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===Human geography===
===Human geography===
[[File:Horta Marina Calling Cards.jpg|thumb|left|235px|The pier and seawalls in Horta Harbor and Marina are covered with the "calling cards" of visiting yachts.]]
[[File:Horta Marina Calling Cards.jpg|thumb|left|235px|The pier and seawalls in Horta Harbor and Marina are covered with the "calling cards" of visiting yachts.]]
[[File:Horta Marina Calling Card.jpg|thumb|left|235px|An example of one of the murals painted on the Marina seawall]]
[[File:Horta Marina Calling Card.jpg|thumb|left|235px|An example of one of the murals painted on the Marina seawall, showing the ensign of the [[Royal Maritime Auxiliary Service]]]]
Three parishes comprise the urban area of the city of Horta (the urbanized area and historical center): [[Angústias]], [[Conceição (Horta)|Conceição]], and [[Matriz (Horta)|Matriz]]. The remaining parishes comprising the rest of the municipality are located along the Regional E.R.1-1ª road network, and includes lands from the ocean to the central volcano (with the exception of Flamengos, which is the only landlocked parish):
Three parishes comprise the urban area of the city of Horta (the urbanized area and historical center): [[Angústias]], [[Conceição (Horta)|Conceição]], and [[Matriz (Horta)|Matriz]]. The remaining parishes comprising the rest of the municipality are located along the Regional E.R.1-1ª road network, and includes lands from the ocean to the central volcano (with the exception of Flamengos, which is the only landlocked parish):



Revision as of 12:10, 9 November 2010

Template:Geobox Horta (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈɔɾtɐ]) is a single municipality and city in the western part of the Archipealgo of the Azores, encompassing the island of Faial. Horta has a population of about 15,225 people and an area of 173.1 square kilometers. The population density is about 88 persons per square kilometer. The city of Horta itself has a population of about 7,000.[1]

The city contains the Horta Regional Museum which has a permanent exhibit, Exhibition of Capelinhos Volcano, that details in photographs the recent (1957) volcanic eruption in the Azores. The museum also contains a large collection of scale models of buildings, ships, and people carved from fig kernels carved by Euclides Rosa.[2]

The marina is a primary stop for yachts crossing the Atlantic, and its walls, and walkways are covered in paintings created by visitors who noted the names of their vessels, crews, and the years they visited. Peter Cafe Sport across from the marina houses the island's scrimshaw museum; a collection of hundreds of pieces of scrimshaw work carved on whale tooth and jawbone.

History

A vista of the village of Horta, Faial from the New Bedford Whaling Museum, c.1842 (Purrington & Russel)

In 1467, the Flemish nobleman Josse van Huerter returned to Faial on a second expedition, this time disembarking along the shore of what would be known as Horta bay. He had a small chapel built, that would later form the nucleus of a small community known as Horta (a name derived from the transliteration of his name). The infante D. Fernando, Duke of Viseu, granted Huerter the first captaincy of the island on February 2, 1468. But, the settlement of the island was not chiefly by flemish peasantry or business interests. In fact, generally, settlers to the island were from hard-working farmers from continental Portugal, willing to work hard in new lands, from a cross-section of northern Portugal. But, Huerter cultivated new business opportunities, attracting a second wave of settlers under the stewardship of Willem van der Haegen (later transliterated to Guilherme da Silveira), who brought administrators, tradesmen, settlers and other compatriots to settle on the island.

Huerter's son, Joss de Utra (who would become the second Captain-General), and daughter, D. Joana de Macedo (who married Martin Behaim at the Santa Cruz chapel) continued on Faial, long after van Huerter’s death. By 1498, Horta was elevated to the status of vila (analogous to a town) by decree of King D. Manuel I, as its center grew north from the area around the small chapel of Santa Cruz. The island prospered with exports of wheat and woad. On June 28, 1514 the parish of Matriz do São Salvador da Horta was constituted and services were begun. In 1567, the cornerstone of what would be the Fort of Santa Cruz was laid. The constant growth of the settlers in the villa compelled the creation of the parishes of Nossa Senhora da Conceição (July 30, 1568) and Nossa Senhora da Angustias (November 28, 1684) by the diocese of Angra. As two nuclei developed around Santa Cruz and Porto Pim, growth had also extended around the older Matriz (where the Tower Clock now stands) and the public square (where Alameda Barão de Roches now exists). Public buildings were erected between Rua Visconde Leite Perry and Rua Arriage Nunes, and eventually the town hall and the court offices moved to the former Jesuit College, after the Jesuits were expelled from Portugal in 1758.

