San Pedro de Macorís Province

San Pedro de Macorís
Province
Country  Dominican Republic
Capital San Pedro de Macorís
 - elevation 4 m (13 ft)
 - coordinates
Area 1,255.46 km2 (485 sq mi)
Population 201,744 (2002)
Density 240.3 / km2 (622 / sq mi)
Province since 1907
Subdivisions 6 municipalities
2 municipal districts
Congresspersons 1 Senator
6 Deputies
Timezone AST (UTC-4)
Area code 1-809 1-829 1-849
ISO 3166-2 DO-23
Postal Code 21000
Location of the San Pedro de Macorís Province

San Pedro de Macorís (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈsam ˈpeðɾo ðe makoˈɾis]) is a province of the Dominican Republic, also the name of its capital city.[1] The city is fairly active due to its proximity to the Capital of Santo Domingo and also its role in the sugar industry. The province is infomally known as San Pedro, SPM or Serie 23 for the first 2 numbers of their Dominican identification or Cedula.

Citizens from San Pedro De Macorís are called petromacorisanos. The culture of the province shares many similarities with those of the other eastern provinces. For example, during carnival season, the diablos (devils) tend to wield fuetes (whips), which relates to the traditional cattle farming of the whole region.

Serie 23 is a mecca for all Dominican culture and was the home to the DR's most famous writer Pedro Mir. In the past years the beautiful architecture of Serie 23 has been used as a backdrop for several Hollywood Feature Films such as "Miami Vice", "The Good Shepherd" and "Sugar". It is often portrayed as Havana, Cuba.

Contents

Municipalities and municipal districts

The province as of June 20 2006 is divided into the following municipalities (municipios) and municipal districts (distrito municipal - D.M.) within them:[2]

The following is a sortable table of the municipalities and municipal districts with population figures as of the 2002 census. Urban population are those living in the seats (cabeceras literally heads) of municipalities or of municipal districts. Rural population are those living in the districts (Secciones literally sections) and neighborhoods (Parajes literally places) outside of them.[3]

Name Total population Urban population Rural population
Consuelo &1000000000003140500000031,405 &1000000000002503400000025,034 &100000000000063710000006,371
Quisqueya &1000000000001852800000018,528 &1000000000001591200000015,912 &100000000000026160000002,616
Ramon Santana &100000000000092660000009,266 &100000000000019630000001,963 &100000000000073030000007,303
San José de los Llanos &1000000000002540400000025,404 &100000000000079490000007,949 &1000000000001745500000017,455
San Pedro de Macorís &10000000000217141000000217,141 &10000000000193713000000193,713 &1000000000002342800000023,428
San Pedro de Macorís province &10000000000301744000000301,744 &10000000000144571000000144,571 &1000000000005717300000057,173

For comparison with the municipalities and municipal districts of other provinces see the list of municipalities and municipal districts of the Dominican Republic.

Economy

There are several Ingenios azucareros (sugar mills or, literally, sugar engines) distributed in the province which handle the load of its large sugar cane plantations. This industry in turn allowed for San Pedro De Macorís to serve as the base of operations for two of the DR's three biggest rummeries. Bovine cattle is another important economic asset, as it is in all of the other eastern provinces thanks to the vast Llanura Oriental (Eastern Plain). San Pedro also hosts many hotel and tourism ventures, ranging from low-tier resorts to top tier exclusive Golf and Country Clubs.

Sports

The province enjoys a rarely disputed reputation as the capital of Dominican baseball, providing a relatively high number of professional baseball players. Many of these players are drafted to play in the USA's Major Leagues of Baseball, with Sammy Sosa being the most notable player from SPM in recent years (see a full list of Dominican players). Baseball players from this city often come from poor homes and use baseball as a way to earn money for their families. Many ball players from this city are major philanthropists as well.

See also

References

  1. ^ Gwillim Law - Statoids. "Provinces of the Dominican Republic". http://www.statoids.com/udo.html. Retrieved 2007-05-26. 
  2. ^ Oficina Nacional de Estadistica, Departamento de Cartografia, Division de Limites y Linderos. "Listado de Codigos de Provincias, Municipio y Distritos Municipales, Actualizada a Junio 20 del 2006" (in Spanish). http://www.one.gob.do/index.php?option=com_docman&task=cat_view&gid=113. Retrieved 2007-01-24. 
  3. ^ Oficina Nacional de Estadística. "VIII Censo 2002 Poplación y Vivienda" (in Spanish) (PDF). http://one.gob.do/censo/volumen_I_pdf.zip. Retrieved 2007-01-24. 

External links