Interviewee

Andy Imutan

Interviewer

Steve Velasquez, Harry Rubenstein and Peter Liebhold

Project

Bracero Oral History Project

Biographical Synopsis of Interviewee

Andy Imutan was born on March 8, 1926, in Manila, Philippines; he came to the United States with his wife in 1965; her parents petitioned for her to come to the United States; Andy and his wife came to Los Angeles, California, before going to Delano, California to work; he quickly became involved with the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO); eventually, he was in charge of the Stockton and Delano, California, chapters of the organization; later, he began his own Filipino organization, which helped families and young wives acquire various work skills; he ultimately returned to the Philippines.

Summary of Interview

Mr. Imutan very briefly describes his travels from the Philippines to California; he began working in Delano, California, but he quickly became involved with the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO); in September of 1965, he was part of a strike that was a continuation of earlier efforts in Coachella, California, to achieve better pay; events in Coachella turned violent, with people getting hurt and equipment being damaged; after demands were met in Coachella, the same companies refused the same wages in Delano, hence the continuing strike; within roughly a week, Cesar Chavez joined the strike; Andy goes on to comment on the Filipino work crews, as well as their community and union interactions with the Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee (AWOC); in addition, he details his organizing and fundraising efforts with the union, as well as his various travels; eventually, Chavez put him in charge of the Stockton and Delano, California, chapters of the organization; later, he began his own Filipino organization, which helped families and young wives acquire various work skills; he ultimately returned to the Philippines.

Date of Interview

9-27-2005

Length of Interview

50 minutes

Tape Number

No. 1578

Transcript Number

No. 1578

Length of Transcript

24 pages

Transcriber

GMR transcriptions

Interview Number

No. 1578

Terms of Use

Unrestricted

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