Adjuntas, Puerto Rico

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Adjuntas, Puerto Rico
Image:Adjuntas flag.gif
Image:Adjuntas seal.gif
Flag Seal
Nickname: "La Ciudad del Gigante Dormido" (City of the Sleeping Giant), "La Suiza de Puerto Rico" (Puerto Rico's Switzerland), "La Tierra de Lagos (Land of Lakes)"
Gentilic: "Adjunteños"
Location

Location of Adjuntas, Puerto Rico
Location of Adjuntas, Puerto Rico within Puerto Rico

Coordinates 18°12′5″N, 67°8′20″W
Government
Founded August 11, 1815
Mayor Jaime H. Barlucea Maldonado
Political party [[Partido Nuevo Progresista|PNP]]
Senatorial district 5 - Ponce
Representative district 22
Geographical characteristics
Area
Total km²
Population
Total (2000)
Density /km²
Time zone AST (UTC-4)
Official website: http://www.adjuntaspr.com
Anthem - "Adjuntas es mi amor"

Adjuntas (ahd-HOON-tahs), is a small mountainside town in Puerto Rico located central midwest of the island on the Central Mountain range (La Cordillera Central), north of Yauco, Guayanilla and Peñuelas; southeast of Utuado; east of Lares and Yauco; and west of Ponce. Adjuntas is spread over 16 wards and Adjuntas Pueblo (the downtown area and the administrative center of the city). Adjuntas is about two hours by car westward from the capital, San Juan.

Adjuntas is nicknamed "the Switzerland of Puerto Rico", because of its relatively chilly weather. Many Puerto Rican mountain towns have colder weather than the rest of the island; Adjuntas is no exception: the average yearly weather is 72 degrees Fahrenheit. The cool weather attracts a good number of island tourists during the summer months. The town has a small hotel named Monte Rio and a good size parador, or country inn, called Villa Sotomayor. It also has the distinction of being the postal area with the lowest numerical ZIP code in the United States Postal Service (00601).

Contents

[edit] History

Adjuntas was founded August 11, 1815, by Diego Maldonado, gaining administrative independence from Utuado.

After the mid 1800s, Adjuntas welcomed many immigrants from the Mediterranean islands Corsica and Majorca. Some of them established coffee plantations. During the last decades of XIX century, the fine coffee produced in Adjuntas was exported to Europe, United States and even the Vatican.

It was proclaimed "villa", or a first order municipality, by the Spanish Government Monarchy in 1894.

Adjuntas was occupied by the United States Army forces during the Spanish American War of 1898 and was visited by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1906.

The discovery of rich deposits of copper, gold and other minerals during the 1960s, motivated some local community and environmental leaders to opposed the mining. By the 1990s, they convinced the Puerto Rican government to take a stand against the minning industry, on behalf of conservation. Today, instead of mining, with the leadership of Casa Pueblo, a community organization, Adjuntas leads the preservation of natural resources movement in Puerto Rico.

[edit] Demographics

[edit] Barrios (Districts/Wards)

  • Adjuntas Pueblo
  • Capáez
  • Garzas
  • Guayabo Dulce
  • Guayo
  • Guilarte
  • Juan González
  • Limaní
  • Pellejas
  • Portillo
  • Portuguez
  • Saltillo
  • Tanamá
  • Vegas Abajo
  • Vegas Arriba
  • Yahuecas
  • Yayales

[edit] Geo/Topography

Guilarte State Forest between Adjuntas, Peñuelas and Yauco.

[edit] Economic

[edit] Agriculture

Adjuntas' main industry is the growing of tropical crops such as bananas, coffee and citron.

[edit] Business

[edit] Industrial

[edit] Tourism

[edit] Landmarks and places of interest

  • Guilarte
  • Hacienda Bareal Ruins
  • Hacienda El Muerto
  • Hacienda La Arbela
  • Hacienda Pietri Ruins
  • Inabon Waterfalls
  • Mirador de Vegas Arriba
  • Poblado Castañer
  • Sotomayor Villa

Casa Pueblo is a local museum and cultural institution called founded by a group of local activists who fought against the copper mine exploitation of the area for decades. Casa Pueblo is responsible for many environmental projects like the preservation of hundred of acres of pristine woods and fresh water bodies.

[edit] Festivals and events

  • March - Festival del Gigante
  • March - Festival de la Cidra
  • August - San Joaquín & Santa Ana Patron Festivities

[edit] Transportation

The main road is Puerto Rico 10, that connects the cities of Ponce in the south and Arecibo in the north. In addition, there is a small airport that caters to private airplanes.

[edit] Education

The education in Adjuntas is intermediate, meaning that about 50% of the population is literate. Of the population that is not literate most become farmers. Of the half that are, they leave to more advanced places such as San Juan, and work there as scientists, geologists, doctors, and much more.[citation needed]

[edit] Sports

The town has a professional volleyball team called Gigantes de Adjuntas.

[edit] Notable Adjunteños

  • Dr. Norman Maldonado, physician and former President of the University of Puerto Rico
  • Dr. Arístides Moll (1880-1965), physician, writer, poet and Secretary of the Pan American Sanitary Bureau of the Pan American Health Organization
  • Jesús M. Benitez
  • Rafael Bosh, lawyer, poet, writer and legal advisor of the Committee of Insular Affairs of the United States Senate
  • Josefina Moll, writer
  • Pelegrín López de Victoria (1850-1942), writer
  • Rafael de Jesús Cordero (1897-1974), economist, professor and co-founder of the Department of Economy of the University of Puerto Rico. First Puerto Rican to hold the position of Auditor of Puerto Rico, named by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1943. First Comptroller of Puerto Rico.
  • Dolores Cruz (alias Doña Lola)
  • Ignacio Rivera, corporate and criminal laywer, Federal prosecutor, intelligence agent for the Central Intelligence Agency, radio news commentator and author ("El Presidente se viste de blanco"). Made an honorary member of the local troop of the Boy Scouts of America.

[edit] References

[edit] Footnotes

[edit] Books about Adjuntas

Mi Pueblo Adjuntas 1992 by Rafael J. Mirabal-Linares and Entre Fotos y Palabras 2005 by Rafael J. Mirabal-Linares

[edit] Additional Information

Adjuntas was featured in the March 2003 issue of National Geographic in an article about Puerto Rican lifestyles.

[edit] External links


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