Pete A. Gallego
|
Elena Paredes Peña
born August 18, 1928 died March 8, 2023 lived to age 94 |
"I knew this day would come sooner or later, but I still wasn’t ready. It was tough. We buried my mom today.
"Elena Peña Gallego was 94. She was devoted to her children and committed to her community. She was a force of nature who lived life to the fullest.
"While my father gets credit for many things, including leading the fight for integration of the public schools in Alpine, the truth is that she was as responsible for it as he was.
"My mother was not only a dreamer, she was a doer. She was the consummate strategist, planner, and implementer. She was born way ahead of her time. Born in 1928 to a family of very humble means in Fort Stockton, she was the third of four surviving children.
"She was highly intelligent, hard working, and determined. She had everything except opportunity - but opportunity was what she gave her children."
"Elena Peña Gallego was 94. She was devoted to her children and committed to her community. She was a force of nature who lived life to the fullest.
"While my father gets credit for many things, including leading the fight for integration of the public schools in Alpine, the truth is that she was as responsible for it as he was.
"My mother was not only a dreamer, she was a doer. She was the consummate strategist, planner, and implementer. She was born way ahead of her time. Born in 1928 to a family of very humble means in Fort Stockton, she was the third of four surviving children.
"She was highly intelligent, hard working, and determined. She had everything except opportunity - but opportunity was what she gave her children."
Pete Gallego, her son and
former US Congressman
former US Congressman
Elena Peña Gallego's Obituary
Elena Peña Gallego, 94, a long-time resident of Alpine, passed away peacefully in her sleep on March 8, 2023. Born in Fort Stockton, Texas, on August 18, 1928, to Martín Peña and Cecilia Paredes Peña, she was the third of four surviving children - and the last of her generation.
Always precocious and driven, Elena left Fort Stockton at the age of 16 to attend Sul Ross State Teachers’ College in Alpine. At Sul Ross, she met a fellow student, Pete A. Gallego. The couple married on April 12, 1947. She was 18 years old. Their marriage lasted until Pete’s death on March 3, 2010 —just short of 63 years — and produced four children, María Imelda, María Rebecca, Pete III, and Robert.
To make ends meet prior to her marriage, Elena left Sul Ross to take a position as a teacher at the very rural school near Chinati Peak. Upon her marriage, she worked in the Gallego family restaurant then known as the Green Café while Pete continued college. Later, she became the first Mexican American bookkeeper/teller to be hired at First National Bank in Alpine. The racism of the time made her experience at the bank difficult, though she paved the road for many other Mexican Americans to follow. Thereafter, Elena accepted a position with the Texas Department of Human Services. This was her favorite job as she loved helping local and area people meet their basic needs.
Because of the local bank’s unwillingness to provide loans to most Mexican Americans, Pete and Elena had also become part of a core group of people who founded Our Lady of Peace Credit Union (now Alpine Community Credit Union). While Pete served as its president, Elena did the books, handled all of the financial transactions, took payments, and helped provide financial counseling and other services. She did so after her normal work hours and, for years, from her home’s dining room table. She excelled at making people feel comfortable, helping them establish credit, and working with them to find ways to pay for their children’s education.
Seeing many challenges, Elena and Pete also became active in local politics. In 1959, Pete became the first Mexican American elected to the Board of Trustees of the Alpine Independent School District, where he served five terms and 15 years. Elena was the campaign strategist. Throughout his career, she would be the one who researched potential courses of action and planned the next moves. She was Pete’s inspiration as he used his position on the school board to force desegregation and improve conditions for Mexican American students. Their restaurant became a hotbed of local political activity — and a required stopping place for statewide Democratic candidates campaigning in the West Texas area.
Elena pushed all of her children to go to college. They became the first Mexican American graduates of Alpine High School to become lawyers (Imelda and Pete) or medical doctors (Rebecca). However, with her marriage, family, work, and political activism, Elena never completed her degree from Sul Ross. It was ironic that the family member who most valued education and a college degree was the only family member without one. However, Sul Ross State University and the Board of Regents of the Texas State University System stepped in to remedy that. In December, 2019, in recognition of her many successes, Elena Peña Gallego was granted an honorary Bachelor of Arts degree, the first time in University and System history that such a degree had been awarded.
Elena is survived by her children, Imelda Gallego García, Rebecca Peña Gallego, M.D., and former U.S. Congressman Pete P. Gallego and his spouse, María Elena Ramón, her grandchildren, Imelda García, María Elena García, Briana García and her spouse, Tori Sandovál, Cristina Shalanta Gallego, and Nicolás Miguel Ramón Gallego; and her great-granddaughter, Sonia García; as well as numerous nieces, nephews, and cousins.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Pete A. Gallego, son, Robert Peña Gallego, parents Martín and Cecilia Paredes Peña, her sisters Mary Peña Sotelo and Irene Peña Villarreal, and her brother, Pete Paredes Peña.
