My
home town
An excerpt from ‘The Brick
People’ by Alejandro Morales
“Mr. Simons
made it happen. Everything is his. The store, pool hall, post office, movie
show, bachelor’s cabins, Vail School, the library, the church, the water tower,
the electricity, the clinic, the trains, the machines, the lots. The houses,
unpainted and battered by the weather, the walls of scrap lumber, barely
standing together, all the same; two, maybe three bedrooms, a kitchen and small
living room, no bath, no toilet. Some had been there for thirty, forty years,
but they’re clean on the inside and the outside, pretty garden, lots of plants.
It’s not too bad, it’s not too good. It was planned by Mr. Simons and the City.
Simoms was
built at just the correct distance from Montebello to discourage the Mexicans
from going into town. It was logical to have a separate school, church and
other conveniences. The Simons Mexicans were to live, work, play, worship and
trade apart, at a safe distance from Montebello. When Simons was established it
was never proposed that the company town be a part of Montebello, or for that
matter any city. It was understood that the Mexicans were to remind apart in
every way”