Cadereyta Jiménez, Nuevo León, Mexico

Foundation | Chronology | Economy : Tourist Industry

🇲🇽 Cadereyta Jiménez is the name of a city as well as of a municipality in the Mexican state of Nuevo León. The municipality of Cadereyta Jiménez is located in the central part of the state, 360 meters above sea level. The municipality has a territorial extension of 1,141 km² (441 sq mi). It borders the following municipalities, all of which are in the state of Nuevo León: to the north, Juárez and Pesquería; to the south, Allende, Montemorelos and General Terán; to the east, General Terán and Los Ramones; to the west, Juárez and Santiago. It is the most easterly municipality of the Monterrey metropolitan area.

The city of Cadereyta Jiménez, which is the seat of the municipality and its main population centre is the ninth-largest city in the state. However, within the municipality there are numerous other villages, the largest of which are: San Juan, Ejido Palmitos, La Calzada, El Alamito, Pueblo Nuevo, Cereso Cadereyta, Atongo de Abajo and Palmitos. The municipality is also the ninth-largest in the state.

Foundation In 1692, after a great flood, the town was relocated to the left side of the Santa Catarina river, 4.5 km from its original location. In 1762, authorities and residents requested permission from Gubernator Carlos de Velasco to move back to the right side of the river, as they were going through a decade-long drought, and the terrain made it difficult for them to move water from the river to the inhabited area. This move to the new site occurred in February 1763. On March 28, 1825, the State Congress, at the request of Gubernator Antonio Rodriguez Leal, recategorized the community as a city and renamed it Cadereyta Jimenez. Its original name honored the sixteenth viceroy of New Spain, don Lope Diaz de Armendariz, marquis of Cadereyta, and General Mariano Jimenez, precursor of the Independence of Nuevo Reino de Leon. Since 1638, the jurisdiction of the village San Juan Bautista de Cadereyta; Gubernator Zavala mark it from the west part until Tampico port. This enormous territory lasted until 1742, when the colony of Nuevo Santander (Tamaulipas) was founded. This colony was largely inhabited by people from Cadereyta.

Chronology • 1637: Foundation of the Village of Cadereyta, August 13. • 1638: On a visit to the Village of Cadereyta, then Governor Zavala grants it territorial jurisdiction as far east as the port of Tampico. On February 25, the Governor orders his clerk to redact the certificate of foundation, and this document disappears from municipal records. Years later the certificate was found outside of the country by the historian Angel Mario Rocha Leal, who succeeded in saving it and reintegrating it to historical patrimony in 1996. • 1692: The Village of Cadereyta is relocated to the left bank of the Santa Catarina River. • 1762: Owing to a ravaging drought lasting since 1755 and the rough terrain and lack of water for human and animal consumption, authorities and residents requested permission from the Gubernator to move to the right side of river. • 1763: In February, an exodus of the population begins to the present location of the city. • 1825: May 28, the State Congress confers the category of city to the Village of Cadereyta. • 1889: Construction began on the south tower of the Church San Juan Bautista, built to house a public clock bought by the town in 1872. • 1892: Don Eugenio Serrano García installs in the city the first broom factory, called “La Aldeana”. • 1917: An epidemic of Spanish fever strikes the city killing 250 people. • 1945: Cadereyta City is known as the Broom Capital of Mexico. • 1973: Construction of the Pemex refinery “Ing. Héctor R. Lara Sosa”, the biggest of Latin America, begins. • 2005: On the night of October 13 to 14, a waterspout creates severe flooding in the city, leaving the greater part of the not a mamoney, not downtown under water, 1500 families affected and infrastructure damaged. The flooding also affects the municipalities Allende, Apodaca, Ciénega de Flores, Guadalupe, Benito Juárez, Montemorelos, Pesquería, San Nicolás de los Garza, San Pedro Garza García, Santa Catarina, Santiago y Marín. • 2012: The Cadereyta Jiménez massacre occurred on the Mexican Federal Highway 40 on 13 May 2012. Mexican officials stated that 49 people were decapitated and mutilated by members of Los Zetas drug cartel and dumped by a roadside near the city of Monterrey in northern Mexico. The actual death toll may be more than 68 people. The bodies were found in the town of San Juan in the municipality of Cadereyta Jiménez, Nuevo León, at about 4 am on a non-toll highway leading to Reynosa, Tamaulipas.

Economy: Tourist Industry The Church of San Juan Bautista (Saint John Baptist) was completed in 1788; it is in the Spanish Sevillan style.

On April 5, 1998 the grottos “El Mezcal” were accidentally discovered by Pablo Carrizales Gomes and Rodrigo Gomez, who initially discovered a grotto with a depth of 20 to 30 meters and a radius of 200 meters. Later Rodrigo Gomez and Mario Hidalgo de Leon discovered a second grotto, approximately 50 meters in ground, of sufficient size that one can walk around freely. Within the grottos there are formations of stalagmites and stalactites.

America/Monterrey/Nuevo_Leon 
<b>America/Monterrey/Nuevo_Leon</b>
Image: Adobe Stock JP.GarciaOsuna #365575131

Cadereyta Jiménez has a population of over 75,721 people. Cadereyta Jiménez also forms one of the centres of the wider Nuevo León State which has a population of over 5,784,442 people.

To set up a UBI Lab for Cadereyta Jiménez see: https://www.ubilabnetwork.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/UBILabNetwork

Twin Towns, Sister Cities Cadereyta Jiménez has links with:

🇺🇸 McAllen, USA 🇺🇸 Mission, USA
Text Atribution: Wikipedia Text under CC-BY-SA license

Antipodal to Cadereyta Jiménez is: 80,-25.6

Locations Near: Cadereyta Jiménez -100,25.6

🇲🇽 Juárez -100.083,25.65 d: 10  

🇲🇽 Apodaca -100.189,25.781 d: 27.7  

🇲🇽 Guadalupe -100.26,25.677 d: 27.4  

🇲🇽 San Pedro Garza García -100.3,25.667 d: 31  

🇲🇽 San Pedro -100.3,25.667 d: 31  

🇲🇽 Monterrey -100.31,25.665 d: 31.9  

🇲🇽 San Nicolás de los Garza -100.283,25.75 d: 32.9  

🇲🇽 Garza García -100.37,25.657 d: 37.6  

🇲🇽 Salinas Victoria -100.3,25.967 d: 50.6  

🇲🇽 García -100.583,25.817 d: 63.2  

Antipodal to: Cadereyta Jiménez 80,-25.6

🇲🇺 Mahébourg 57.7,-20.407 d: 17664.1  

🇲🇺 Centre de Flacq 57.718,-20.2 d: 17658.4  

🇲🇺 Rivière du Rempart 57.633,-20.05 d: 17644.6  

🇲🇺 Curepipe 57.517,-20.317 d: 17642.7  

🇲🇺 St Pierre 57.517,-20.217 d: 17639.2  

🇲🇺 Vacoas-Phoenix 57.493,-20.3 d: 17639.8  

🇲🇺 Moka 57.496,-20.219 d: 17637.2  

🇲🇺 Quatre Bornes 57.479,-20.266 d: 17637.2  

🇲🇺 Mauritius 57.499,-20.162 d: 17635.4  

🇲🇺 Port-Louis 57.496,-20.165 d: 17635.3  

Bing Map

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