This college letterman sweater was owned by Francisco Vega and features the varsity red "A" for Aquinas College in Grand Rapids, MI and was awarded to him for track and tennis. The sweater relates to this important leader in the West Michigan Hispanic community who was a lifelong entrepreneur and business consultant in Grand Rapids. Vega moved to Grand Rapids to attend Aquinas College under the GI Bill. He moved to Michigan to attend the University of Michigan and then transferred to Aquinas and graduated in 1950 with a degree in Business Administration.
Margaret Vega (donor) Margaret Vega is a Professor of Undergraduate and Graduate Painting at Kendall College of Art and Design and the Founding Director of SiteStudio and Children Designing for Children Project. Vega previously taught Accademia di Belle Arti, Perugia, Italy and Grand Valley State University, MI. An accomplished artist, Vega has worked on many major exhibitions including: 14th Annual Juried Show, Prince Street Gallery, NYC, GeoLogic, Juried Show, Atlantic Gallery NYC; and Medina Gallery, Selected Group Exhibition, Rome, Italy and is featured locally in permanent exhibits at Grand Rapids Art Museum and Frederik Meijer Gardens Museum and Sculpture Park. The Grand Rapids Public Museum featured Vega's work in the exhibition Celebration of Souls: Day of the Dead in Southern Mexico (2022). Vega created a candlelit alter, known as an ofrenda honoring her father, Francisco Vega (1922-2021). Francisco was a leader in the Latino community of West Michigan and a grassroots organizer for civil rights.Francisco Vega (used by) Francisco Vega (1922 - 2021) was born to Mexican American parents in San Antonio, Texas before moving to Grand Rapids, Michigan where he became a leader in the West Michigan Hispanic community. After attending a military high school he enlisted at 17 with the US Army, and was promoted to an elite team as a decoder for his typing speed. He was awarded a bronze star and numerous medals for actions in some of World War II major battles including the D-Day Invasion on Omaha Beach and the Battle of the Bulge.
After the war, he married Phyllis Jean Lackland and they had three daughters, Margaret, Liz and Susan. A lifelong entrepreneur and business consultant, Vega attended University of Michigan and graduated from Aquinas College with a degree in Business. He was the founder of several organizations that served the Hispanic community and notably, co-organized the first Hispanic festival and parade in 1968. In 1955, he taught himself to draft and designed the first privately owned cemetery in the Midwest open to all people regardless of race or religion.
He worked with national labor leaders Cesar E. Chavez and Dolores Huerta in the late 1960's and remained passionate about equality throughout his life. A respected figure nationally, he frequently traveled to the White House, advising Presidents Kennedy, Nixon, Reagan, Ford and Bush, Sr. He was an international advisor and US representative to Prime Minister Price of British Honduras following their independence. He held many appointed and elected positions including Board Member of SER Jobs for Progress in Dallas, Texas. Vega was elected Midwest Vice Chairman of the Republican National Hispanic Assembly and promoted the responsibility to vote by organizing numerous community register to vote campaigns.
Among his many accomplishments, Vega was a national pioneer of bilingual education and in 1977 was the co-founder of the National Hispanic Scholarship Fund, the largest Hispanic scholarship fund to date. He left a legacy here in Grand Rapids through his mentoring of start up Latino businesses, chair of the first Ethnic Heritage Celebration at the Museum, and had an instrumental role in the development of Millennium Park and the renaming of Hall Street School and Grandville Avenue to honor Cesar E. Chavez.Goebel-Brown Sporting Goods (creator) Goebel-Brown Sporting Goods was founded by Paul Goebel in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Aquinas College (depicts)