In 1583, Spanish soldiers under the command of D. Pedro de Toledo landed in Pasteleiro in the southwestern part of the island. After some skirmishes at the doors of the fort, the Captain of Faial, António Guedes de Sousa, was executed. Four years later, the Earl of Cumberland commanding a fleet of 13 British ships captured a Spanish ship, and then plundered the town's churches and convents, profaning them and destroying reliquary and crucifixes. They captured several artillery pieces and set fire to the houses within the Fort of Santa Cruz. Two cannons, located in Porto Pim, were missed. In 1597, a new force, under Sir Walter Raleigh, second in command to Robert Devereux, Earl of Essex, sacked and burned the religious buildings and churches in Horta, as well as the neighboring parishes of Flamengos, Feteira and Praia do Almoxarife. The constant threat of privateers and pirates forced the construction of several forts and lookouts.

In 1643, Horta had about 2579 inhabitants and 610 homes.

D. Frei Lourenço, the Bishop of Angra, authorized the renovation of the chapel of Santa Cruz in 1675. In 1688, the final renovations and ornamentation of the church were realized.

During the 18th and 19th centuries, Horta was a small town that extended along the shoreline. It was peppered by various convents and churches, but little commerce and almost no industry. But, luckily due to its location, it prospered as a stopover on important commercial routes between Europe and the New World. For a time, Horta was a center of commerce and travel. It was a gateway for Azorean orange growing, and the port for the export of wine from Pico Island, as well as an important stop for North American whalers, and later as a refueling port for coal-powered ships during their transatlantic passages.

On July 4, 1833, the vila, through the initiative of the Duke d'Ávila and Bolama, was elevated to the status of city and the district capital, as a reward for the support that the people of the island had given to the Liberalist forces during the Portuguese Liberal Revolution. The city hall's coat of arms, by decree, was granted to promote “My Loyal City of Horta” by King Luis I on May 3, 1865.

19th Century

In 1804 John Bass Dabney (1766–1826), the U.S. Consul General in the Azores, married Roxanne Lewis, and moved to a home in Horta. His son, Charles William Dabney (who would later marry Francis Alsop Pomeroy) who succeeded his father in this position, was to play an important part in the history and economy of Horta and Faial. This was helped by the construction of a commercial port (1876) and the installation of transatlantic telegraph cables (1893). The Dabney family steered the island's economy for 83 years, with good effect on the dynamic growth of the port, the export of oranges, the Verdelho wine from Pico, and the commerce of the whaling industry.

On September 26, 1814, the American privateer brig "General Armstrong", under the command of Captain Samuel Chester Reid, was sunk by three ships of the British Royal Navy under the command of Robert Lloyd. After being forced to scuttle his ship, Captain Reid made a formal protest over the ships destruction in a neutral port, and the incapacity of the Portuguese to defend their own waters. Her principal piece of naval artillery, the cannon "Long Tom", was later recovered from Horta Bay. It was eventually offered to General Batcheller, the U.S. Minister in Lisbon, in compensation. Interestingly, General Batcheller returned to Horta to pick up the cannon to deliver it to New York City on board the ship USS Vega (on or about April 18, 1893).

In the semi-autobiographical story The Innocents Abroad, Mark Twain, painted a more disparaging picture of Horta and Faial, at the time:

