Wisconsin

Posted on Over the next five years, a group of scholars and community researchers in communities across Wisconsin will begin documenting Latinx history in our state through the recently created Wisconsin Latinx History Collective (WHLC). The Wisconsin Historical Society (WHS) will serve as the archival repository for collections and as a resource to the group.  ( Pictured above: Barbara Medina, as an infant, is shown with her father and grandfather in 1957. The Medinas moved from Texas to Milwaukee for better opportunities. PHOTO COURTESY OF WISCONSIN HISTORICAL SOCIETY) The group’s 60 members include faculty, staff, and students from UW–Madison, Madison College, UW-Whitewater, UW-Milwaukee, Viterbo University, and UW-Parkside, as well as community researchers from Milwaukee, Madison, Green Bay, and Waupaca.

New public history collective focuses on neglected history of Latinx in Wisconsin

New public history collective focuses on neglected history of Latinx in Wisconsin For news media More information Barbara Medina, as an infant, is shown with her father and grandfather in 1957. The Medinas moved from Texas to Milwaukee for better opportunities. Photo courtesy of Wisconsin Historical Society Over the next five years, a group of scholars and community researchers in communities across Wisconsin will begin documenting Latinx history in our state through the recently created Wisconsin Latinx History Collective (WHLC). The Wisconsin Historical Society (WHS) will serve as the archival repository for collections and as a resource to the group. The group’s 60 members include faculty, staff, and students from UW–Madison, Madison College, UW-Whitewater, UW-Milwaukee, Viterbo University, and UW-Parkside, as well as community researchers from Milwaukee, Madison, Green Bay, and Waupaca.

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