González Catán
González Catán | |
---|---|
Town | |
Country | Argentina |
Province | Buenos Aires |
Partido | La Matanza Partido |
Elevation | 19 m (62 ft) |
Population | |
• Total | 163,815 |
• Density | 3,189/km2 (8,260/sq mi) |
CPA Base | B 1759 |
Area code | +54 2202 |
Website | http://www.gonzalezcatan.com/ |
González Catán is a city located in La Matanza Partido, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina. The city is the second-largest by area in the county (52 km²), and the second most-populous.
The settlement itself is the oldest one in La Matanza County, and was originally founded in 1570 as a garrison by a Conquistador, Captain Juan de Garay. The modern settlement originated with the 1869 sale of the land by Germán Carrizo to Mauricio González Catán, a prominent surgeon and provincial legislator. He set aside the land for recreational purposes, christening it the Finca San Mauricio, in honor of his patron saint. He and his wife, Juana del Carmen Palacios, set aside a parcel for the establishment of the Colegio San Mauricio in 1879, and he died in 1895.
Home to a dairy, an orchard and numerous other agricultural businesses, the town was officially established on April 3, 1910, by Dr. Enrique Simón Pérez, a dentist and brother-in-law of González Catán. Writer Martiniano Leguizamón had La Morita, his home, built nearby at the time, and the opening of a Buenos Aires and Pacific Railway station promoted the town's initial growth. The growth in manufacturing establishments in the county from 140 to over 1,600 between 1935 and 1954 led to an influx of migrants from the hinterland, and González Catán grew to become the second-largest city on the county. It social problems increased as well, however, and the city was the site of Father Mario Pantaleo's chapel and day care center from the 1970s onwards. The Provincial Legislature declared it a city on September 19, 1974.[1]
The city's socio-economic difficulties were dramatized in a 2004 film, Buena Vida Delivery.
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34°46′S 58°39′W / 34.767°S 58.650°W