Visitation: at 5:00 P.M. on Wednesday, March 15, 2023 at Our Lady of Peace Catholic Church followed by
Rosary service: at 7:00 p.m.
Funeral Mass: Thursday morning, March 16, 2023 at 10:00 a.m. at Our Lady of Peace Catholic Church. Burial will follow at Holy Angels Cemetery.
Pallbearers: Elena Gallego’s grandson, Nicolás Miguel Ramón Gallego, her nephews, Peter Villarreal and Edward Villarreal, her grand-nephew Frank Lunsford, and Danny Saenz, Joe Daniel Valenzuela, and Wesley Duncan.
Honorary pallbearers: Elena Gallego’s caregiver, Tori Sandovál, her grandchildren Imelda García, María Elena García, and Briana García, Rowena Gallego, Elva Torres, Elidia Polanco, and Dr. Jimmy Case.
Always precocious and driven, Elena left Fort Stockton at the age of 16 to attend Sul Ross State Teachers’ College in Alpine. At Sul Ross, she met a fellow student, Pete A. Gallego. The couple married on April 12, 1947. She was 18 years old. Their marriage lasted until Pete’s death on March 3, 2010 —just short of 63 years — and produced four children, María Imelda, María Rebecca, Pete III, and Robert.
To make ends meet prior to her marriage, Elena left Sul Ross to take a position as a teacher at the very rural school near Chinati Peak. Upon her marriage, she worked in the Gallego family restaurant then known as the Green Café while Pete continued college. Later, she became the first Mexican American bookkeeper/teller to be hired at First National Bank in Alpine. The racism of the time made her experience at the bank difficult, though she paved the road for many other Mexican Americans to follow. Thereafter, Elena accepted a position with the Texas Department of Human Services. This was her favorite job as she loved helping local and area people meet their basic needs.
Because of the local bank’s unwillingness to provide loans to most Mexican Americans, Pete and Elena had also become part of a core group of people who founded Our Lady of Peace Credit Union (now Alpine Community Credit Union). While Pete served as its president, Elena did the books, handled all of the financial transactions, took payments, and helped provide financial counseling and other services. She did so after her normal work hours and, for years, from her home’s dining room table. She excelled at making people feel comfortable, helping them establish credit, and working with them to find ways to pay for their children’s education.
Seeing many challenges, Elena and Pete also became active in local politics. In 1959, Pete became the first Mexican American elected to the Board of Trustees of the Alpine Independent School District, where he served five terms and 15 years. Elena was the campaign strategist. Throughout his career, she would be the one who researched potential courses of action and planned the next moves. She was Pete’s inspiration as he used his position on the school board to force desegregation and improve conditions for Mexican American students. Their restaurant became a hotbed of local political activity — and a required stopping place for statewide Democratic candidates campaigning in the West Texas area.
Elena pushed all of her children to go to college. They became the first Mexican American graduates of Alpine High School to become lawyers (Imelda and Pete) or medical doctors (Rebecca). However, with her marriage, family, work, and political activism, Elena never completed her degree from Sul Ross. It was ironic that the family member who most valued education and a college degree was the only family member without one. However, Sul Ross State University and the Board of Regents of the Texas State University System stepped in to remedy that. In December, 2019, in recognition of her many successes, Elena Peña Gallego was granted an honorary Bachelor of Arts degree, the first time in University and System history that such a degree had been awarded.
Elena is survived by her children, Imelda Gallego García, Rebecca Peña Gallego, M.D., and former U.S. Congressman Pete P. Gallego and his spouse, María Elena Ramón, her grandchildren, Imelda García, María Elena García, Briana García and her spouse, Tori Sandovál, Cristina Shalanta Gallego, and Nicolás Miguel Ramón Gallego; and her great-granddaughter, Sonia García; as well as numerous nieces, nephews, and cousins.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Pete A. Gallego, son, Robert Peña Gallego, parents Martín and Cecilia Paredes Peña, her sisters Mary Peña Sotelo and Irene Peña Villarreal, and her brother, Pete Paredes Peña.
Visitation: at 5:00 P.M. on Wednesday, March 15, 2023 at Our Lady of Peace Catholic Church followed by
Rosary service: at 7:00 p.m.
Funeral Mass: Thursday morning, March 16, 2023 at 10:00 a.m. at Our Lady of Peace Catholic Church. Burial will follow at Holy Angels Cemetery.
Pallbearers: Elena Gallego’s grandson, Nicolás Miguel Ramón Gallego, her nephews, Peter Villarreal and Edward Villarreal, her grand-nephew Frank Lunsford, and Danny Saenz, Joe Daniel Valenzuela, and Wesley Duncan.
Honorary pallbearers: Elena Gallego’s caregiver, Tori Sandovál, her grandchildren Imelda García, María Elena García, and Briana García, Rowena Gallego, Elva Torres, Elidia Polanco, and Dr. Jimmy Case.
This page was created March 18, 2023