Candelaria, Texas | |
---|---|
Unincorporated community | |
Nickname(s): Cadelaria, Texas | |
Location within Texas | |
Coordinates: 30°08′19″N 104°40′59″W / 30.13861°N 104.68306°WCoordinates: 30°08′19″N 104°40′59″W / 30.13861°N 104.68306°W | |
Country | United States |
State | Texas |
County | Presidio |
Elevation | 2,861 ft (872 m) |
Time zone | Central (CST) (UTC-6) |
• Summer (DST) | CDT (UTC-5) |
ZIP codes | 79845 |
Area code | 432 |
GNIS feature ID | 1331836, 1377164 |
Candelaria (/ˌkændᵻˈlɛəri.ə/ KAN-de-LAIR-ee-a) is an unincorporated community in Presidio County, Texas, United States, with about 75 inhabitants.
The town stands in the Chihuahuan Desert on the north bank of the Rio Grande, just across from the small Mexican town of San Antonio Del Bravo. The two towns were linked by a bridge across the river that enabled the inhabitants of San Antonio to buy groceries and supplies from Candelaria; some sent their children to school there. However, in 2008 the bridge was controversially removed by the US Border Patrol because of concerns that it had become, in the words of Border Patrol chief John Smietana, "a route for terrorists, drug traffickers and illegals."
It is unclear when Candelaria was founded, but the area was occupied by Native Americans before farmers began to grow crops on the irrigated floodplain of the Rio Grande. It was known initially as Gallina ("chicken" in Spanish) before being renamed as Candelaria. In 1868, an entrepreneur named William Russell came to the area to establish a farm worked by the local people, selling the grain to the US Army at Fort Davis and . Cotton was also grown locally. With the town's population increasing steady, it became the seat of one of Presidio County's three school districts in 1893. By 1911 it had grown to two stores, a church and a school, with 307 pupils in the school district and a general population of 1,842, though only a minority of these actually lived in the town.