EL PASO


Meaning of EL PASO in English

city, seat (1850) of El Paso county, extreme western Texas, U.S., on the Rio Grande, there bridged to Ciudad Jurez, Mex., just south of the New Mexico line. The largest of the U.S.-Mexican border cities, it lies at the foot of the Franklin Mountains (at an elevation of 3,762 feet ) below a narrow pass where the Rio Grande issues from the bare southernmost spurs of the Rocky Mountains. The strategic site was recognized in 1598 by Juan de Oate, colonizer of New Mexico, who called it El Paso del Norte (The Pass of the North). Franciscans established the Mission Nuestra Seora de Guadalupe there in 1659; the original church stands in the central square of Jurez. Spanish survivors of the Pueblo Revolt (168092) took refuge there and built other missions nearby, including one at Ysleta, site of the oldest town in Texas and now in El Paso. In 1776 the settlement comprised a string of hamlets and farms inhabited by 5,000 people. Not until after 1827 did a village exist on the river's north bank at the present site of El Paso. It became U.S. territory in 1848, when an army post was built (commemorated by the Fort Bliss Replica Museum). The town, laid out in 1859, was on the Butterfield Stage Route to California. It grew slowly until 1881, when four railways arrived; by 1890 its population had increased more than 10-fold to 10,338. Meanders of the Rio Grande to the south resulted in border disputes in the 1860s; Mexican claims to El Chamizal, a wedge of land on the Texas side, were first filed in 1895. The dispute, involving relocating the river's channel, was finally resolved in 1967 and is commemorated by the Chamizal National Memorial. Spanish language and culture distinguish the city. Its old adobe buildings are unmistakably Mexican, yet in general appearance El Paso is a modern American metropolis. It is the commercial and financial centre for an extensive trade territory where livestock ranching, irrigated cotton farming, and mineral production are major economic activities. El Paso has a highly diversified industrial structure centring on primary metals, petroleum and gas operations, food products, and apparel. Its copper-lead custom smelter and electrolytic copper refinery refines a significant portion of the nation's copper. Fort Bliss (home of the U.S. Army Air Defense Center), the William Beaumont General Hospital, and nearby White Sands Missile Range (in New Mexico) augment El Paso's economy. A port of entry and an important foreign-trade and transcontinental crossroad on several major highways, it is served by both U.S. and Mexican railroads. It is a tourist gateway to Ciudad Jurez and the interior of Mexico and to scenic areas of the United States. The University of Texas at El Paso (site of the Sun Bowl) originated as the Texas State School of Mines and Metallurgy in 1913. El Paso Community College opened in 1969. Inc. 1873. Pop. (1990) city, 515,342; El Paso MSA, 591,610.

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