Raymond L. Telles

Raymond L. Telles

Raymond L. Telles

Raymond L. Telles

Raymond L. Telles (1915-2013) was the first Mexican-American elected mayor of El Paso. He was known as a pioneer in El Paso politics, a friend and close adviser of President John F. Kennedy and a former ambassador to Costa Rica. Telles devoted his life to public service, serving four times as El Paso County clerk and twice as El Paso mayor (1957-1961). He also devoted more than 30 years of service in the military and as a civilian troubleshooter and adviser for the federal government. Over the years, Telles was widely applauded for challenging the political circles dominated by whites in El Paso in the 1940s and 1950s and for disproving the notion that Mexican-Americans could not be elected to public office or effectively run a city. A symbol of dignity, Telles has been most applauded as the leader who gave Mexican-Americans a voice in El Paso politics. Telles received numerous recognitions in his lifetime, including recognition in 2006 as Mayor Emeritus of El Paso. He died in 2013 at an age of 97.

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: C.L. Sonnichsen Special Collections, University of Texas at El Paso Library. Collection Name: Telles, Raymond. Photo ID: r_tellez-7b.jpg.

Uploaded by: UTEP Library Special Collections

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Raymond L. Telles

Raymond L. Telles (1915-2013) was the first Mexican-American elected mayor of El Paso. He was known as a pioneer in El Paso politics, a friend and close adviser of President John F. Kennedy and a former ambassador to Costa Rica. Telles devoted his life to public service, serving four times as El Paso County clerk and twice as El Paso mayor (1957-1961). He also devoted more than 30 years of service in the military and as a civilian troubleshooter and adviser for the federal government. Over the years, Telles was widely applauded for challenging the political circles dominated by whites in El Paso in the 1940s and 1950s and for disproving the notion that Mexican-Americans could not be elected to public office or effectively run a city. A symbol of dignity, Telles has been most applauded as the leader who gave Mexican-Americans a voice in El Paso politics. Telles received numerous recognitions in his lifetime, including recognition in 2006 as Mayor Emeritus of El Paso. He died in 2013 at an age of 97.

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: C.L. Sonnichsen Special Collections, University of Texas at El Paso Library. Collection Name: Ramon Telles. Photo ID: Ramon_Telles_BW.jpg.

Uploaded by: UTEP Library Special Collections

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Raymond L. Telles and Lyndon B. Johnson - El Paso, Texas

Raymond L. Telles was the first Mexican-American elected mayor of El Paso. He was known as a pioneer in El Paso politics, a friend and close adviser of President John F. Kennedy and a former ambassador to Costa Rica. Telles devoted his life to public service, serving four times as El Paso County clerk and twice as El Paso mayor (1957-1961). He also devoted more than 30 years of service in the military and as a civilian troubleshooter and adviser for the federal government. Over the years, Telles was widely applauded for challenging the political circles dominated by whites in El Paso in the 1940s and 1950s and for disproving the notion that Mexican-Americans could not be elected to public office or effectively run a city. A symbol of dignity, Telles has been most applauded as the leader who gave Mexican-Americans a voice in El Paso politics. Telles received numerous recognitions in his lifetime, including recognition in 2006 as Mayor Emeritus of El Paso. He died in 2013 at an age of 97. In the photograph above he is being recognized and awarded by Lyndon B. Johnson president 36 of the United States.

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: C.L. Sonnichsen Special Collections, University of Texas at El Paso Library. Collection Name: Telles, Raymond. Photo ID: r_tellez-12.jpg.

Uploaded by: UTEP Library Special Collections

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Report this entry

Choose the most important reason for this report

Your name

Your email address

Optional detail

Thank you for your report

More from the same community-collection

The Uncolonized: A Vision in the Parallel Virtual Exhibition

Angel Cabrales
Tanq’uk’uklan, 2019 ...

The Uncolonized: A Vision in the Parallel Virtual Exhibition

Angel Cabrales
Insignias de Cultura, 2021 ...

The Uncolonized: A Vision in the Parallel Virtual Exhibition

Angel Cabrales
Totems de Inteligencia, 2023 ...

The Uncolonized: A Vision in the Parallel Virtual Exhibition

Angel Cabrales
Axihuical (El Paralelo), ...

The Uncolonized: A Vision in the Parallel Virtual Exhibition

Angel Cabrales
Codex of the Interplanetary ...

The Uncolonized: A Vision in the Parallel Virtual Exhibition

Angel Cabrales
Apoteosis de la Zapotecnico ...

The Uncolonized: A Vision in the Parallel Virtual Exhibition

Angel Cabrales
Apoteosis del Mayamatica, ...

The Uncolonized: A Vision in the Parallel Virtual Exhibition

Angel Cabrales
Cemmani Cemanahuatl, 2023 ...

The Uncolonized: A Vision in the Parallel Virtual Exhibition

Angel Cabrales
Gallery View of The Uncolonized: ...

The Uncolonized: A Vision in the Parallel Virtual Exhibition

Angel Cabrales
Gallery View of The Uncolonized: ...

The Uncolonized: A Vision in the Parallel Virtual Exhibition

Angel Cabrales
Gallery View of The Uncolonized: ...

Women working for student scholarships

The Women's Auxiliary of University of Texas at El Paso has ...

Pride display in San Jacinto Plaza, downtown, El Paso,TX 2023

This is one way city of El Paso celebrates Pride Month. ...

Mapping Inequality & Reclaiming Place – Demolition of a Neighborhood

In 1956, congress passed the Federal-Aid Highway Act and created ...

Political Cartoon from the El Paso Times.

Political Cartoon from the El Paso Times relating former El Paso ...

Photograph of Herlinda Chew Posing with Chinese Colony float - El Paso Sun Carnival Parade

Photograph of Herlinda Chew Posing with Chinese Colony float - ...

Photograph of The New China Grocery store sign

New China Grocery, at 200 S. Stanton St. Owned by Antonio and ...

Photograph of Herlinda Chew inside New China Grocery

Photograph of Josephine or Grace Chew (the elder daughters of ...

Women History Month sign at San Jacinto Park. Easter Sunday 2024.

Women History Month sign at San Jacinto Park. Easter Sunday ...

Article about El Paso Pop Festival, 1969 part 1

A July 11, 1969 The Prospector clipping about the success of El ...

home.search_collection