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San Miguel de Allende

 

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San Miguel de Allende


 
 

San Miguel de Allende is the seat of the municipality of Allende, GuanajuatoGuanajuato

Guanajuato is a state in the central highlands of Mexico....
, MexicoMexico

The United Mexican States, generally known as Mexico is a country located in North America, bordered at the north by t...
, a historic town founded in 1542 that has become an attractive tourist destination for wealthy Mexico City residents and has a large American and Canadian expatriate community comprised primarily of retirees.

Location

San Miguel de Allende is located in the eastern part of Guanajuato in MexicoMexico

The United Mexican States, generally known as Mexico is a country located in North America, bordered at the north by t...
's mountainous bajíoBajío

The Baj?o is a region of Central Mexico that includes the plains south of the Sierra de Guanajuato, in the state of Guanaju...
region. The bajío (low place) is a relatively flat region about above sea level surrounded by mountains; it is a part of the Mexican altiplano. San Miguel serves as the administrative seat for the surrounding municipality of Allende, Guanajuato.

San Miguel de Allende is located at . The municipality rests at above sea level. The municipality extends over an area of . To the north it is bordered by the municipalities of San Luis de la PazSan Luis de la Paz

San Luis de la Paz, a charming city with great historic and cultural wealth, was founded in August 25, 1552, as a defensive ...
 and Dolores HidalgoDolores Hidalgo

Dolores Hidalgo is a small city in the Mexican state of Guanajuato....
. To the west it is also bordered by Dolores HidalgoDolores Hidalgo

Dolores Hidalgo is a small city in the Mexican state of Guanajuato....
. To the south the municipality is bordered by Juventino Rosas, Guanajuato and ComonfortFacts About Comonfort

Comonfort is a Mexican city located in the state of Guanajuato....
 and to the southeast by Apaseo el GrandeApaseo el Grande

Apaseo el Grande is a Mexican city located in the state of Guanajuato....
. To the northeast it is bordered by San José IturbideSan José Iturbide

San Jos? Iturbide is a Mexican city located in the Northeast region of the state of Guanajuato, within the Sierra Gorda ran...
. Finally, to the east it is bordered by Querétaro municipality in the state of QuerétaroQuerétaro

Quertaro is a state in central Mexico....
. The municipal seat is located from Mexico CityMexico City

Mexico City is the capital city of the nation of Mexico....
 and from the state capital of GuanajuatoGuanajuato

Guanajuato is a state in the central highlands of Mexico....
.

Population

According to the 2005 census, the municipality of Allende had a total of 139,297 inhabitants. Of these, 62,034 lived in the municipal seat of San Miguel de Allende (the ninth-largest community in the state), with the remainder living in smaller surrounding communities within the municipality, the largest of which are Los RodríguezLos Rodríguez

Los Rodr?guez was a rock band composed by two Spaniards and two Argentinians, that played during the 90's. ...
 and Colonia San Luis Rey. The largest sector of employment among the 39,371 economically active inhabitants was manufacturing (18.1%), followed by construction (16.3%) and retail and wholesale commerce (13.6%).

As of 2006, the elected San Miguel city government officials were using these updated figures compiled from both the Mexican census bureau and from US consulate figures:

  • 80,000 residents within the urban area.
  • 60,000 residents within the 540 surrounding villages that are a part of San Miguel.
  • 11-12,000 foreign residents at any one time, 7,000 of these on residency visas while the remainder are on tourist visas of a maximum of six months.


Of these foreign residents, 70% are from the United States, 20% are from Canada, and the remaining 10% are from 31 other countries. If the 12,000 foreign residents who live in SMA at any one time are considered as a percentage of the SMA urban population, foreigners make up 15% of the SMA population. If the 7,000 foreign residents who are on permanent residency visas, including FM3 and FM2 visas, are considered as a percentage of the total SMA population, foreigners make up 5% of the SMA population.

