Preliminary Inventory of the Graciela Gil Olivarez Papers
Scope and Content Note
This collection houses speeches, awards, memorabilia, newspaper articles, university degrees, scrapbooks, photographs, and slides documenting Graciela Gil Olivarez's work with the Community Services Administration and the New Mexico State Planning Office as well as her activism on behalf of the Mexican American community and specifically Mexican American women. This collection has not been processed in full and can be viewed only by appointment. Contact Archives and Special Collections for more information.
Dates
- Creation: 1949-1988
- Creation: Majority of material found within 1962-1988
Language of Materials
Material in English
Access Restrictions
To view this collection, make an appointment at least five business days prior to your visit by contacting Ask an Archivist or calling (480) 965-4932. Appointments in the Wurzburger Reading Room at Hayden Library (rm. 138) on the Tempe campus are available Monday through Friday. Check the ASU Library Hours page for current availability.
Copyright
The Arizona Board of Regents retains copyright to this collection for and on behalf of the Arizona State University Library. Requests to publish, display, or redistribute information from this collection must be submitted via our online application.
Biographical Note
Graciela Gil (known commonly as Grace) was born to Damian Valero and Eloisa Solis Valero Gil in Phoenix, Arizona on March 9, 1928. She began working for KIFN (a Spanish language radio station in Phoenix) in 1952, where she served as a bilingual secretary, as a third-class radio engineer, as an announcer, and finally as the Women's Program Director. After leaving KIFN in 1962, Gil worked as a Staff Specialist at the Choate Foundation (1962-1965) and as the Director of the Arizona State Office of Economic Opportunity (1966-1968). She was also involved with volunteer work to help the poor and physically handicapped of Phoenix and considered both radio and television to be a means of informing the impoverished about the health, social, and educational services available to them. She was married briefly in the late 1950s and had one son, Victor Rene (1959-).
Although she had dropped out of Ray High School in 1944 in favor of completing a six-month course at a business school, Olivarez was admitted to the Law School at the University of Notre Dame in 1967. She became the first woman to earn her JD at this institution in 1970. She was also granted a number of honorary degrees, including an Honorary Doctor of Public Administration from the University of Albuquerque (1985), an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from Amherst College (1972), and Honorary Doctorates of Law from Michigan State University (1975), the University of Notre Dame (1978), and St. Mary's-of-the-Woods (1980).
After earning her law degree, Olivarez worked as Director of Food For All (1970-1972), as Director of the Institute for Social Research and Development (1972-1975), and as the New Mexico State Planning Officer (1975-1977) before being appointed the Director of the Community Services Administration by President Jimmy Carter. Olivarez left this post in 1980 and returned to Albuquerque, where she founded Olivarez Television Company, Inc. Graciela Gil Olivarez died in Albuquerque on September 19, 1987.
Full extent
11 Box(es)
Full extent
11.5 Linear Feet
Abstract
This collection houses speeches, awards, memorabilia, newspaper articles, university degrees, scrapbooks, photographs, and slides documenting Graciela Gil Olivarez's work with the Community Services Administration and the New Mexico State Planning Office as well as her activism on behalf of the Mexican American community and specifically Mexican American women. This collection has not been processed in full and can be viewed only by appointment. Contact Archives and Special Collections for more information.
Arrangement
This collection consists of eleven boxes divided into two series:
- Series I: Accession #1994-01446
- Series II: Accession #2013-04722
Provenance
Victor Olivarez and Paula Maldonado donated these papers to the Chicano Research Collection in 1994, 1997, and 2013.
Separated Materials
The majority of the photographs received with this collection have been removed and processed as MP SPC 293: Graciela Gil Olivarez Photograph Collection (guide available at http://www.azarchivesonline.org/xtf/view?docId=ead/asu/olivarez_photos.xml).
- Title
- Preliminary Inventory of the Graciela Gil Olivarez Papers
- Status
- Completed
- Date
- 2012
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latn
- Language of description note
- Finding guide encoded in English.
Repository details
Part of the Chicano/a Research Collection Repository
Contact
Arizona State UniversityP.O. Box 871006
Tempe AZ 85287-1006 United States
(480) 965-4932
archives@asu.edu