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Arcadio Amando Mendoza 1920 - 2002

Arcadio Amando Mendoza of El Paso, El Paso County, TX was born on January 12, 1920, and died at age 82 years old on April 6, 2002. Arcadio Mendoza was buried at Ft. Bliss National Cemetery Section M Site 1524 P.o. Box 6342 - 5200 Fred Wilson Avenue, in El Paso.
Arcadio Amando Mendoza
El Paso, El Paso County, TX 79904
January 12, 1920
April 6, 2002
Gender
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Arcadio Amando Mendoza's History: 1920 - 2002

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  • 01/12
    1920

    Birthday

    January 12, 1920
    Birthdate
    Unknown
    Birthplace
  • Military Service

    Branch of service: Us Army Rank attained: LT COL Wars/Conflicts: World War Ii, Korea, Vietnam
  • 04/6
    2002

    Death

    April 6, 2002
    Death date
    Unknown
    Cause of death
    Unknown
    Death location
  • Gravesite & Burial

    mm/dd/yyyy
    Funeral date
    Ft. Bliss National Cemetery Section M Site 1524 P.o. Box 6342 - 5200 Fred Wilson Avenue, in El Paso, Tx 79906
    Burial location
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Did you know?
In 1920, in the year that Arcadio Amando Mendoza was born, speakeasies replaced saloons as the center of social activity. After the 18th Amendment was ratified and selling alcohol became illegal, saloons closed and speakeasies took their place. Speakeasies, also called a blind pig or blind tiger, were "so called because of the practice of speaking quietly about such a place in public, or when inside it, so as not to alert the police or neighbors". There were a lot of them and they were very popular. And where saloons often prohibited women, they were encouraged at speakeasies because of the added profits.
Did you know?
In 1933, at the age of merely 13 years old, Arcadio was alive when the day after being inaugurated, the new President, Franklin Roosevelt, declared a four-day bank holiday to stop people from withdrawing their money from shaky banks (the bank run). Within 5 days of his administration, the Emergency Banking Act was passed - reorganizing banks and closing insolvent ones. In his first 100 days, he asked Congress to repeal Prohibition (which they did), signed the Tennessee Valley Authority Act, signed legislation that paid commodity farmers to leave their fields fallow, thus ending surpluses and boosting prices, signed a bill that gave workers the right to unionize and bargain collectively for higher wages and better working conditions as well as suspending some antitrust laws and establishing a federally funded Public Works Administration, and won passage of 12 other major laws that helped the economy.
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Arcadio Mendoza's Family Tree & Friends

Arcadio Mendoza's Family Tree

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Arcadio's Friends

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