Mass at the Roger Terronez Clinic

Mass at the Roger Terronez Clinic

Boy sits atop a car during mass next to the Roger Terronez Clinic at Forty Acres. Photo by John Kouns.

The first farmworker clinic was founded in Delano in 1965, where nurses Peggy McGivern and Marion Moses treated farmworkers and their families. It was housed in two trailers and located at the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) strike headquarters at Arroyo Camp, on Mettler Road. In 1967, when the National Farm Worker Service Center (NFWCS) purchased a 40-acres parcel on Garces Highway and the Arroyo Camp was shut down, the two trailers were relocated at Forty Acres, the new union’s headquarters (by then called the United Farm Worker Organizing Committee, UFWOC). In 1970 Richard Chávez, César Chávez’s brother, started directing the construction works for a permanent structure. Built by a group of volunteers and finished with brick walls and a mission-style roof, the clinic was named in memory of Roger Terronez, a leader of the NFWA killed in a car accident in 1968. The Roger Terronez clinic opened in later 1971.

Priests celebrating mass next to the Roger Terronez Clinic, Delano, 1971

Priests celebrating mass next to the Roger Terronez Clinic at Forty Acres. The building in the background was the newly built UFW office, funded by United Auto Workers and named the Roy L. Reuther Memorial. Delano, 1971. Photo by John Kouns.

Two women posing for a photograph during services ending César Chávez’s fast, Delano, 1971

Two women attending mass next to the Roger Terronez Clinic at Forty Acres. They hold religious iconography of Jesus Christ and Saint Francis of Assisi standing in front of Reuther Hall. Delano, 1971. Photo by John Kouns.

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