Pergamino, Buenos Aires Province

Pergamino, Buenos Aires Province

Infobox Settlement
official_name = Pergamino


imagesize = 300px
image_caption = San Nicolás Street, Pergamino.
image_shield =
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pushpin_label_position1=
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pushpin_mapsize1 = 240
subdivision_type = Country
subdivision_name = ARG
subdivision_type1 = Province
subdivision_name1 = Buenos Aires
subdivision_type2 = Partido
subdivision_name2 = Pergamino
established_title = Foundation
established_date = 1626
population_as_of = census-ar|2001
population_total = 85,487
population_density_km2 =
latd = 33
latm = 53
longd = 60
longm = 34
latNS=S|longEW=W
elevation_m = 56
postal_code_type = CPA Base
postal_code = 2700
area_code = +54 2477
website =

Pergamino is an Argentine city in the Province of Buenos Aires. It has a population of about 85,000 inhabitants as per the census-ar|2001 and is the seat of the "partido" (county) of the same name. Its UN/LOCODE is ARPGO.

History

Long valued for its many springs and fertile land, the area had been home to the Charrúa and Araucanian people when it was first noticed by Spanish conquistadores around 1620. Quickly becoming a posada along the trade route between colonial Buenos Aires and Córdoba, the settlement was given its name on 3 January 1626, for the parchment paper found there and conforming to an Araucanian term meaning "red soil." The settlement's first businesses were established in 1700 and in 1749, recurrent attacks by displaced natives led to the construction of a fort. [http://pergaminoinformacion.files.wordpress.com/2008/02/historias-de-pergamino-y-su-gente.pdf Historias de Pergamino] ] These attacks did not cease, however, and on 8 August 1751 the settlement was destroyed. The site continued to be of interest to the Buenos Aires government and in 1769, Commander Juan González ordered the village rebuilt. It reconstruction successful, the Curate of nearby Arrecifes ordained a Parish in Pergamino in 1779 and the new Viceroyalty of Río de la Plata assigned the area a "partido" (county) in 1784. The fort played a prominent role during the intital battles in the war for independence and, in 1815, was the site of a mutiny led by Col. Ignacio Álvarez Thomas against the fledgling nation's Head of State, Director Carlos María de Alvear. Col. Álvarez Thomas' coup d'état against Director de Alvear's brief though highly divisive autocracy averted the dissolution of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata, the confederacy that later became Argentina. [http://209.85.173.104/search?q=cache:rvyX1o7VoTsJ:www.ateneohyv.com.ar/Regional/Parroquia%2520Nta%2520Sra%2520de%2520la%2520Merced%2520de%2520Pergamino%2520en%2520la%2520colonia.pdf+%22Historia+de+Pergamino%22&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=5&gl=us Parroquia de Nuestra Señora de la Merced] ] Following the struggle for independence, the progressive new Governor of Buenos Aires, Martín Rodríguez assigned Pergamino a Justice of the Peace in 1822 and first school was opened in 1828. The town soon became home to a number of abattoirs and, following the 1829 advent of the regime of Governor Juan Manuel de Rosas, whose family interests centered around cattle-raising, a close alliance developed between the governor and Pergamino's most prominent families, the Acevedos and the Anchorenas. Rosas' repressive regime resulted in the sole school's closure in 1838. Following Governor Rosas' 1852 overthrow, the local gentry allied themselves to Bartolomé Mitre, a prominent advocate on behalf of Buenos Aires Province for greater autonomy. Mitre was elected governor in 1860 and President of Argentina in 1862. President Mitre's 1862 establishment of Argentina's first institute of Agronomy helped lead to the development of a new economic activity in the region around Pergamino: intensive agriculture. The first Argentine grain shipment to arrive intact in the United Kingdom in 1875 touched off an agricultural boom that, in Pergamino, made itself evident in the massive cultivation of maïze. The city had begun to grow, counting four schools by 1873 for instance; but the town's development only began to accelerate following the arrival of the Central Argentine Railway in 1882, en route to Rosario. Pergamino, whose population exceeded 10,000 and home to over 90 registered businesses, was formally designated as a city on 23 October 1895.Continuing to rely economically on maize, local landowners funded the establishment of an agricultural laboratory in 1912. [http://www.inta.gov.ar/PERGAMINO/ins/historia.htm INTA] ] Pergamino's population, now mostly made of European immigrants and their children, nearly tripled to almost 30,000 between 1895 and 1914; this era saw the establishment of important Basque, Piemontese, Provençal and Lebanese communities, as well as the inauguration of the "Hotel Roma" in 1913, one of the best-known art nouveau structures in the area. [ [http://www.historia-actual.com/hao/Volumes/Volume1/Issue13/esp/v1i13c12.pdf Historia Actual] ] One immigrant from the Piedmont, Enrique Venini, founded Pergamino's first newspaper, "La Opinión", in 1917. [http://www.laopinion-pergamino.com.ar/Historia.html La Opinión] ] The city's growing immigrant communities also included a sizable contingent of British railway engineers and other technicians associated with the rapidly expanding railways. A number of these staffers and the Central Argentine Railway's director, Ronald Leslie, organized Pergamino's first football team on 18 November 1918, christening it in honor of a British Field Marshal famed for his roles in the Boer War and in World War I, Gen. Douglas Haig. Club Atlético Douglas Haig has enjoyed regional prominence, long forming part of the Argentine B League. [ [http://www.taringa.net/posts/info/789123/C_-A-Douglas-Haig,-de-Pergamino-un-Grande.html Taringa: Douglas Haig] ] Pergamino's main church and city hall were both completed in 1930. Following a decade of prosperity, the great depression led to the ruin of the majority of the area's small landholders; the city soon began to recover, however, and celebrated the opening of the Municipal Fine Arts Museum in 1936, for instance. A devastating flood in 1939 led to construction of levees and canals along the Pergamino River. Growing to nearly 50,000 people by 1947, the city's first large manufacturing establishments began to operate. Pergamino's agricultural sector, however, was strained by the creation of a national export grain purchaser, the IAPI, by Pres. Juan Perón in 1946; although Pergamino benefited from IAPI investment in irrigation and other infrastructure works, the low prices the agency paid local growers also led to the bankruptcy of number. The dissolution of the IAPI following Perón's overthrow in 1955 and the 1956 establishment of the National Agricultural Laboratory (INTA) in Pergamino helped revitalize the sector in the area and nationally. ["Historical Dictionary of Argentina". London: Scarecrow Press, 1978.] The elections of 1963 carried a native of Pergamino, Dr. Arturo Illia, to the Presidency; President Illia prioritized economic growth while keeping national budgets nearly balanced, the combination of which led to unprecedented growth in Pergamino. [ [http://www.laopinion-pergamino.com.ar/ARCHIVO/nota.asp?date=2008/01/19&vernota=1459&id=56 La Opinión] ] The city's first high-rises were built, as well as the industrial district. Pres. Illia graced his birthplace with numerous visits during his tenure. Another native of Pergamino, Héctor Chavero, became nationally renown during that era after releasing an album of folklore ballads and narration, "El payador perseguido" ("The Persecuted Troubadour"); by then, he was known by his pseudonym, Atahualpa Yupanqui and has remained, long after his passing in 1992, arguably the most influential musician of his genre in Argentina.

