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Benny Martinez, Texas Native & Latino Civil Rights Leader, Dies At 85

GOLIAD, Texas (CBSDFW.COM/AP) — Benny Martinez, a Mexican-American civil rights leader who helped organize the historic Latino meeting with President John F. Kennedy, died Sunday.

His daughter, Loretta Martinez Williams, said Martinez died peacefully of natural causes in Olmito following a long bout with several illnesses. He was 85.

benny martinez
Benny Martinez (LULAC Greater Houston Council #4967)

Born in Goliad, Martinez went to segregated schools before his father moved the family to Houston so his sons "wouldn't have to pick cotton for a living." After serving 18 months as a medic in the U.S. Army during the Korean War, Martinez returned to Houston and organized boycotts against businesses that refused to hire Mexican-Americans.

Martinez later joined the League of United Latin American Citizens, then the nation's largest civil rights organization for Latinos, and raised money for Mexican-Americans to pay their Texas "poll taxes" so they could vote.

"We served in World War II and in Korea and deserved to be treated with respect," Martinez told The Associated Press in 2013. "The time for silence was over."

A registered nurse, Martinez joined civil rights attorney John J. Herrera to organize a special LULAC gala for Kennedy during his 1963 trip to Texas. The Houston gala took place the night before the president's assassination in Dallas. Historians said the meeting was the first time a sitting president met with a Latino civil rights group.

"I didn't get to shake his hand, but I was able to reach out and touch his shoulder," Martinez said. "The next day, I was in tears."

In his later years, Martinez continued to raise money for scholarships for Hispanic students.

(© Copyright 2019 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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