(CNN) – President Obama will make modern history Monday when he announces the creation of a monument to honor the late labor and civil rights activist Cesar Chavez.
The Cesar E. Chavez National Monument will become the 398th park in the National Park Service system, and the first since the 1700s to honor a Latino, the park service told CNN.
The move comes less than a month before Election Day, as the president maintains a strong lead among Latinos. A big turnout among Latino supporters in states where the race is close could help Obama win re-election against GOP challenger Mitt Romney.
The president will speak at a ceremony in Keene, Calif., on land known as Nuestra Señora Reina de la Paz, where, from the 1970s until the early ’90s, Chavez lived and led his farm worker movement.
“Cesar Chavez gave a voice to poor and disenfranchised workers everywhere,” Obama said in a statement. “La Paz was at the center of some of the most significant civil rights moments in our nation’s history, and by designating it a national monument, Chavez’s legacy will be preserved and shared to inspire generations to come.”
The National Hispanic Leadership Agenda, a coalition of 30 Latino organizations, lauded the move.
Chavez, who died in 1993, embodied the principle “that individuals can accomplish more as a community than they ever could on their own,” said Hector E. Sanchez, executive director of the Labor Council for Latin American Advancement, in a statement put out by the leadership agenda.
The monument includes 120 acres, National Park Service spokesman David Barna said.
It will encompass property that includes a visitor’s center, the United Farm Workers’ legal aid offices, Chavez’s home with his wife, Helen, a memorial garden containing his grave, and other buildings, the White House said.
Barna said no sculpture is planned.
The monument, in the Tehachapi Mountains, is the fourth designated by Obama under the Antiquities Act.
Obama’s decision to set aside the land as a national monument also sends a political message to environmentalists — a key group of voters, as many strongly supported him in 2008.
The League of Conservation Voters, which endorsed Obama in 2008 and for his current White House run, has not always been happy with the president‘s environmental record. As debate raged in 2011 over air quality regulations and proposed construction of a transcontinental oil pipeline, LCV President Gene Karpinski said the administration had been “caving” to industry.
Monday, LCV spokesman Jeff Gohringer said establishing the Chavez monument stands as “further proof of President Obama’s commitment to our special places across the country and we hope he continues to use that authority.”
The Chavez family donated certain properties to the federal government so that the monument could be created.
Beginning Tuesday, the park service will take steps to prepare it as an official site, Barna said.
It will become “one of those places that everyone should visit,” he said, “part of our shared cultural heritage.”
The land includes property that was once Chavez’s home, which was added to the National Register of Historic Places last year. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar called him “one of the heroes of the 20th century.”
Paul F. Chavez, president of the Cesar Chavez Foundation, said at the time, “For my father, La Paz was a personal refuge from bitter struggles in agricultural valleys and big cities, a spiritual harbor where he recharged batteries, drew fresh inspiration and prepared for the battles ahead. It was a place where many dedicated people spent years of their lives working with Cesar Chavez for social justice, inspiring generations of Americans from all walks of life who never worked on a farm to social and political activism.”
Ruben Navarrette, a CNN.com contributor, wrote a column last year noting that many sites around the country are named for Chavez, and suggesting that that “campaign” may have run its course.
Still, he wrote, Chavez “was a great American who helped bring fairness and dignity to the fields and the workers who toil there. Before Chavez and the union came along, there were no collective bargaining rights for farm workers, no toilets or clean drinking water in the fields, and little public awareness about pesticides and other dangers that workers must endure to put fruits and vegetables on our table. He helped change all that.”