|
|
|
HR1270 |
|
LRB094 20451 HSS 58659 r |
|
|
1 |
| HOUSE RESOLUTION
|
2 |
| WHEREAS, The members of this Body are honored to recognize |
3 |
| significant milestones in the lives of the people of this |
4 |
| State; and
|
5 |
| WHEREAS, It has come to our attention that Senobio Nila of |
6 |
| Aurora is celebrating the 105th anniversary of his birth; and
|
7 |
| WHEREAS, Senobio Nila was born on May 4, 1901, on a little |
8 |
| ranch called "El Pedregoso" in Leon, Guanajuato, Mexico, to |
9 |
| Miguel and Dorotea, who worked for the Spanish Governor of |
10 |
| Guanajuato as servants; and
|
11 |
| WHEREAS, Senobio first came to the U.S. in 1918 at the age |
12 |
| of seventeen; he went to Louisiana looking for work, then on to |
13 |
| Georgia, then to Tennessee, and then to Kentucky; he did |
14 |
| whatever kind of work he could find; and
|
15 |
| WHEREAS, During a time when he had returned to Mexico, |
16 |
| Senobio fell in love with Santiaga, called Chaga; Santiaga was |
17 |
| born to Nestor and Juana Hernandez on July 29, 1901, in a |
18 |
| little village by the name of Los Sapos, in Leon, Guanajuato, |
19 |
| Mexico; they were married sometime around February of 1923; and |
20 |
| WHEREAS, Senobio and Santiago later came to the U.S. |
21 |
| together with other family members; Senobio found a job with |
22 |
| the Burlington Railroad at the Reclamation Plant in Eola, |
23 |
| separating parts of trains; the company provided homes for |
24 |
| Senobio and his family by repairing and insulating box cars; |
25 |
| they gave them blankets, water, coal, coal stoves, and beds, |
26 |
| and everything was provided rent-free; the community in the box |
27 |
| cars was called "El Campo" (the Camp); and
|
28 |
| WHEREAS, Senobio worked with Burlington Railroad through |
29 |
| the Great Depression, never losing a day of work; he retired |