[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 100 (Wednesday, June 25, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H5731-H5732]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
23 IN 1--SAN ELIZARIO, TEXAS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Texas (Mr. Gallego) for 5 minutes.
Mr. GALLEGO. Madam Speaker, today, as we continue our journey through
the 23rd District of Texas, I would like to talk about the newest city
in the 23rd District and one of the newest cities in Texas, which is
the city of San Elizario, with a population of about 12,000 people.
Located south of El Paso, it is a small community that incorporated
on November 5, 2013, after its residents voted to make it a city.
Recently, on May 10, the people of the city of San Elizario elected
their first mayor, Maya Sanchez, and the voters of San Elizario also
elected council members Leticia Hurtado-Miranda, David Cantu, Miguel
Najera, Jr., Rebecca Martinez-Juarez, and George Almanzar.
While it is a new city, the San Elizario community has been around a
very long time.
In 1598, Don Juan de Onate, who was a Spanish conquistador and
nobleman who was born in Zacatecas, led a group of more than 530
colonists and about 7,000 head of livestock from southern Chihuahua to
settle the province of New Mexico.
The group traveled a northeasterly route for weeks and crossed the
desert until reaching the banks of the Rio Grande in present day--you
guessed it--San Elizario.
On April 30, 1598, the travelers, who were very thirsty, drank the
cool water of the river and then celebrated with a thanksgiving mass
and enjoyed a feast. They ate fish, fowl, and deer. That is actually
considered the very first Thanksgiving ever celebrated in the present-
day United States of America.
Mr. Onate performed a ceremony known as ``La Toma,'' or ``the take,''
declaring the land a new province of Spain, to be ruled by King Phillip
II.
San Elizario was established around 1760 as a civilian settlement of
Hacienda de los Tiburcios. In 1789, the Spaniards established a fort
there called Presidio de San Elizario. The town grew around the fort
and took the name of San Elizario.
The word San Elizario actually comes from the Spanish word ``San
Eliceario,'' known as the Roman Catholic patron saint of soldiers.
The chapel there at the mission of San Elizario, or La Capilla, is
one of three missions in El Paso--Socorro and Ysleta being the other
two--and is part of El Paso's historic Mission Trail.
During the 20th century, it served as the center of missionary work
throughout the Mission Valley. The chapel was moved to its present site
in 1789 to protect travelers and settlers along the Camino Real, or
Royal Highway, which ran from Mexico through Ciudad Juarez, which was
then called Paso del
[[Page H5732]]
Norte, and on to Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Upon Mexico's independence, the presidio fell into ruins. Rebuilding
efforts didn't beginning until 1853, with a small church. The present
structure was completed in 1882, and little has changed since then.
I invite everyone to visit the city of San Elizario and the historic
Mission Valley of El Paso to learn more about the cultures and
traditions of the 23rd District of Texas.
I congratulate the new city.
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