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Apolonia Dangzalan, a Filipino resident of Watsonville, California, was interviewed on April 27, 1977 by Meri Knaster, an editor at the Regional History Project, as part of a series of oral histories documenting local agricultural and ethnic history. Dangzalan was born in February 1896 in San Nicolas, Ilocos Sur, northwest of Manila, on the largest of the Philippine islands. Her family owned some land on which rice and corn was cultivated by sharecroppers. Her uncle was the president of San Nicholas. Dangzalan attended school for five years but was unable to continue due to illness. Her father died when she was five years old and her mother died when she was seventeen. In 1923, at age 27, she married. A year later she and her husband immigrated to Oahu, Hawaii. Her husband worked in the sugar cane fields and Dangzalan began a small business in her house sewing clothes for the Filipino community. This was the first of many small businesses she would run throughout her long life. In 1925 she and her husband moved to San Francisco, and then to Stockton, California, where her husband worked as a laborer in the asparagus fields.
Dissatisfied with her marriage, in 1926 Dangzalan divorced her husband and moved
to Marysville, California, where she bought and managed a pool hall and restaurant
frequented by Filipinos, Mexicans and Anglo Americans. Although she enjoyed
this work, business was not too good. She heard that Watsonville and Salinas
were much better places to be in business because they attracted a large Filipino
community that came to work in the fruit orchards. So after five months in Marysville,
Dangzalan joined her nephew, Frank Barba, in Watsonville, California. Frank
Barba is the subject of an oral history also published by the Regional History
Project. Dangzalan opened a boarding house for Filipino agricultural workers
on Bridge Street in Watsonville, California, where she became known as Mama
Dangzalan. After a few years, her nephew, Frank Barba, took over the Watsonville
boarding house and Dangzalan opened another boarding house on Salinas Road in
1930. Most of the workers she housed were working for the Gary Company, and
Dangzalan also served as a labor contractor, hiring men to work in the companys
fields. Dangzalan was one of very few women engaged in labor contracting.
Dangzalan engaged in diverse business activities besides labor contracting. She also opened a liquor store, dancing club, and pool hall on Main Street in Watsonville in 1936. During World War II she owned a house of prostitution on Union Street in Watsonville. She hired an American woman to manage it for her.
In 1950 Dangzalan stopped working as a labor contractor and went into business
for herself as a farmer, primarily growing strawberries. After four years of
this she was tired. In 1952 Dangzalan was operated on for kidney cancer. She
withdrew from all of her businesses except for the International Groceries and
Liquors store on lower Main Street, which she was still running at the time
of this oral history interview in 1977. At age 81 Dangzalan was still working
in the liquor store until 2:30 in the morning. In her field notes, interviewer
Meri Knaster described Dangzalan as a very spry and active eighty-one
year old. Dangzalan continued to operate the liquor store until 1982. She died
in 1992, at the age of 96.