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MONTERREY (usually spelled Monterey i...

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Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 774 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MONTERREY (usually spelled
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Monterey in
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English)
  , a city of Mexico and capital of the state of Nuevo Leon, 6o6 m. by the old wagon road, and 671 m. by the Mexican
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National railway N. by W. of the city of Mexico, in
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lat . 25° 40' N., long. roe 25' W . Pop . (1900), 62,266 . Railway communications are provided by the Mexican National with the
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United States, with the national capital and
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southern Mexico, and with
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Matamoros, and by the Belgian
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line with
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Tampico on the Gulf coast, and with Trevino, or Venadito, on the Mexican International line, which gives access to the iron deposits of
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Durango . The city stands 1624 ft. above sea-level, between two spurs of one of the Sierra Madre ranges—the Cerro de la Silla (4149 ft.) on the east, and the Cerro de
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las Mitras (3618 ft.) on the west . The
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Santa Catarina
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river furnishes
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water-power for some of its
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industries . The surrounding
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district is fertile, and the rainfall about 22 in . The
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climate is dry and mild, and the city is frequented in winter .by invalids from the United States . Monterrey is laid out with broad, straight streets
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crossing each other at right angles, and spreads over a large
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area . It is the see of the bishop of
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Linares, and has a large
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cathedral, a bishop's palace and numerous churches . Among the public edifices are the government palace, municipal hall, national college, girls' college, medical school, public hospital, theatre and penitentiary .

Its public

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works include an interesting old
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reservoir, called the " Ojo de Agua," and the " Puente Nuevo " (new
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bridge) . Monterrey is the most important centre of
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northern Mexico, and large sums of
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foreign capital have been invested in its industries . Among its manufactories are woollen mills, smelting works, brass and iron foundries, a steel producing plant, saw-mills,
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flour-mills, breweries, and a
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carriage and wagon factory . ` Monterrey was founded in 156o under the name of Santa Lucia de Leon; and in 1596, as Monterrey, was raised to the dignity of a city . In 1777 it became the see of a bishop, nowsuffragan to the archbishop of
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Guadalajara . During the war between Mexico and the United States General Zachary Taylor arrived before the city on the 19th of September 1846, with about 6600 men . Monterrey was defended by a Mexican force of about 1o,000 under General Pedro de Ampudia . On the loth Colonel John Garland (1792-1861) assaulted the
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lower (north-eastern)
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part of the city; he was driven back, but captured one of the forts . The attacks on the ether forts on the east were unsuccessful . On the 21st and 22nd General W . J . Worth carried the forts west of Monterrey, and on the 23rd attacked the western part of the city, the troops slowly working their way toward the central plaza .

On the same

day
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American troops again advanced from the east, and were again forced back . On the
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morning of the 24th the terms of a capitulation were agreed upon—the Mexicans were permitted to retire, retaining their small arms and one field battery of six pieces with twenty-one rounds of
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ammunition, and an armistice of eight weeks was arranged . A disastrous flood, caused by heavy rains and the sudden overflow of the Santa Catarina river on the 28th of August 1909, swept away about one-
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fourth of the city, drowning 1200-1400 persons, and destroying about $12,000,000 (Mex.) worth of
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property .

End of Article: MONTERREY (usually spelled Monterey in English)
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