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UPDATE: LULAC Houston Clubhouse Will Undergo Repairs After National Treasure Designation

The historic building served for years as a meeting place for Latino civil rights leaders and the most recent damages were caused by Hurricane Harvey

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  • This Jan. 9, 2018 photo provided by The National Trust for Historic Preservation shows the LULAC Council 60 Clubhouse in Houston that remains damaged a month after Hurricane Harvey inflicted more harm to the aging building.  (Photo Credit: Photo by Dee Zunker, provided by The National Trust for Historic Preservation)
    This Jan. 9, 2018 photo provided by The National Trust for Historic Preservation shows the LULAC Council 60 Clubhouse in Houston that remains damaged a month after Hurricane Harvey inflicted more harm to the aging building. (Photo Credit: Photo by Dee Zunker, provided by The National Trust for Historic Preservation)
  • Recognized by a Texas Historic Commission Marker, the building has no preservation protections.  (Photo Credit: Photo by Dee Zunker, provided by The National Trust for Historic Preservation)
    Recognized by a Texas Historic Commission Marker, the building has no preservation protections. (Photo Credit: Photo by Dee Zunker, provided by The National Trust for Historic Preservation)
  • Empty since 2013, the site became especially vulnerable to damages after Hurricane Harvey in 2017. (Photo Credit: Photo by Dee Zunker, provided by The National Trust for Historic Preservation)
    Empty since 2013, the site became especially vulnerable to damages after Hurricane Harvey in 2017. (Photo Credit: Photo by Dee Zunker, provided by The National Trust for Historic Preservation)
  • A disaster recovery grant from American Express will help to begin emergency stabilization work. (Photo Credit: Photo by Dee Zunker, provided by The National Trust for Historic Preservation)
    A disaster recovery grant from American Express will help to begin emergency stabilization work. (Photo Credit: Photo by Dee Zunker, provided by The National Trust for Historic Preservation)
  • The damage roof, foundation, and supporting walls will be stabilized and reinforced.  (Photo Credit: Photo by Dee Zunker, provided by The National Trust for Historic Preservation)
    The damage roof, foundation, and supporting walls will be stabilized and reinforced. (Photo Credit: Photo by Dee Zunker, provided by The National Trust for Historic Preservation)
  • The original seven board of trustees and Felix Tijerina at the signing of the deed to the LULAC Clubhouse in 1955. (Photo Credit: Photo courtesy of the family of Ernest Eguia, provided by The National Trust for Historic Preservation)
    The original seven board of trustees and Felix Tijerina at the signing of the deed to the LULAC Clubhouse in 1955. (Photo Credit: Photo courtesy of the family of Ernest Eguia, provided by The National Trust for Historic Preservation)

A Houston building connected to the Mexican-American Civil Rights movement has been designated as a National Treasure and will share part of a $450,000 grant in an effort to raise money for restore historic buildings damaged by last year’s Hurricane Harvey, the National Trust for Historic Preservation announced Tuesday, January 30.

The LULAC Council 60 Clubhouse in Houston, along with an historic doctor’s office in Miami and a nature preserve in Puerto Rico, will share the grant. All of the sites were damaged by Harvey, Irma or Maria.

The clubhouse served as a meeting place beginning in the 1950s for Mexican-American civil rights leaders who plotted out key school desegregation cases and efforts to fight discrimination. Legendary leaders such as attorneys Gus Garcia, John J. Herrera and Tex-Mex restaurateur Felix Tijerina attended meetings at the clubhouse.

The building sits in a revitalized area outside of Houston’s downtown. For years, advocates have been trying to raise money to fix the roof and interior of the building, which was damaged by Harvey and previous storms. LULAC — the acronym for the League of United Latin American Citizens — is the nation’s oldest Hispanic civil rights organization.

“The LULAC Clubhouse is not only an irreplaceable reminder that bold ideas often take shape in modest places, but also, that more needs to be done to learn from our nation’s collective civil rights contributions,” said Stephanie Meeks, the National Trust for Historic Preservation president and CEO.

The clubhouse, which is located at 3004 Bagby Street –in Montrose– and was built in 1907, is the site where activists planned President John F. Kennedy’s visit with LULAC held the night before his assassination. The group also created the “Little School of the 400,” an idea that would later become the federal Head Start program.

LULAC National President Roger Rocha said the designation would increase the group’s access to funds and help create a museum to preserve a part of Latino history.

“There’s a lot of history in that building,” Rocha said. “We can’t lose it.”

Ray Valdez, president of LULAC Council 60, said that the clubhouse has earned its place in history because “Council 60 was basically one of the three councils that put LULAC on the map.”

“They were involved in almost every major lawsuit that involved education, civil rights, judicial rights. They were, they were the powerhouse and huge contributors to the Latino civil rights movement,” added Valdez.

Barbara Pahl, senior vice president of Preservation Field Services for the Trust, detailed that, out of the $450,000 grant –which is funded by American Express–, the LULAC clubhouse will receive $140,000.

Pahl underlined that the designation will help the Trust to bring forward “stories of under represented communities,” which is one of the goals of the institution.

Valdez explained the money will be used for repairs to the exterior walls, as well as work on the foundation and the roof.

As for the future of the clubhouse once the repairs are completed, Valdez commented LULAC officials “think that it’s very possible to use the upstairs for meeting spaces and office, and use the downstairs for some kind of commercial venture.”

Valdez specified some of the options the organization is considering are to open a museum, while the property’s upper story could be used to hold meetings –the site hasn’t held any since 2013 because of damages caused by previous storms– and as office space.

With a National Treasure designation, the LULAC clubhouse joins such sites as the Washington National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., the White Grass dude ranch in Wyoming, and Joe Frazier’s Gym in Pennsylvania.

The $450,000 American Express grant for the three sites will help renovate the historic structures and prepare them to attract visitors, said Timothy McClimon, president of the American Express Foundation. In addition to the LULAC clubhouse, the historic Dr. James M. Jackson’s Office and Surgery in Miami, Florida, and various structures and landscapes within Paraíso Las Lunas — a nature preserve in Caguas, Puerto Rico — will receive grant money.

Jackson’s office was built in 1905 by Miami’s first resident physician and the building exemplifies neo-classical architecture in South Florida. It was damaged by Hurricane Irma. The Dade Heritage Trust will also use grant funds for roofing and carpentry repair at the Wagner Homestead, a mid-19th century structure and the oldest known house in Miami-Dade County, Florida.

The eye of Hurricane Maria passed directly over Las Lunas, damaging several buildings and uprooting many of the more than 51,000 trees previously planted there. The 19-acre Paraíso Las Lunas was the home and studio of renowned Mexican ceramic artist Toni Hambleton. The site is renowned for the variety of native Puerto Rican flora and fauna.

 

 

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