One of Pergamino's Lebanese immigrants, Isaac Annan, had established the city's first garment factory during the late 1940s, creating Far West Jeans and Manhattan Shirts, two of Argentina's best-known domestic clothing brands; by 1970, Wrangler Jeans, Fiorucci, Levi's, Lee Jeans and a number of local firms has established several large textile plants, employing about 6,000. A son of French immigrants, Roberto Genoud, established the area's largest lumber and furniture factory. Pergamino had, by then, become northern Buenos Aires Province's industrial center. Economic instability nationwide began to take its toll on that sector after 1975, however; by 1985, a number of local textile manufacturers had closed and been replaced by smaller cooperatives. [http://pergaminoinformacion.files.wordpress.com/2008/02/industria-manufacturera-2006-partido-de-pergamino.pdf Pergamino Info] ] Pergamino continued to grow, reaching a population of 70,000 in 1980 and being chosen as the site for the prestigious National Viral Research Institute (INEVH) in 1985, as well as being home to one of the nation's first cable television stations. National economic problems saddled the city, however, leading to increased unemployment and the temporary closure of "La Opinión" in 1989, for instance. Financially distressed, the daily's founders, the Veninis, sold the company to local cable tv entrepenueur Hugo Apesteguía, the current owner. Serious floods in 1975, 1984 and 1995 underscored the need for more investments in infrastructure and by 2002, the combined effects of a wave of imports and an acute economic crisis led to the closure of most of Pergamino's industries and many of its retail establishments; the textile industry, in particular, was reduced to about 600 workers; [ [http://www.clarin.com/suplementos/zona/2003/02/16/z-00201.htm Clarín] ] amid rising crime rates and general pessimism, one of the most notable achievements in that difficult era was the establishment of the Pergamino Regional University, the city's first institution of higher learning, in 1993. The school was was absorbed into the upon that latter entity's creation in 2002 and its Pergamino campus today enrolls about 500 students yearly. [ [http://www.unnoba.edu.ar/unnoba/index.do UNNOBA] ]

The city today

The economic recovery Argentina began to experience in 2003 has led to an dramatic recovery in the city's industrial base, as well the area's agricultural production; in 2003 alone, the city saw 2,500 manufacturing jobs return. [http://www.lanacion.com.ar/nota.asp?nota_id=533725 La Nación] ] The county's convert|2950|km2|sqmi|0|abbr=on is dedicated almost entirely to agriculture and, though local farmers have diversified into poultry and dairy production, Pergamino still plays an important role in Argentina's cereal harvest, particularly soy and maize, as well as being home to half the national sales of seed for cultivation; as such, the city was declared National Capital of the Seed in 1998. Even so, agricultural employment accounts for only 8% of the county's total and employment in manufacturing, which has growing by about 13% annually, accounted for 22% of the total in 2006, or about 10,000 jobs. Though still led by the textile and lumber industries, manufacturing in Pergamino is more diversified than in the past and these two sectors today employ less than a third of industrial labor. [ [http://pergaminoinformacion.files.wordpress.com/2008/03/pict-fase-puente-pergamino-2007.pdf Campisteguy Report] ] Pergamino's financial sector has likewise recovered: the value of locally-originated loans nearly doubled between 2002 and 2006, reaching US$52 million and local deposits nearly tripled, reaching almost US$100 million.

The mayor of Pergamino, Héctor Gutiérrez, is (as most of the city's past mayors) affiliated with the centrist Radical Civic Union, Argentina's oldest continously existing political party. Elected in 1999, he has capitalized on the city's economic recovery by emphasizing public works and in 2005, successfully lobbied the Administration of President Néstor Kirchner for a 180 km (112 mi) extension of the Route 8 expressway into Pergamino, a long-overdue improvement for one of the nation's most-transited stretches of two-lane road. [ [http://www.casarosada.gov.ar/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2234&Itemid=66 Presidencia de la Nación] ]

References

*
* [http://pergaminovirtual.com.ar/pergamino/ "Pergamino Virtual"] - Portal of the city.
* [http://laopinion-pergamino.com.ar/ La Opinión] es icon


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