History


The town was founded in 1542 by the FranciscanFranciscan

The term Franciscan is used to refer to the Roman Catholic orders which follow the monastic rule of St....
 monk Fray Juan de San Miguel. It was an important stopover on the Antiguo Camino Real, part of the silver route from Zacatecas, ZacatecasZacatecas, Zacatecas

----Zacatecas is a city in Mexico, the capital of the state of Zacatecas....
. The town featured prominently in the Mexican War of IndependenceMexican War of Independence

The Mexican War of Independence, which started on September 16, 1810, was Mexico's struggle for independence from Spanish co...
. General Ignacio AllendeIgnacio Allende

Ignacio Jos de Allende y Unzaga was a captain of the Spanish Army in Mexico who came to sympathize with the Mexican independ...
, one of San Miguel's native sons, was a leading player in the war against SpainSpain

Spain, officially the Kingdom of Spain , is a European parliamentary monarchy....
 for independence. Allende, captured in battle and beheaded, is a national hero. San Miguel el Grande renamed itself "San Miguel de Allende" in 1826 in honor of his actions.

By 1900, San Miguel de Allende was in danger of becoming a ghost town. Declared a national historic monument in 1926 by the Mexican government, development in the historic district is restricted in order to preserve the town's colonial character. During the Cristero uprisingCristero War

The struggle between church and state in Mexico broke out in armed conflict during the Cristero War of 1926 to 1929....
 in Mexico, when clergy and their families were persecuted, the grandchildren of Gen. Mariano Escobedo came to San Miguel de Allende, which was conveniently in a secluded condition while verging on being a ghost town.

The six children of the daughter of Mariano Escobedo, Donna Maria del Refugio, were Don Anastasio Lopez Escobedo, Don Ezequiel Lopez Escobedo, Dr Ignacio Lopez Escobedo, and the sisters, Balbina and Isabella Lopez Escobedo. The elder child was a Cura, a charismatic head priest, Don Jose Lopez Escobedo, for whom the family was persecuted. The Cura Jose Lopez is interred at the main altar under St. Peter in the main Parroquia church of San Miguel, with a beautiful dedication to his work restoring the church in the 20th century. Lopez Escobedo is interred in the Church by the world-famous and miraculous Christ of the Conquest. The family fled their native home hacienda, Hacienda de los Lopez, to San Miguel Allende, where the Escobedo had a home, on Calle de Mesones and where a plaque still identifies the house.

Few descendants from this family live in San Miguel, as only Don Ezequiel Lopez Escobedo had children. The eldest of his grandchildren is Marcela Andre Lopez, an international teacher and designer of jewel garlands now in residence in the historic district in one of Don Ezequiel Lopez Escobedo's homes. Sr. Ezequiel Lopez Basurto, son of Don Ezequiel Lopez Escobedo, has presided over many works by the Rotary Club.

In the early 20th century, the family fortune of the Lopez Escobedo brothers and sisters was largely donated to schools for girls, convents for nuns, or lost to older distant relatives and people helped by the family who falsified papers or discovered hidden treasure after Don Ezequiel's sudden stroke and death. The impoverished barkeeper's assistant who found Don Ezequiel's property deeds and gold kept the find from Don Ezequiel's widow and five children who suffered hardships as orphans. The barkeeper's assistant had leased the store at Calle Relox and San Francisco Street from Don Ezequiel's widow and in the abundant inventory found more than could have been imagined.

Stirling Dickinson

In 1938, Peruvian artist Felipe Cossio del Pomar established San Miguel’s first art school, the Escuela Universitaria de Bellas Artes. It was located in the former convent that houses the present Bellas Artes. He offered the position of Art Director to American artist and writer Stirling Dickinson. Dickinson taught Spanish, botany and landscape painting, as well as taking students on field trips as part of his "Aspects of Mexico" course.

Dickinson's impact on San Miguel was manifested in many ways. He had arrived in San Miguel before daybreak on February 7, 1937. At the Jardín, Dickinson looked up at the spires of the Parroquia poking through the mist. “My God, what a sight!” he said to himself. “I’m going to stay here.” After five years in San Miguel, Dickinson was named a Favored Adopted Son, the only American to be so honored by the mayor’s office. Two years later, he was honored by the governor for his work with founding a baseball team for young Mexicans. The baseball field he helped build and finance was named Campo Stirling Dickinson.

