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History
Colonial Times
A little over 200 years ago, San Jose was no more
than a few muddy streets around which clustered an assembly of rickety
buildings. In 1737 this little village first gained status, when
a thatched habitation was built to draw residents scattered throughout
the valley. Without drawing too much attention, the first wholesale
influx was comprised of Spanish and Creole smugglers, whom of which
spoke Biesanz et al., "having rebelled against the royal monopoly
of commerce by resorting to contraband, were punished by being 'exiled'
from Cartago," the colonial capitol city formed by Juan Vasquez
de Coronado in 1564. The newly founded settlement was christened
Villa Nueva de la Boca del Monte del Valle de Abra. Later changed
to San Jose, the name of a local patron saint.
Thanks to the merchants' bold ways, San Jose flourished
and quickly grew to the size of Cartago. By the 1820's, San Jose
and Cartago both had just over 5,000 inhabitants, Heredia half the
amount, and Alajuela a bit over 1,800. Soon San Jose developed into
a lucrative monopoly in the tobacco trade. Tobacco funds provided
a civic building; near the end of the 18th century, San Jose was
crowned with a Cathedral facing a beautiful park, a currency mint,
military quarters and a town council building.
Independence
In October 1821 news was passed from Spain to Maceta
central; The surprising announcement was that Costa Rica was an
independent country. Soon the counsels of the four cities sat down
to determine their fate, and a constitution-Pacto de Concordia-inspired
from the 1812 Spanish constitution. Alas, exclaimed historian Carlos
Monge Alfaro, early Costa Rica was not a unified province, rather
a "group of villages separated by narrow regionalisms."
Now the four cities felt and performed as had the city-states of
Ancient Greece. The aristocratic and restrained traditional leaders
of Cartago and Heredia, with their colonial links, favored annexation
to a Central American federation led by Mexico; the progressively
more republican force of San Jose and Alajuela, convinced by the
revolutionary ideas predominant in Europe, argued for independence.
A bloody struggle for regional control soon took place.
On April 5, 1823, the two sides ensued a battle
in the Ochomogo Hills. The republican forces commanded by a former
merchant seaman named Gregorio Jose Ramirez, won victory and then
stormed through Cartago. In a landmark act that set a precedent
to be followed in later years, the civilian hero Ramirez relinquished
power and retired to his farm, then returned to foil a brilliantly
executed army stratagem.
Thus San Jose became the nations capitol city.
It's growing popularity, however, soon engendered resentment and
discontent. In a conciliatory act in March of 1835, San Jose's leaders
offered to rotate the national capitol among the four cities every
four years. Discontently, the other cities-including Alajuela-had
a thorn in their collective side. In September 1837 they formed
a league, chose a president, and on September 26, attacked San Jose
in an effort to overthrow the Bauilio Carillo government. The Josefinos
won what came to be called La Guerra de la Liga ("The war of
the League"). And so San Jose has remained the nation's capitol
ever since.
By the mid 1800's the coffee industry was bringing
a boom in prosperity, culture, and refinement to the once-humble
village. San Jose developed a moderate middle class hungry to invest
its new found wealth for the social good. The mud roads became brick
highways illuminated by kerosene lamps. Tramways appeared as well.
San Jose was the third in the world to install electric lighting
for the public. Well ahead of other cities throughout Europe and
North America san Jose installed public telephones. By the turn
of the century, plazas and splendid buildings, lined with trees
catered to the flourishing movement-libraries, museums, the Teatro
Nacional, and gran neoclassical mansions and middle-class homes-honored
the city. Aided by the coffee income and influenced by he Paris
and Crystal Palace Expositions architects were erecting great monuments
and schools built of imported prefabricated metals.
Of course, the city wasn't without slum like suburbs
formed of puertas ventanas, tiny workers' houses occupied by several
families. Industrial zones rose on the perimeter of the urban center.
And there were isolated sections populated by blacks who had defied
segregationist laws and settled in the Meseta Central.
Modern Times
As recently as the 1940's San Jose still had only
70,000 residents, a mere tenth of the nations population. After
WW II, the capitol city began to mushroom, growing without constraint,
invading neighboring villages such as Guadalupe and Tibas. Unfortunately,
many many of the city's finest buildings were destroyed by the demolition
crane in post war years. Only to be replaced by monstrous examples
of modern architecture. This haphazard growth continues as the city
continues to grow farther afield until the suburban districts have
begun to meld into the larger complex. Surrounding hills twinkle
at night with the lights of suburban villages that are slowly becoming
part of the city's fold.
Much
of the information on our site as it relates to Costa Rica is:
Courtesy
of Christopher P. Baker and Avalon Travel Publishing.
© 2004 Christopher P. Baker. All Rights Reserved.
A2Z Languages highly
recommends Christopher P. Baker's book: Moon
Handbooks Costa Rica. Click on the image to visit
his website where you can purchase this book or find out more about
the author.
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