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María Luisa Arcelay

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María Luisa Arcelay
María Luisa ArcelayMaría Luisa Arcelay
Occupationeducator, businesswoman and politician
NationalityPuerto Rican

María Luisa Arcelay (December 23, 1893-October 17, 1981), was an educator, businesswoman and politician who on November 1932, became the first woman in Puerto Rico and in all of Latin America to be elected to a government legislative body.

Early years

Arcelay was one of five siblings born to Ricardo Arcelay and Isabel de la Rosa in Mayagüez, Puerto Rico. There she received her primary and secondary education before moving to the then town of Rio Piedras where she earned her teachers certificate.

Educator

Arcelay began her career as an educator as a high school teacher at Theodore Roosevelt High School and later at the Jose de Diego High School, both located in the City of Mayagüez. During her spare time she worked as a book keeper for various commercial firms in the area.

Businesswoman and politician

By 1920, Arcelay abandoned her career as an educator and together with Lorenza Carrero founded a needlework workshop which evolved into a successful needlework factory. Her company employed many of the local women who had no other means to sustain themselves economically. Arcelay became an activist defending the island's needlework industry in various public hearings which were held in New York City and Washington, D.C..

Arcelay became a member of the Partido Coalicionista de Puerto Rico (The Puerto Rican Coalition Party) and in the elections of November 1932, she was elected to represent the district of Mayagüez in the Puerto Rican Camera of Representatives. Arcelay became the first Puerto Rican and for that matter the first woman in all of Latin America to be elected to a government legislative body. She used her position to continue her defense of the needlework industry before local and federal authorities and played an instrumental role in making the industry compatible with others which were already established in the United States market by going against any measure which would raise the salaries of the common worker in the industry. In Agust 1932, needleworker women went on strike for a higher pay. Police who were called to protect employer property killed and wounded some strikers who stoned the workshop of Arcelay Puerto Rican musician Mon Rivera wrote a song titled "Quien Nama" (loosely translated as "Hello, Who' Calling?", sometimes referred to as "Que Sera") which describes the seamstress' strike and she is mentioned in the song.Under her leadership, Puerto Rico's needlework industry grew to become islands the second largest industry (Puerto Rico's largest industry was agriculture) during the 1940s and 50s. In 1934, she presented before the Puerto Rican legislature a Bill which established the Lottery of Puerto Rico. During World War II, she was named president of the Prices and Rationing Board #49 of Mayaguez and was the director of the Bonds for Victory program.

Arcelay also participated in civic orientated organizations such as the Women's Civic and Cultural Club of Mayagüez and wasthe founder of the Altrusa Club of that same city. She retired in 1965, from both her business and political careers.

Legacy

Arcelay died on October 17, 1981, in her hometown Mayagüez and is buried in Mayagüez's Old Municipal Cemetery,. The city named a school in her honor. There is a Portrait of Maria Luisa Arcelay at the Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute.

Further reading

"ALO, QUIEN LLAMA?" "MARIA LUISA ARCELAY." PIONERA DE LA LEGISLATURA OLVIDADO EN EL TIEMPO."; by Arcelay Santiago and Carmen L. San Juan; 0 9755107 7 0.

See also

References

  1. ^ Biografia
  2. ^ "Latino thought"; By: Francisco Hernández Vázquez, Rodolfo D. Torres; page 182; ISBN-13: 9780847699414
  3. "Home to work: motherhood and the politics of industrial homework in the ..."; By Eileen Boris; page 233; Publisher: Cambridge University Press; ISBN-13: 9780521455480
  4. Mon Rivera
  5. Maria Luisa Arcelay School
  6. Harvard University Library
  7. MARIA LUISA ARCELAY
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