Texas Heritage Project

What We Do

The Texas Heritage Project of AITSCM, founded in December, 2014, conducts humanities-based primary research to assemble never-before-made-public family artifacts of historical significance to the South-Central Texas region.

To develop the archive/repository, the Project holds community-based events called “History Harvests” during which families gather to display their family’s artifacts. Together they celebrate their cultural identity and efforts of the Indigenous/Latino communities that contributed, and continue to contribute, to the rich cultural history & heritage of the region.

Our Mission

The mission of the Texas Heritage Project is to reverse systemic historical erasure of Indigenous and Chicano people by expanding the narrative of South Central Texas through primary research that illustrates our rich contributions with the goal of fostering unity and healing for the generations.

THE ARCHIVES

Texas Heritage Project Digital Repository

Selected artifacts are digitally preserved in a high resolution repository, as well as in an analog, hard-copy archive facility.  The community archive & repository assets are made available to the public in the form of analog & digital exhibits. In addition, the collection will contribute to the efforts of the project’s publishing cooperative and immersive educational opportunities for higher education students.

Below is just a sample of our ever-growing collection. If you have photos or documents you’d like to contribute to the Texas Heritage Project contact us

Project Founders

Rudy De La Cruz, Jr.

MPA, MA: Project Director of Texas Heritage Project of AITSCM & Higher Education Faculty

Art Martínez de Vara

Attorney at Law, Historian & Author

Ramon Juan Vasquez

Executive Director of American Indians in Texas at the Spanish Colonial Missions

Participating Faculty:

Dr. Jennifer P. Mathews

Trinity University

Dr. Amy M. Porter

Texas A&M University

Dr. Francis X. Galán

Francis X. Galán

Leslie Sitz Stapleton

Texas A&M University

Texas Heritage Project Sponsors & Partners

Digital Repository & Archive Facilities Crew

Our students, staff, and volunteers carefully process images and documents from History Harvest Events and families who contact us with their historical documents. Our team uses high-quality imaging scanners for archival records.

View our Project Galleries to get a look at what it takes to gather these important historical stories that make up San Antonio and South Texas History.  

Texas Heritage Project

Rudy De La Cruz, Jr.

Mr. De La Cruz, Jr. received his Master of Public Administration and Master of Political Science from St. Mary’s University in San Antonio, Texas. He also earned a double-major BA in Political Science & Philosophy from the same institution. He has taught US Government and Texas Politics in the Alamo Colleges District over the past several decades. Since 2014, he has been Project Director of the Texas Heritage Project, an Academia &Community Partnership.

Texas Heritage Project

Art Martínez de Vara

Mr. Martínez de Vara graduated with a J.D. from St. Mary’s University School of Law and holds M.A. degrees in Theology from St. Mary’s and in History from Sam Houston State University. His research interests focus upon early Tejano history and his book, Tejano Patriot: The Revolutionary Life of José Francisco Ruiz, 1783-1840, was published by the Texas State Historical Association Press in 2020, and won the Presidio La Bahía Award. In addition to his private law practice in nearby Von Ormy, Texas, Mr. Martínez teaches business law at Our Lady of the Lake University.

Texas Heritage Project

Ramon J. Vasquez

Mr. Vasquez is the Co-Founder and Vice President of the Land Heritage Institute Foundation, Co-Founder of the American Indians in Texas Institute, and Co-Founder of the National Urban Indian Family Coalition. Ramon has decades of research on the history of the Coahuiltecan tribes that inhabited the areas where San Antonio now continues to grow. His genealogical knowledge is sought out by people nationwide seeking to understand their heritage. Mr. Vasquez also serves as a spokesperson for the Tap Pilam Coahuiltecan Nation.

Texas Heritage Project

Dr. Jennifer P. Mathews

Dr. Jennifer P. Mathews is a Professor of Anthropology and Chair of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Trinity University. Her undergraduate degree was in anthropology from San Diego State University. She received her master’s and Ph.D. in anthropology, with a specialization in Maya archaeology, from the University of California at Riverside.

She has worked in the Yucatán Peninsula since 1993 studying the ancient, historical, and contemporary Maya. She is the co-editor of three edited volumes: Quintana Roo Archaeology (with Justine Shaw), Lifeways in the Northern Maya Lowlands: New Approaches to Archaeology in the Yucatán Peninsula (with Bethany Morrison), and The Value of Things: Prehistoric to Contemporary Commodities in the Maya Region (with Tom Guderjan). She also published the two monographs, Chicle: Chewing Gum of the Americas: From the Ancient Maya to William Wrigley (with Gillian P. Schultz) in 2009 and (with John Gust, 2020) Sugarcane and Rum: The Bittersweet History of Labor and Life on the Yucatán Peninsula. She was named the 2019 recipient of the Dr. and Mrs. Z.T. Scott Faculty for Trinity University and the Piper Professorship for the state of Texas in 2020 in recognition of her outstanding abilities as a teacher and mentor.

Texas Heritage Project

Dr. Amy M. Porter

Dr. Porter received her Ph.D. in History from Southern Methodist University after earning a B.A. in History and Spanish from Austin College. She teaches classes on colonial America, the American Revolution through Early Republic, and Texas.

Among her publications include the book, Their Lives, Their Wills: Women in the Borderlands, 1750-1846, published by Texas Tech University Press in 2015, which won its Lou Halsell Rodenberger Book Prize in History, Culture, and Literature, and a Co-Winner of the Fabiola Cabeza de Baca prize from the Historical Society of New Mexico. Dr. Porter also wrote a chapter on María del Carmen Calvillo in the book, Texas Women and Ranching: On the Range, at the Rodeo, and in Their Communities, published by Texas A&M University Press in 2019.

Texas Heritage Project

Dr. Francis X. Galán

Dr. Galán received his Ph.D. in History from Southern Methodist University, an M.A. in history from the University of Texas at San Antonio, and B.A. in Latin American Studies with a concentration in history from the University of Texas at Austin.

He teaches classes on Latin America, Mexico, and Texas. His book, Los Adaes: The First Capital of Spanish Texas, was published by Texas A&M University Press in 2020, which was a Finalist for the Texas Institute of Letters 2021 Ramirez Family Award for Most Significant Scholarly Book.

Texas Heritage Project

Leslie Sitz Stapleton

Leslie Sitz (pronounced – sites) Stapleton is the Head of Archives and Special Collections at Texas A&M University-San Antonio.  Leslie previously served as Director of the Daughters of the Republic of Texas Library, the Texas history research library and archives on the grounds of the Alamo.  She palayed in vital role in the DRT’s victorious battle with the state over ownership of the library’s collection. 

In 2020 Mrs. Stapleton was appointed to a four-year term on the the Texas Historical Records Advisory Board.  She is a member of the of the Texas State Library Association, the Society of Southwest Archivists, and Texas State Historical Association, and the American Association of State and Local History.