Dickinson began what was probably the largest private orchid collection in Mexico, a lifelong interest that was highlighted by the discovery of Encyclia dickinsoniana and having a second named after him in recognition of his work, Cypripedium dickinsonianum.

When Dickinson first arrived in San Miguel in 1937 he and his writing partner had purchased an old tannery on Santo Domingo on the way to the Atascadero Hotel above town for the equivalent of 90 U.S. dollars. The present property is worth in the millions of dollars.

American veterans

In the 1950s, San Miguel de Allende became a destination known for its beautiful colonial architecture and its thermal springs. After World War IIWorld War II

World War II, or the Second World War, was a worldwide conflict fought between the Allied Powers and the Axis Powers ,...
 San Miguel began to revive as a tourist attraction as many demobilized United StatesUnited States

The United States of America, also known as the United States, the U.S., the U.S.A., and America, is...
 GIs discovered that their education grants stretched further in Mexico at the U.S.-accredited art schools, the privately-owned Instituto Allende, founded in 1950, and the Bellas Artes, a nationally chartered school.

American ex-servicemen first arrived in 1946 to study at the art school. By the end of 1947, Life magazine assigned a reporter and photographer to do an article on this post-war phenomenon. A three-page spread appeared in the January 5, 1948, edition under the headline “GI Paradise: Veterans go to Mexico to study art, live cheaply and have a good time.” This was possible when apartments rented for US$10 a month, servants cost US$8 a month, rum was 65 cents a quart and cigarettes cost 10 cents a pack.

As a result of the publicity, more than 6,000 American veterans immediately applied to study at the school. Stirling Dickinson thought that San Miguel, which then had a population of fewer than 10,000, could only handle another 100 veterans, bringing the student body to around 140.

Ex-GIs were more demanding than previous students. Contemporary and friend of painter and muralist Diego RiveraDiego Rivera

Diego Rivera, was a cubist Mexican painter and muralist....
, David Alfaro SiqueirosDavid Alfaro Siqueiros

David Alfaro Siqueiros was a Mexican painter and muralist....
, another icon of the Mexican mural movement and a vocal member of the Communist Party, was hired as a guest lecturer. He agreed to work with the students on a mural of San Miguel’s most famous son, Ignacio Allende. When Siqueiros reviewed the budget, he and the art school’s owner, Alfredo Campanella, had a falling out and the artist threw him down a flight of stairs.

The faculty and the majority of the students then walked out in support of Siqueiros. When this forced the school to close in 1949, Dickinson opened one of his own. But it did not receive accreditation from the American Embassy, so most of the veterans either went home or transferred to other Mexican schools.

In the counterculture years of the 1960sCounterculture of the 1960s

The counterculture of the 1960s refers to a period between 1960 and 1973 that began in the United States as a reaction aga...
, San Miguel began its career as a center for American expatriatismExpatriate Overview

An expatriate is someone temporarily or permanently residing in a country and culture other than that of their upbringing or...
 and was a popular destination for Ken KeseyFacts About Ken Kesey

Ken Elton Kesey was an American author, best known for his novel, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, and as a cultural f...
 and the Merry PrankstersMerry Pranksters

The Merry Pranksters were a circle of people who collected around American novelist Ken Kesey who lived communally at his ho...
, as recorded in Tom WolfeTom Wolfe

Dr. Thomas Kennerly "Tom" Wolfe is an American author and journalist, best known as one of the founders of the new journalis...
´s novel The Electric Kool-Aid Acid TestFacts About The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test

...
.
Beat writer Neal CassadyNeal Cassady Summary

Neal Cassady was an icon of the Beat Generation of the 1950s and the psychedelic movement of the 1960s, perhaps best known a...
 died beside the railroad tracks between San Miguel and CelayaCelaya

Celaya is a city in the state of Guanajuato, Mexico, located at ....
 after a party in town.