The group on the pier was a rusty one — men and women, and boys and girls, all ragged, and barefoot, uncombed and unclean, and by instinct, education, and profession, beggars. They trooped after us, and never more, while we tarred in Fayal, did we get rid of them. We walked up the middle of the principal street, and these vermin surrounded us on all sides, and glared upon us; and every moment excited couples shot ahead of the procession to get a good look back, just as village boys do when they accompany the elephant on his advertising trip from street to street.
The community is eminently Portuguese — that is to say, it is slow, poor, shiftless, sleepy, and lazy. There is a civil governor, appointed by the King of Portugal; and also a military governor, who can assume supreme control and suspend the civil government at his pleasure. [...] there is one assistant superintendent to feed the mill and a general superintendent to stand by and keep him from going to sleep...There is not a wheelbarrow in the land [...] There is not a modern plow in the islands, or a threshing-machine. All attempts to introduce them have failed. The good Catholic Portuguese crossed himself and prayed God to shield him from all blasphemous desire to know more than his father did before him. [...] The people lie, and cheat the stranger, and are desperately ignorant, and have hardly any reverence for their dead. The latter trait shows how little better they are than the donkeys they eat and sleep with.

With construction of the commercial port in 1876, Horta became more important internationally. On August 23, 1893 the first telegraph cables linking Horta (Alagoa) and Lisbon (Carcavelos) made Horta a link in transatlantic communication. The location and presence of several cable companies on Horta had the cumulative affect of increasing the activity, the level of economic development and urban growth, as well as cultural and sporting activities on the island. Between 1893 and 1969, Horta was an important post in intercontinental communications.

20th Century

Horta also entered important aviation history. The first transatlantic flight, ever, via the floatplane NC-4, under the command of Captain Albert C. Read, U.S. Navy, made a stopover at Horta Bay in May 1919. After 1939, Horta was a scheduled waypoint on the transatlantic flying boat routes between North America and Europe.

In 1921, Dutch seagoing tugboats began to use Horta as a stopover, and after World War II, they returned during the reconstruction of Europe. By 1960, yachts started using Horta’s sheltered port during transatlantic voyages. The local airport was dedicated in the parish of Castelo Branco, on August 24, 1971, by the President of Portugal, Américo Tomás. Since 1972, the Sociedade Açoreana de Transportes Aeréos (which was the forerunner of SATA Air Azores) has had scheduled flights from Horta. TAP Air Portugal, the national airline, later established direct service from Horta to Lisbon. Following major renovations in December 2001, the airport was given the designation as an international airport, although no foreign airlines have scheduled flights to the Horta airport.

A new 300-slip marina was open on June 3, 1986, to serve the needs of transatlantic voyagers and local boating enthusiasts.

Geography

Physical geography

Human geography

The pier and seawalls in Horta Harbor and Marina are covered with the "calling cards" of visiting yachts.
An example of one of the murals painted on the Marina seawall, showing the ensign of the Royal Maritime Auxiliary Service

Three parishes comprise the urban area of the city of Horta (the urbanized area and historical center): Angústias, Conceição, and Matriz. The remaining parishes comprising the rest of the municipality are located along the Regional E.R.1-1ª road network, and includes lands from the ocean to the central volcano (with the exception of Flamengos, which is the only landlocked parish):

  • Capelo - located in the western portion of the island that includes the most recent historic volcanism on the island; location of the Capelinhos Volcano and Recreational Forest Park.
  • Castelo Branco - located on the southern coastal area between Capelo and Feteiras; location of Horta International Airport.
  • Cedros - largest civil parish and agricultural lands, located on the northern coast between Capelo and Salão
  • Feteira - southern parish located between the urbanized core of Horta and Castelo Branco; primarily agricultural activities in transition into suburban community of Horta.
  • Flamengos - the only landlocked civil parish on the island, established by original settlers from the low countries of Europe.
  • Pedro Miguel - located to the north of Praia do Almoxarife, along the eastern coast
  • Praia do Almoxarife - original settlers disembarked along the beach of Praia do Almoxarife during the original 1465 and 1467 expeditions; currently the main tourist beach community on the island.
  • Praia do Norte - located between Cedros and Capelo, a zone affected by historic volcanism from the Capelo Volcanic Complex.
  • Ribeirinha - a civil parish occuping the ancient geological zone that formed the island of Faial.
  • Salão - settled by Spanish during the Iberian Union, and located between Cedros and Ribeirinha.

