Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Minas de Oro

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Country
  
Honduras

Website
  
www.minasdeoro.info

Area
  
390 km²

Area code
  
27

Departament
  
Comayagua

Elevation
  
1,060 m

Population
  
13,341 (2015)

Minas de Oro

Weather
  
28°C, Wind N at 13 km/h, 42% Humidity

Minas de Oro is a municipality in the Honduran department of Comayagua.

Contents

Minas de oro hd


Geography

Minas de Oro is located to the northeast of Comayagua, 150 km to the northwest of Tegucigalpa, the capital of Honduras. It is surround by the mountains named Grande, El Cobre and El Peñón. To the north, the district of Victoria; to the south, the San Luis and Esquías districts; to the east, the San Jose del Potero district and to the west, the La Libertad district.

Historical information

Minas de Oro was founded as a consequence of the gold rushes that were common in the region, when workers and neighbours settled in the area. During one of his visits to this place, Juan Lindo discovered a gold mine. For that reason it has continued to be called "Minas de Oro" (Gold Mines).

During Dr. Policarpo Bonillas's administration, citizenship began negotiating with the Círculo de Cabañas, an association that grouped the municipalities of Minas de Oro, Esquías and San José del Potrero. These negotiations led to the transfer of the head of such association to Minas de Oro in 1893, during general Domingo Vazquez's administration. To justify the transfer, the citizenship argued that the powerful increment of the footwear industry, the commercial relationship between Minas de Oro, Tegucigalpa and the northern coast, and the growing café crops in the region were becoming Minas de Oro's main patrimonies, which at least in the first case it held true in the subsequent years.

City of education

In the 1990s, Minas de Oro was called a "city of education" in Honduras because it was the only municipality where all the towns had access to a primary education.

The Malcotal

Minas de Oro counted on the Malcotal School, oriented to the agroforestal formation led by a North American. The only thing left of this institution is a house turned centre of tourist retirements in the highway that leads to Mines of San Antonio.

Evangelical Boarding School

Minas de Oro were counted by the decade from the 1960s to 1990s in the Famous Evangelical Institute that has a boarding school where students from all of the republic of Honduras went. Its musical, English formation and Biblical education was recognised. At the beginning of the 1960s, it closed because of stoked heat from the insecurity in the access routes, stop cost of fuels, local competition, and complexity in the administrative handling of this type of institution.

List of villages

  • 031101 Minas de Oro
  • 031102 Agua Blanca
  • 031103 El Socorro
  • 031104 El Zompopero
  • 031105 La Hoya de la Puerta
  • 031106 Las Huertas
  • 031107 Minas de San Antonio
  • 031108 Montecitos
  • 031109 Pimientilla
  • 031110 San Isidro del Mal Paso
  • 031111 Santa Cruz
  • Notable people

  • Neida Sandoval – A host of the morning show Despierta America on the Spanish language network Univision.
  • Vicente Cáceres – teacher in one of the largest public schools of Honduras.
  • Ramón Carías Donaire – teacher, principal of the Villa Ahumada Normal School.
  • José María Calix – journalist
  • Sites of interest

  • Cerro Pelon – Mountain to the north of the city that is named after its lack of large trees. Only desert plants like cacti, small palms and bushes grow here. There are also many caves that make popular tourist attractions. This site is also known as Cerro Grande (Large Hill) or Cacalotepe in some geography books. Over the top there is a point of the fist order geodethic net.
  • Evangelical Institute Installations
  • El Malcotal Installations
  • El Manantial Ecocenter
  • Cerro Los Tornillos
  • Some Closed Mines
  • References

    Minas de Oro Wikipedia