File:Chapel of Our Lady of Carmen (34687299311).jpg

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Description Isla del Carmen is located in the Sea of Cortez, about nine miles east of Loreto, seven miles southeast of Coronado Island and four from the coast of the peninsula. Like Coronado, the island is part of the municipality of Loreto. Nature has favored Loreto with exceptional geographical features of contrasting landscapes of mountain, desert and sea. Today, the island is home to a private business and a protected area for the conservation of wildlife. Guards and guides are the sole inhabitants. The island’s elongated shape is about 37,000 acres in length, occupies approximately 58 square miles and contains a mountain range that rises to 1,600 feet above sea level. The complete privacy and freedom found on Carmen allows close contact with nature. The history of Isla del Carmen basically revolves around a salt deposit located at the north end of the island in an area called Bahia Salinas. The salt saga began in 1698 when the Jesuits arrived to establish the mission of Loreto. The missionaries discovered the area by accident and began stocking up on salt for themselves, as well as future Jesuit missions as they were established. It remained so for many years until 1875 when the Viosca brothers from La Paz took control of the salt. They built a railroad track of about 2,000 feet where a steam locomotive moved the salt to a small pier. Eventually, the control of this resource came under the Santa Fe Railroad and then the Pacific Salt Co. Limited of London. The latter improved extraction methods and renewed the railway equipment. Around 1945, the company began operating under the name Pacific Salinas, SA and obtained a permit allowing 99 years of extraction. According to Andrew Davis, most members of the company were Spanish, including, as he recalls, Cayetano Blanco Vigil and Alonso Florida. This group, in turn, owned several salt mines, as remembered by General Manager Ricardo Sanchez. Subsequently, the salt became part of the of the Monterrey Cellulose and Derivatives S.A de C.V Conglomorate (CYDSA) which extracted the salt of Isla del Carmen until 1983. The salt plant closed in 1984, but what remains provides an idea of what the island once looked like. It is possible to see the dwellings for the saltmine staff, the school, cemetery, sports fields, workshops, warehouses, fuel and oil tanks, and a bank. Inside the ruins of this last one some files, typewriters and a safe wich content is said “to be ignored” are preserved. There is also is the Chapel of Our Lady of Carmen in perfect condition, with a beautiful image of the Virgin on the altar. The wives of the business owners are very attentive to the preservation of the chapel.
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Source Chapel of Our Lady of Carmen
Author Kirt Edblom from Albany, Oregon, United States
Camera location25° 59′ 58.95″ N, 111° 06′ 20.91″ W Kartographer map based on OpenStreetMap.View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMapinfo

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w:en:Creative Commons
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This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license.
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This image was originally posted to Flickr by Kirt Edblom at https://flickr.com/photos/27190564@N02/34687299311. It was reviewed on 15 September 2022 by FlickreviewR 2 and was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the cc-by-sa-2.0.

15 September 2022

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current14:20, 15 September 2022Thumbnail for version as of 14:20, 15 September 20223,564 × 5,555 (14.2 MB)StellarD (talk | contribs)Transferred from Flickr via #flickr2commons

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