City of Horta

"I love Horta like loquats! I had a longing of what was, I don't know how, of here. Everything imagined is more or less frustrated when we comprehend: but in Horta, no, it is exceeded. At the end of the Rua do Mar are the built-up homes; over the unique celebretated road of the town are the alleyways that descend to the coast and provide a modest contribution to the fires and transit." (Vitorino Nemésio, O Corsário das Ilhas)

From Espalamaca or Monte da Guia, the city of Horta is typical of insular Portuguese coastal communities and the urban tradition of the medieval-renaissance. The city is seaward looking, much like Angra do Heroísmo (Terceira) or Velas (São Jorge) and populated by several volcanic cones located to its southern and eastern margins (the most predominant being Monte da Guaia, Monte do Carneiro and Monte Escuro). It is a population center that is centered along its principal avenue (sometimes referred to as either Avenida Marginal or Avenida D. Infante Henriques), and cut by several smaller roadways. But, its proto-urban form lies in the north near Espalamaca, with a grouping of north-south and east-west roads that developed from the initial colonization. The Horta of today grew from streets such as:

Horta and its marina from the south
  • Rua Vista Alegre/Ladeira da Paiva/travessa Almeida Garrett (that includes the Church Matriz, and Convent of Saint John);
  • Rua Advogado Graça/Travessa do Poiso Novo (where the original Casa da Câmara and Convent of Glory were situated);
  • Rua de São Paulo;
  • Rua de São Pedro and Travessa da Misericórdia; and,
  • Rua Dr. Azevedo and Calçada M. Vila, near the entrance to the Largo do Colégio.
  • Rua de São João
  • Rua Ten. Aragão (currently between the Império dos Nobres and the Sociedade Amor da Pátria)
  • Rua da Conceição/Alameda Barão de Roches/Rua D. Pedro IV/Rua E. Rebelo, with the Pelourinho, the Casa da Câmara and older urban prison (Cadeia), the Convent of Glory, this area constituted the original Vila of Horta. The oldest dwellings and the older ornate façades are located in this area.
  • Rua Maestro Simaria, located near the Rua Serpa Pinto, and the ancient Largo do Colégio Jesuíta;
  • Rua Conselheiro Miguel da Silveira, and open to the Avenida Marginal.

These streets formed from the central colony, along hills parallel to each other, and perpendicular to the ocean. Littoral growth was made cautiously until the town square, civic center, town hall, and local water wells had been built along the seashore, growing out in both directions. The religious institutions generally mark the extent of the urbanized/rural limits (just as the Convent of Monte Carmo and Convent of the Capuchos do today to the northeast).

Modern Horta grew beyond the limits of this early colonization. A secondary nucleus grew in the area of Port Pim, and infilling occurred sporadically until a crescent form along the banks of the east coast developed, only contained by Ponte de Espalamaca to the north and the open sea to the south. The cinder cones in the south likely protected settlers and ships from the north Atlantic weather systems, sheltering colonists during the formative period. Horta grew slowly into the river valleys to the interior, linking the parishes of Flamengos to the west and Feteiras (the southwest) forming an incomplete urbanized mass. The nodes of growth basically follow the road network, including the recently completed "Scute" (freeway) that bypasses the southern E.R.1-1ª between Angustias and Feteiras.

Twin towns — Sister cities

Horta is twinned with:

Notable natives

In literature

Ponta do Pico, on Pico, as seen at dusk from Horta Marina; its island neighbor is an ex-libris of the "Triangle" group of islands.
View of Horta from its municipal black sand beach.

Mark Twain visited Horta in June 1867, near the beginning of a long pleasure excursion to Jerusalem. He described his visit, with acerbic commentary on the people and culture of Horta, in The Innocents Abroad. Similarly, Joshua Slocum, sailing the Spray, stopped in Horta on the first leg of his solo circumnavigation, which he chronicled in his 1899 book "Sailing Alone Around the World."

In works by Vitorino Nemésio (O Corsário das Ilhas), Raul Brandão (As ilhas Desconhecidas), the island is characterized as a focus of the story, while Jules Verne mentioned Horta in descriptions to his fiction tales.

References

Notes
  1. ^ Nuno Pires Soares, 2004
  2. ^ "Horta Regional Museum". Government of the Azores Regional Directorate for Culture. Retrieved 23 February 2010.
  3. ^ City of Fremont. "Horta, The Azores, Portugal". Sister Cities. Retrieved 2008-10-05.
Bibliography