Attractions

During the final week of July, San Miguel de Allende and Guanajuato, GuanajuatoGuanajuato, Guanajuato

The Mexican city of Guanajuato is the capital of the state of the same name....
 are co-hosts to the Expresión en Corto International Film FestivalExpresión en Corto International Film Festival

The Expresi?n en Corto International Film Festival is an annual international film festival, held since 1997 during the fina...
, Mexico’s largest competitive film festival and the most prestigious of its kind in Latin America. The internationally renowned festival is free to the public and screens over 400 films from 10am until 4am each day in 16 venues, which include such unusual locations as San Miguel's Jardín Principal (or main square), the subterranean streets and tunnels of Guanajuato, the Guanajuato Mummy Museum and both city's Municipal graveyards (Panteónes).

San Miguel de Allende was also named a Pueblo MágicoPueblo Mágico

The Programa Pueblos M?gicos is an initiative led by Mexico's Secretariat of Tourism , in conjunction with other federal a...
 in 2002. In 2008, San Miguel was designated by UNESCOUNESCO

UNESCO is a specialized agency of the United Nations established in 1945....
 as a World Heritage SiteWorld Heritage Site

A UNESCO World Heritage Site is a specific site that has been nominated and confirmed for inclusion on the list maintained ...
.

Recent demographic changes

Famous worldwide for its mild climate, thermal springs and colonial era architecture, San Miguel de Allende has attracted a large community of foreign residents. Exact figures are difficult to obtain since Medicare, the U.S. public health system, cannot be claimed abroad, and many expatriates return regularly to the United States to receive treatment as well as to maintain their residence status in their home country. Both Democrats AbroadDemocrats Abroad

Democrats Abroad is the official organization of the Democratic Party of the United States for United States citizens living...
 and Republicans AbroadRepublicans Abroad Summary

Republicans Abroad is an organisation of U.S....
 have active chapters in San Miguel and retain their involvement with U.S. politics. Canadian residents often live six months in Mexico and six months in Canada to maintain their Canadian health coverage.

SMA city government leaders in 2006, as reported in Atención (the local bilingual newspaper), did realize that a population surge of foreigners was growing that year and its size could not be documented. There was a rash in home sales and construction of new housing developments, with rapid profitable turnover of new housing units. However, the slowing of the housing market in the United States in 2006 was also felt in San Miguel.

Many Mexican and foreign residents protested the number of new developments in San Miguel in late 2006 and early 2007. During this time, a major new supermarket, Mega/Comercial Mexicana, opened at one end of the urban area, and another major shopping mall with a SuperGigante supermarket, eight movie theaters, an Office DepotOffice Depot

company_name = Office Depot| company_logo = *Christopher Lowell, for office furniture...
 and a McDonald'sMcDonald's Summary

McDonald's Corporation is the world's largest chain of fast-food restaurants, selling variations on meals comprising of hamb...
 opened slightly farther away. A 700-space city parking lot was built away from the historic Centro area to help reduce traffic within the city. Unfortunately, the parking lot is rarely used and the traffic in the city is still heavy, resulting in unnecessary air pollution in the center of San Miguel.

Another attraction in this city is the John Passero statue. This statue was imported from Midland Park, NJ in the late 1800s. This statue shows John Passero playing a game of horseshoes. John won the championship and took home the trophy in 1865.

Sister cities

  • Redlands, CaliforniaFacts About Redlands, California

    Redlands is a city in San Bernardino County, California, United States....
    , United States of America
  • Acquaviva delle FontiAcquaviva delle Fonti

    Acquaviva delle Fonti is a town and comune with about 21,600 inhabitants in the province of Bari, Puglia, Italy....
    , ItalyItaly

    Italy, officially the Italian Republic , is a Southern European country....


Further reading

  • Cohan, Tony, (2001) On Mexican Time: A New Life in San Miguel ISBN 978-0-7679-0319-6

External links

  • Official website (in Spanish)
  • Photo Essay on San Miguel de Allende
  • Searchable on-line street map of San Miguel
  • Weekly bilingual newspaper