The logical place for this story to begin is in the year 1907,
in the little village called Barruelo de Santullan, in the northern Spanish
province of Palencia. It begins with 23-year-old Isaac Aparicio, anxious
to seek a future more promising than that offered by the only employer
in town – the coalmine. His mind is filled with stories of the immense
wealth that can be gained in the new world. Vera Cruz, Mexico is the first
stop – later moving to the Chihuahua desert in the Torreon area. After
three years of tranquil prosperity, the Mexican revolution makes it expedient
to move to Texas in the United States. A later return to Mexico only serves
to verify that life there is forever changed no longer desirable, so the
permanent move to Texas is made. The marriage to Manuela Villarreal in
1917 adds motivation and fulfillment to his life. Six children and nine
years later, 1926, the family moves to Palacios, Texas where Camp Hulen
is being built and good jobs are available. The stay is short and the family
moves to Ganado, Texas. In 1930 the family, now including eight siblings,
returns to Palacios, Texas; this time to stay. By 1932 the family is now
complete – seven girls and three boys; they are:
Isabel ----------- born in 1918 in Goliad, Texas
Janie ------------- born in 1919 in Goliad, Texas
Mary ------------- born in 1920 in Goliad, Texas
Rosie ------------- born in 1922 in Goliad, Texas
Homer Isaac ----- born in 1924 in Zapata, Texas
Bernard -----------born in 1925 in Zapata, Texas
Antonia (twin) -- born in 1928 in Ganado, Texas
Andrea (twin) --- born in 1928 in Ganado, Texas
Frances ----------- born in 1930 in Palacios, Texas
Pete --------------- born in 1932 in Palacios, Texas
The next ten years were the most difficult faced by the family
because not only were they facing a brutal economic depression, but also
the patriarch of the family has been felled by a crippling illness, which
severely limited his ability to function. He’s barely able to walk and
constantly suffers from painful arthritis and yet he continued to work
wherever work can be found. In the summer, he receives 50 cents a week
to water the city park. He plants and harvests cotton and maize on vacant
land that is bordered by 12th and Henderson streets. Milk cows provide
milk to sell and calves to slaughter for food for the family. Shucking
oysters provides badly needed income during the fall, winter, and spring
seasons. Finally the summer garden provides food for the dinner table.
And yet all his efforts fail to meet the needs of the family.
It fell upon the mother and the oldest four, all girls, to pitch
in and help. So, Manuela and her girls; Isabel, Janie, Mary and Rosie forego
school and go to work so the family can survive. They pick cotton, both
their own and that of others. They worked as maids; they also raised and
sold chickens. The one job that provides the most income is working in
the shrimp houses, heading, peeling and packing shrimp. These shrimp houses
employed many people in town. Securing a workplace required arriving early,
as these were often fewer than the number of people wishing to occupy them.
This meant arriving at the workplace as early as three o’clock in the morning
and sometimes working through the day into the early evening. There were
several fish houses in those years – perhaps the prominent were the Colter
Corporation and the Crawford Packing Company. They had their own fleet
boats and it was on one of these that 14-year-old Bernard began a fishing
career that was to last half a century. As the rest of the siblings grew
they also worked in the fish houses, sometimes after school and during
the summer months.
The first in the family to enter the fishery as boat owner was
Antonia and her husband Edward Garcia, Sr. in the early 1950’s a decade
later, Homer and a cousin, Arnulfo Villareal bought their first boat. IN
the 1970’s Pete would join Homer in a joint venture that grew to several
boats by the time Homer died in 1990. These seeds that were planted in
earlier years evolved into businesses that today make up a significant
portion of the shrimp industry in Palacios. This includes three shrimp
houses, 46 large offshore gulf trawlers, and a shrimp processing plant
in Port Lavaca, owned by the offspring of Homer and Antonia. Pete remains
involved in the shrimp industry also.
This account of one family’s involvement in the shrimp industry
illustrates the fact that through good times and bad times this fishery
is a constant in the economy of Palacios providing the means of survival
in lean times and tremendous opportunities for those who are willing to
work when time improve.
It also confirms something heard long ago that once you drink
the water of Palacios, you may move elsewhere but you will always return.
Click here to see photos from Anchor Seafood.
Pete V. Aparicio
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