A young Georgia Sandoval (Herrera) remembers the boxcar homes and railroad life.
“Riding the Rails to Hero Street” and “A Bridge too Far from Hero Street” by award-winning filmmakers Kelly and Tammy Rundle of Fourth Wall Films will screen at the Silvis Public Library, 806 1st Ave, Silvis, Illinois on Friday, October 15 at 3:00 p.m. The program is free to the public and includes a discussion with the filmmakers following each 26-minute film.
“Riding the Rails to Hero Street”, part one in the Rundles’ Hero Street documentary series, tells the story of the immigrants’ journey from Mexico to Cook’s Point in Davenport, Holy City in Bettendorf, Iowa, and the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad train yards and boxcar homes in Silvis, Illinois. The families experienced both acceptance and discrimination in their new communities. Around the time of the great depression, the families were removed from the rail yards and some moved box cars or built new homes on 2nd Street in Silvis. Only a block and a half long, the street lost six young men in World War II and two in the Korean War, more than any other street in America. Hero Street, as it is now known, has provided over 100 service members since World War II.
Willie Sandoval gets ready to leave his home on 2nd Street to serve during WWII.
“A Bridge Too Far From Hero Street” (part 3 in the series) follows William Sandoval's journey from a boxcar in Silvis, Illinois to a battle in a forest in Holland. Born into an impoverished family of twelve, Willie performed migrant farm work alongside his parents and siblings until his father took a job with the Rock Island Railroad. The Sandovals and other Mexican immigrants made their homes in boxcars in the rail yard. As a young man Willie became an accomplished boxer.
Answering a call to service following the attack on Pearl Harbor, Willie became an Army paratrooper. He survived several battles over the next two years (Salerno, Anzio), before he was killed at age 21 in October 1944 following his involvement in the largest air assault in history--Operation Market Garden. An interview with military historian John C. McManus, the author of "September Hope: The American Side of a Bridge Too Far", highlights Willie's participation. Marc Wilson, the author of "Hero Street, USA" is also featured.
Eight sons of Mexican immigrants from the block-and-a-half long 2nd Street in Silvis, Illinois were killed in combat in World War II and Korea--more lost than any other street in America. The street was renamed Hero Street in 1968.
The Rundles’ “Hero Street” eight-part documentary series, explores the personal and family sagas behind each of the eight heroes from Silvis, Illinois and tells the compelling true story of an ongoing effort to memorialize them. The Rundles partnered with WQPT-PBS to produce the Mid-America Emmy-nominated "Letters Home to Hero Street" which tells Hero Frank Sandoval’s story and was the first film created for the series.
The newest film in the series, “An Infantryman from Hero Street” (part 4), tells Hero Joseph Sandoval’s story and is slated for release near Memorial Day 2022.
“Hero Street” Documentary Film Series received partial funding, through its fiscal sponsor the Moline Foundation, from the Regional Development Authority (RDA), Illinois Arts Council, the Illinois Humanities, Humanities Iowa, National Endowment for the Humanities, Quad City Arts, the Quad Cities Community Foundation, LULAC Iowa, Mexican American Veterans Association, the City of Silvis, and individual contributors. The project also received two grant awards from the Moline Foundation. The views and opinions expressed by these films do not necessarily reflect the views of these organizations.
Fourth Wall Films is an award-winning and nine-time Emmy-nominated independent film production company formerly located in Los Angeles, and now based in Moline, Illinois.
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