Sunday, February 26, 2023

"SAN BENITO TWENTY" CREATES BOHEMIAN SOCIAL CLUB DURING THE GREAT DEPRESSION WHILE VALLEY GETS FILLED WITH BUMS AND HOBOS

                  by Rene Torres



After the stock market crash of 1929 many in this country experienced a dramatic change in 
their lives. The economic downfall, which lasted about ten years, caused a downgrade of lifestyle as many lost their jobs and some had no choice but to live in shanty towns. 

Some of the well-to-do of the "Roaring Twenties" were reduced to selling apples and pencils on street corners.

The Valley was home to many of those bums and drifters created by the era. 

“They came in record numbers—more than this region had seen before,” said local police.

Word spread among the down and out that the Valley was prosperous with a mild climate, and that you could eat as many grapefruits as your stomach could hold. 

A newspaper of that era reported, “The highways of the Valley are literally lined with human driftwood, hobbling along the side of the road or footing along the railroad tracks.”

It was written that we went from the land of hope to the land of despair and people did what they could to make their lives bearable.

A need for entertainment was apparent. In the Valley no “Depression” was going to damper the spirit of the people and what better way to depart from the pains of their daily routines than to dance the night away 

Listening to the radio offered some escape, but dancing to the Latin rhythms, swinging to the Shim Sham Shimmy, Charleston and the rest brought instant romance.

So, the idea of forming a social dance club in San Benito during the “Depression” had its skeptics, but that did not deter twenty local young men to do what seemed the impossible.

The people of this era were typically entertained by sporting events like baseball and/or girls’ softball games, high school football, boxing, wrestling, horse racing, cock fighting and the more influential were playing golf and tennis—and of course the movies were hot. 

Reading and board games were popular as well.

“The San Benito Twenty,” envisioned more, by bringing the sounds of Benny Goodman, Glenn Miller and Tommy Dorsey from the radio to the local ballroom, so in 1934 they formed the

Bohemian Recreational Club. 

The club elected Edmundo Leandro, president, Oscar Gomez, vice-president, Oscar Lozano, secretary and Ramon Trevino as treasurer.

The club’s purpose was to organize three dances a year that would be open to the public, but a couple could not just show up and pay their three dollars (equivalent to $48 today) and get in.

The club followed the same rules established by other Bohemian Clubs of the Valley that required an invitation to attend.




Under Leandro’s leadership and club officials, the organization soon established itself as a 
viable club within, not only the Latin-American community of San Benito, but recognized throughout the Valley as well. 

The San Benito chapter was now rubbing elbows with other Bohemia Clubs that were established in Brownsville, McAllen, Mercedes and Harlingen.

Since money was scarce during this era, raising it was a major stumbling block, so collecting a one dollar membership fee was necessary. 

The club had its headquarters at Daniel Chapa’s store, formerly owned by the Corkill family, where they met every Thursday evening. It was there that members were also expected to donate at least another dollar to be used to finance the dances.

It was agreed to rent the Aztec Building in San Benito, which still stands today, for $25.00 a night, providing the perfect place for dancing the nights and sorrows away. 

Being that the dance floor was on the roof top, it provided a unique dancing climate under the stars.

If you think that the rental fee was affordable, think again, as, according to the consumer price index $25 would be the equivalent of $400 today.

On a cool and fair night of moonlight in November, the sounds of boleros and/or big bandmusic could be heard for long distances throughout the streets and alleys of San Benito. 

“The dances were well attended with guests coming from throughout the Valley.  It was not uncommon to have up to 300 couples,” said a frequent swinger.

After several successful events the club was healthy enough to hire big-name orchestras. 

One of those groups was Peg Lyndon’s band from Philadelphia which performed from 8 p.m. to 1 A.M. for $350. 

The highlight of the year was when Lee Prowse’s band, one of the most renowned bands of the 1930s, (which charged $600 a night) swung south to perform for each of the Bohemian Clubs of the Valley.

Thanks to the ‘San Benformity,’ many were given the opportunity to enjoy their youth and to form lasting friendships through dancing. 

It was an era when young single girls danced out their teenage years into the dawning pleasures of young ladyhood, of course with a chaperon close by, usually their mother.

