Monday, August 23, 2010

How Soon Does Water Retention Disappear

MESTRE STREET STREET MARTINEZ

Let
officially inaugurate the blog Carrers D'ALACANT a street "ghost" because officially there and appears on the street, but the reality is very different because the street was engulfed by development of the 70. Still, his plate is placed on the facade of one of the original homes of the Plaza de San Cristobal, which finished devouring leading to our street.

hard they seem Mestre Martinez was not a teacher, and is written in Catalan. His full name was Ramiro Martínez Mestre journalist by profession and an enlightened mind from which the idea of \u200b\u200bpromoting tourism in Madrid. Yes, it was pfundador of the famous "Train-Boulot" economic train circulated without interruption from 1893 to 1917 to be recovered years later. Thanks to these trains thousands of locals could see the sea for the first time

Don Ramiro (which has nothing to do with the short walk) from the newspaper "The Correspondence of Spain" was responsible for spreading the benefits of our climate in Madrid promoting the massive influx of locals who, carrying their jugs, and 12 pesetas round faced an eternal journey by train from Madrid to our city where they were received by the carriages of different Postiguet spas.

Ramiro Martínez Mestre, Man-Boulot

Mestre Ramiro Martinez was born in Madrid in 1847 and earned his BA in Philosophy and Letters at the Universidad Central. Great lover of literature began publishing his writings in 1868, but very young man he wanted his passion: journalism. Until his death he served as editor of The Correspondence of Spain.

May 26 1897 was appointed chronicler of Alcala de Henares and one year later specifically a September 23, 1898 was named adopted son of Alicante for their ongoing campaign to promote the city. He was in possession of the Knights of the Order of Carlos III. Martínez Mestre Patriarch of the Order Botijil died in Madrid on January 8, 1922 and was buried in San Lorenzo Cemetery in a funeral procession consisting of six horses pulling the carriage mortuary. Accompanied him to the late hundreds.

The "correspondences of Spain" cried
the death of his partner


back to Alicante, in 1913 agreed to sign with your name on the Market Street of Knights. But the years passed and still no street Mestre. In 1927 the popular historian Alicante Francisco Montero Pérez requested to carry out the change of name once and for all. It was definitely heard the petition and the August 10, 1927 at the request of Deputy Mayor Joseph Alós remembered part of the then label the Infanta Street (now Gen. Primo de Rivera) with the name of the city adopted son Ramiro Mestre Martínez. This portion was from the old Plaza de San Cristóbal (much smaller than the current one) and Zaragoza Street. The reform and expansion of the then Comrade Macia Plaza 70 resulted in the expansion of the square and the passing of the street which curiously still keeps popping up in the street. Refuses to go away ...


believe that the name of Ramiro Martínez Mestre would be appropriate to label the current Calle del General Primo de Rivera once taken a resolution to amend the streets with Franco connotations, as this is a name such municipal authorities recovered in 1939 to install the dictatorship of General Franco.

Site map of Mestre Martinez Street


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