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A Brief History of
Rocky Point
For years the community known as Puerto Peñasco to the Mexicans has been
called Rocky Point by the Americans.
Rocky Point in Spanish would be Punta (not Puerto) Peñasco. Why the
discrepancy?
Actually the name goes back much farther than we might suppose, considering the
town was first settled only in the 1920's. It was 1826 that retired Lt. Robert
William Hale Hardy of the British Royal Fleet was sailing along the coasts of
Sonora and Baja California searching for pearls and precious metals in the
sailing ship La Bruja (the witch). He baptized the point Rocky Point and it was
identified as Rocky Point on marine maps until General Lázaro Cárdenas (who was
to become president of Mexico in the 1930's) changed it to Puerto Punta Peñasco
(Port Rocky Point). Americans dropped the Port, and Mexicans the Punta.
During the early 1920's Americans traveled from Tucson, Phoenix, Gila Bend and
Ajo to fish for the enormous flying fish abundant in the nearby waters. For the
wandering fisherman who traveled from Guaymas to the gulf of Santa Clara del
Colorado, Rocky Point provided the ideal place for refuge from storms, thanks to
the hill of volcanic origin, which the fishermen knew as "the hill of the
whale", and the beautiful and tranquil estuary. However the sight did not offer
the essential element they needed: water.
During Prohibition there sprang up along the border bars, clubs, hotels, and
casinos, which offered thirsty Americans beer and liquor and, in some cases,
women and gambling as well. Then John Stone, who owned the Hotel Cornelia in
Ajo, decided to build a hotel-casino farther south, near the sea, to combine the
money-making potential of fishing with that of alcohol. He dug a well for
potable water 20 kilometers from the coast and recruited a number of fisherman
who were willing to risk living in harsh conditions. So was born the town of
Puerto Peñasco.
John Stone installed roulette, cards and dice tables. He also sold water which
he imported from his well. More surprising, perhaps, he established an airline,
Scenic Airlines, with direct flights to Phoenix and Tucson. The site was nearer
what is now downtown Puerto Peñasco than the present airport. It is no longer in
use and homes have been built on the land.
The fishermen who settled the town in the 1920's were left in dire straits when
John Stone, a local hotel keeper, had a falling out with them and left town,
burnong the Stone Hotel and blowing up the only well with drinking water for
miles around. After that the townspeople had to depend on water carried by truck
from Sonoyta, which was expensive and in short supply.
One day in 1936 , when the fishermen were sinking under the midday heat, when
even the flies didn't have strength to move, there arrived in the village three
automobiles. From one of the vehicles stepped out General Lázaro Cárdenas,
president of the Republic.
The General saw a sad spectacle, men and women who appeared to be alive only
through a miracle, living in caves, in tents, out in the open, unkempt and
virtually without clothing. Tears came to his eyes. What they had said in the
country was true.
The committee went out to a hill, and from there, the president began to plan an
enormous wharf where cargo vessels would tie up, a railroad that would unify
Baja California with the rest of the country, and a highway to the United
States.
On March 20, 1937 the first spike was driven in the Sonora-Baja railroad by Don
Ulises Irigoyen on behalf of President Lázaro Cárdenas
Simultaneously in Puerto Peñasco the wharf began operations, the well and the
old Stone Hotel were rehabilitated and the urban development of the port was
begun.
The
importance of Puerto Peñasco owed much to the railroad, which created other
sources of work, such as industrial shops and new hotels - among them the Hotel
Mexico, the Hotel Miramar and luxurious Hotel Cortez. The last named was
constructed of material from the US, supposedly as a result of a meeting between
Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and Lázaro Cárdenas of Mexico.
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