La Calera, Chile


La Calera is a city and commune in the Quillota Province of central Chile's fifth region of Valparaíso.

Geography

La Calera is located northeast of Valparaíso, and northwest of Santiago, in the Aconcagua River Valley. Its area is. La Calera borders Nogales to the north and west, Hijuelas to the east, and La Cruz to the south.
The city of La Calera is partly enclosed by Route 5 and Route 60.

History

La Calera's name comes from the production of quicklime that is obtained from the processed limestone , extracted from the hills at the south of the town, which were already exploited by the Chilean and Peruvian Natives for some 400 years previously. Therefore, La Calera means "quicklime mine".
Established by the Jesuits as a settlement of the Jesuit reduction, the estate of La Calera belonged to the Jesuits up to 1767, to the expulsion of Jesuits by the decree of King Charles III of Spain from 1 March 1767. The Bavarian Jesuit missionary Karl von Haimhausen was prominent in the area's early development. The turning point came in 1842, when it was acquired by Bolivian citizen Ildefonso Huici who started industrialising it using local resources. By 1844, a small town had emerged consisting mainly in a number of workers' dwellings located around the factories and production centres established in it, giving life to what La Calera is today.

Economy

Due to its strategic crossroads location on the central valley and the pioneering and entrepreneurial work of locals and immigrants, La Calera has managed to remain a significant commercial and services centre to the interior of the Valparaiso Region, even though it is not the capital city of the Province. It also remains an important industrial base, employing a fair share of the rural population around it.

Industries and commercial markets

  • Cemento Melón
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According to data from the Census 2002 by the National Statistics Institute, the commune's population was 49,503 inhabitants. Of these, 47,836 lived in urban areas and 1,667 in rural areas. Its 2007 estimated population was 50,644. La Calera holds 3.21% of the total population of the region. The city's central location in between Santiago de Chile and Valparaiso on the coast made the city of La Calera a true crossroads of industrial development.
Amongst the important immigrant communities set in La Calera before 1950, Palestinians and Italians stand out, which makes the town with the largest proportion of Palestine people in Latin America. The small but well prominent Palestinian community was recently reported in international news media. Even a former Mayor of the city was of Palestinian descent. As mentioned, Italians as well as French immigrants have established a thriving agricultural economy.
La Calera has a mestizo cultural identity and over half the people have some Amerindian ancestry. It is estimated that Spanish descendants and mestizos make up more than 90% of the population.

Notable Caleranos

The demonym for a person from La Calera is Calerano for a man, or Calerana for a woman. Notable Caleranos include:
  • Eugenia Errázuriz
  • Elías Figueroa Branden
  • Manfred Max-Neef

    Administration

As a commune, La Calera is a third-level administrative division of Chile, administered by a communal council, which is headed by a directly elected mayor. The current mayor, as of December 2008, is Dr. Eduardo Martínez Machuca. The communal council has the following members:
  • Trinidad Rojo
  • Margarita Osorio
  • Ricardo Aliaga
  • Gustavo Arancibia
  • Orietta Valencia
  • Lautaro Correa
Within the electoral divisions of Chile, La Calera is represented in the Chamber of Deputies by Mr. Eduardo Cerda and Mrs. Andrea Molina as part of the 10th electoral district,. The commune is represented in the Senate by Ignacio Walker Prieto and Lily Pérez San Martín as part of the 5th senatorial constituency.

Universities