Dolores Huerta was born on April 10, 1930, in Dawson, New Mexico. She was three when she moved to Stockton. There, she met farm worker families. She saw that families had a hard time living on the small amount of money the workers earned.
Huerta became a teacher to help farm workers’ children, but she soon left her job. She said that she couldn’t stand seeing “kids come to class hungry and needing shoes." She thought she could do more by organizing farm workers.
Huerta started an organization to help farm workers. She urged lawmakers to pass laws that would treat farm workers more fairly. In 1962, she joined César Chávez to start the National Farm Workers Association, a labor union. The union won higher wages and better working conditions for California’s grape workers.
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