Cananea | ||
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City | ||
Heroica Ciudad de Cananea | ||
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Nickname(s): Ciudad del Cobre (Copper City) | ||
Municipality of Cananea in Sonora |
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City of Cananea | ||
Coordinates: 30°58′55″N 110°18′02″W / 30.98194°N 110.30056°WCoordinates: 30°58′55″N 110°18′02″W / 30.98194°N 110.30056°W | ||
Country | Mexico | |
State | Sonora | |
Municipality | Cananea | |
Government | ||
• Type | Council-Manager Government | |
• Mayor of Cananea | Lic. Fernando Herrera Moreno | |
Elevation | 1,620 m (5,310 ft) | |
Population (2010) | ||
• Total | 31,560 | |
Time zone | MST (UTC-7) | |
Postal code | 84620 - 84635 | |
Area code(s) | 645 | |
Demonym | Cananense | |
Website | www.cananea.gob.mx |
Cananea (from the Apache term for "horse meat") is a city in the northern Mexican state of Sonora, Northwestern Mexico. It is the seat of the Municipality of Cananea, on the U.S−Mexico border.
The population of the city was 31,560 as recorded by the 2010 census. The population of the municipality, which includes rural areas, was 32,936. The total area of the municipality is approximately 4,100 square kilometres (1,600 sq mi).
The first non-indigenous inhabitants of the present day Cananea, arrived in 1760 from other parts of the Spanish Viceroyalty of New Spain (colonial México). Jesuit priests discovered gold and silver, and opened mines using the indigenous peoples for labor.
In the 19th century General Ignacio Pesqueira, from nearby Arizpe, retired to Cananea. He fought against the Apache who raided the area. One time, while following them into the mountains, he discovered the abandoned Spanish mines and by 1868 he had renewed the extraction of minerals in the Cananea mines. General Pesqueira's wife, Elena Pesqueira Pesqueira, "discovered" a nearby mountain range (sierra) and the General named the highest peak La Elenita ("The Little Helen", 9,327 feet or 2,843 meters above sea level) in her honor. The other peak is named La Mariquita ("The Little Mary", 8,123 feet or 2,476 meters above sea level).
In 1889 William Cornell Greene purchased the mine from General Pesqueira and founded the Nogales, Sonora-based company, The Cananea Consolidated Copper Company, S. A. (CCCC or 4C). In June 1906, a labor dispute erupted into the violent cross-border Cananea strike, that resulted in the death of 23 people and dozens injured, in a fight between the strikers and a posse led by Arizona Rangers from the United States. A corrido titled La cárcel de Cananea ("Cananea jail") written in 1917 and commemorating the incident has since become famous. At the time of the strike the population of 23,000 included 7,000 Americans and 5,000 Chinese.