The Library of Congress has added a vital piece of civil rights history to its holdings—an expansive archive from Raúl Ruiz, a journalist and activist whose work documented the Chicano Movement’s most defining moments in Los Angeles from the 1960s onward.
Ruiz Collection Captures a Cultural Turning Point
In April 2025, the Library of Congress announced the acquisition of the Raúl Ruiz Chicano Movement Collection, a trove of more than 17,500 photographs and nearly 10,000 pages of manuscripts.
Ruiz, a trailblazing Mexican American journalist, captured pivotal scenes in Chicano activism through his lens and editorial leadership at La Raza newspaper and magazine.
This collection is now accessible by appointment in several reading rooms at the Library’s Washington, D.C., campus.

A Legacy of Advocacy in Print and Image
Born in 1940 and active until his death in 2019, Ruiz played multiple roles: educator, editor, photographer, and community organizer.
His visual and written work not only chronicled demonstrations and student walkouts but also shaped public understanding of Chicano identity, justice, and resistance.
“The Ruiz collection speaks to the heart of the Chicano Movement,”
said Adam Silvia, curator in the Library’s Prints & Photographs Division.
The photographs are now partially digitized, with more becoming available online in the coming weeks.
Materials Included in the Collection
Spanning three key formats—visual, textual, and periodical—the Ruiz archive provides a rare first-person lens on Chicano life, protest, and journalism from 1968 through the 1970s.
Component | Description |
---|---|
Photographs | 17,500+ images: prints, negatives, contact sheets, transparencies |
Manuscripts | 10,000 pages: correspondence, book drafts, meeting notes |
Periodicals | La Raza newspapers/magazines and related Chicano publications |
Highlight Items | César Chávez protest image, Rubén Salazar death scene, 1968 walkout docs |
The archive was jointly donated by Ruiz’s daughter, Marcela Ponce, and close friend, Professor Marta E. Sánchez of Loyola Marymount University.
Documenting Defiance: Highlights from the Collection
Among the standout pieces are original handmade page layouts from the first issue of La Raza magazine and iconic protest images from East Los Angeles.
These images bear witness to:
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Student-led walkouts protesting inequality in education
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Vietnam War-era demonstrations spotlighting Latino opposition
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The death of journalist Rubén Salazar during a 1970 protest
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Faith-based civil rights advocacy by Católicos por La Raza
These rare records present an unfiltered look at the movement’s energy and urgency from the perspective of its own community.
Historical and Research Value
The Library of Congress holds the world’s largest archive of recorded knowledge, and the addition of the Ruiz collection deepens its Latino studies and photojournalism assets.
Researchers, educators, and documentarians are expected to use these primary sources to:
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Examine grassroots civil rights strategies
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Analyze ethnic media as agents of political change
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Trace the development of Latino identity in the U.S.
The collection’s arrival is especially timely as renewed interest in ethnic studies and inclusive historical narratives shapes academic and public discourse.
Access and Availability
Researchers can access materials through the following Library of Congress reading rooms:
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Prints & Photographs Reading Room – for images
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Manuscript Reading Room – for written documents
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Newspaper & Current Periodical Reading Room – for magazines and newspapers
Digitized images will be searchable through the Library’s online catalog in the near future.
Explore the Movement Through Ruiz’s Lens
The Raúl Ruiz Chicano Movement Collection offers a window into the stories, struggles, and solidarity that defined a generation.
With more materials coming online soon, the archive is poised to become a cornerstone for those exploring American civil rights history from a Latino perspective.
Want to learn more?
Explore the Library of Congress online catalog or schedule an in-person research appointment to view the Ruiz collection in full.
Sources: Library of the Congress.
Prepared by Ivan Alexander Golden, Founder of THX News™, an independent news organization delivering timely insights from global official sources. Combines AI-analyzed research with human-edited accuracy and context.