And, if you wanted to impress your date after a night of dancing, you could take her for supper, which in the 1930's would set you back about 50 cents.

For instance, at Keno’s Café in Weslaco, they had a special plate that included a choice of one: chicken fried steak, grilled pork chop, calf liver & onions, fried chicken and roast beef served with two vegetables and a drink for 25 cents.

The original members of the 1934 San Benito Bohemian Club included: Jose Garcia, Juan Villarreal, Antonio de los Santos, Guadalupe Aguirre, Enrique Zepeda, Jesus E. Gonzalez, Carlos Zepeda, Alberto Villarreal, Rafael Cantu, Jesus Garza Leal, Ramon Cavazos, Jose Amador, Ramon Trevino, Luis Garcia, Oscar Gomez, Rodolfo Guerra, Juan Conde, Lazaro Izaguirre, Edmundo Leandro, and Oscar Lozano.

Bailamos “Mi Amor”!


Photo 1: Original San Benito Bohemia Club invitation September 1936, from Lillian Leandro collection

Photo 2: Edmundo 



3 comments:

  1. It is so important we keep our history alive. We are more than the corrupt politicos. I am still mad over Fronton street. In Spanish it means bluff and before they dammed the river you could stand on Fronton street and watch the cotton and other commercial ships go up and down the river. That is our history, and we lost it.

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  2. Jim on a side note can you email me. bobbywc58@yahoo.com My last half sibling nearly 90 passed last night. I promised her I would never tell the full story of the original 5 until they all had passed. her mother Alice knowing I would tell the truth when the time was right, left me her diary in her will. Well they are now all gone .I want to send you a guest piece which shows through documents how a corrupt judge and lawyers kidnapped them from their mother in Vermont and brought them to Beaumont. It destroyed their lives. My later sister Caroline who never left Brownsville from when daddy worked for Pan Am in the early 40's said the nicest thing to me before she passed. " I did not know what Alicia did [my mom] did to him but he became the father we never had." Once mom learned the truth she made sure all 12 stayed connected. She even in 76's asked I go to Ft Lauderdale to see the oldest Shirley who I had not seen since daddy's funeral, and the mother Alice. Alice was a panic. But people need to understand the corruption of judges and how it can destroy children.

    if you are interested in the story email me - bobbywc58@yahoo.com. You can read it and publish it or delete it. Nothing personal - it is your blog. But there is context to why I am so hard on judicial corruption. Without those of use who fight the judicial corruption all of these innocent people on death row or in prison for 20+ years would still be there. Jim on a side not can you email me. My last half sibling nearly 90 passed last night. I promised her I would never tell the full story of the original 5 until they all had passed. Well they are now all gone .I want to send you a guest piece which shows through documents how a corrupt judge and lawyers kidnapped them from their mother in Vermont and brought them to Beaumont. It destroyed their lives. my later sister Caroline who never left Brownsville from when daddy worked for Pan Am in the early 40's said the nicest thing to me before she passed. " I did not know what Alicia did [my mom] did to him but he became the father we never had." Once mom learned the truth She made sure all 12 stayed connected. She even in 76's asked I go to Ft Lauderdale to see the earliest Shirley who I had not seen since daddy's funeral, and the mother Alice. Alice was a panic. But people need to understand the corruption of judges and how it can destroy children.

    if you are interested in the story email me - bobbywc58@yahoo.com. You can read it and publish it or delete it. Nothing personal - it is your blog. But there is context to why I am so hard on judicial corruption. Without those of use who fight the judicial corruption all of these innocent people on death row or in prison for 20+ years would still be there. There is real context to what I do. https://innocenceproject.org/all-cases/

    In 11 years federal judge Jack has not been able to force CPS to comply with her orders. They willingly use our money to pay the sanctions and for an independent organization to oversee CPS. I am about to ask for her removal. 11 years and foster children continue to die for no reason. We need a federal judge who will finally just dissolve CPS. I never lost a case against them. They are horrible, horrible people. There is real context to what I do. In 11 years federal judge Jack has not been able to force CPS to comply with her orders. They willingly use our money to pay the sanctions and for an independent organization to oversee CPS. I am about to ask for her removal.

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  3. I guess that is why you migrated to Brownsville huh Messr. Jim?

    You bum!!

    ReplyDelete