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CHIHUAHUA , a city of Mexico, capital of the aboveSee also: state, on the Chihuahua See also: river, about r000 m
.
N.W. of Mexico City and 225 M
.
S. by E. of El Paso
.
Pop
.
(1895) 18,279; (1900) 30,405
.
The city stands in a beautiful valley opening northward and hemmed in on all other sides by spurs of the Sierra Madre
.
It is 4635 ft. above See also: sea-level, and its See also: climate is mild and healthy
.
The city is laid out regularly, with broad streets, and a handsome plaza with a monument to See also: Hidalgo and his companions of the revolution of 181o, who were executed here
.
The most note-worthy of its public buildings is the See also: fine old parish See also: church of
See also: San Francisco, begun in 1717 and completed in 1789, one of the best specimens of 18th-century architecture in Mexico
.
It was built, it is said, with the proceeds of a small tax on the output of the See also: Santa Eulalia mine
.
Other prominent buildings are the See also: government palace, the Porfirio Diaz hospital, the old Jesuit See also: College (now occupied by a See also: modern institution of the some character), the mint, and an aqueduct built in the 18th century
.
Chihuahua is a station on the Mexican Central railway, and has tramways and telephones
.
See also: Mining is the See also: principal occupation of the surrounding See also: district, the famous Santa Eulalia or Chihuahua el Viejo mines being about 12 M. from the city
.
Next in importance is See also: agriculture, especially fruit-growing
.
Manufacturingis making See also: good progress, especially the See also: weaving of See also: cotton fabrics by modern methods
.
The manufacture of cotton and woollen goods are old See also: industries in Chihuahua, but the introduction of See also: American skill and capital toward the end of the 19th century placed them on an entirely new footing
.
The manufacture of See also: gunpowder for mining operations is another old industry
.
Chihuahua was founded between 1703 and 1705 as a mining See also: town, and was made a See also: villa in 1715 with the title San Felipe el Real de Chihuahua
.
Because of the See also: rich mines in its vicinity it soon became one of the most prosperous towns in See also: northern Mexico, although the state was constantly raided by hostile See also: Indians
.
In 1763 it had a population of nearly 5000
.
The war of independence was followed by a See also: period of decline, owing to See also: political disorder and revolution, which lasted until the See also: presidency of General Porfirio Diaz
.
In the war between Mexico and the See also: United States, Chihuahua was captured on the 1st of See also: March 1847, by Colonel A
.
W
.
Doniphan, and again on the 7th of March by General Price
.
In 1864 PresidentSee also: Juarez made the city his provisional capital for a See also: short See also: time
.
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