The site where Azara now occupies was a cattle farm created by the Jesuits (in the seventeenth century) called "puesto" San Antonio dependent on "dairy" from
Yapeyú. After the expulsion of the Jesuits the area was sacked by the Paulist
Bandeirantes, leaving the Jesuit settlements and dwellings abandoned. Around 1800 there was an attempt at colonization by José Avilés e Iturbe, Marquis of Avilés, Viceroy, Governor and Captain General of Rio de La Plata and he was assisted by
Félix de Azara and Joaquin de Alós. Colonization failed when the viceroy ceased from his duties because of the war between Spain and Portugal. During the
War of the Triple Alliance (1865-1870) troops heading to Trincheras de San José (today
Posadas) and Paraguay passed through the area. After the attempt at colonization by José Avilés e Iturbe there was a hundred-year wait before the first inhabitants took root.
First inhabitants In 1897 a group of 14 families (120 people) from
Galicia, Austria-Hungary (region now divided between
Poland and
Ukraine), on their way to the United States, had to choose between returning to their rural villages of origin or embarking on another destination for lack of documentation. The Argentine consul in
Trieste offered them land to settle in the country and they accepted. Having reached
La Plata without prior notice and not understanding their Polish language, an official recognized the language and summoned one Mr. Szelagowski from Buenos Aires that could translate for them and welcome them. On mentioning the promised land, he communicated with his friend, newly appointed Governor of National Territory of Misiones, to receive them. On terminating the discussions the families embarked on a journey up the Uruguay river to the vicinity of Garruchos. They then went up to Apóstoles where they were received by Governor Lanusse.
Life in the early years The beginning was difficult, since the fields were degraded or consisted of
scrubland. With limited resources, but animated, supporting each other, they began to build their homes, wiring, plowing and provided themselves with daily sustenance. These lands were part of the farm of one Granné, from Corrientes, which was then passed into the hands of a Mr. Olgin. The early settlers grieved the absence of a priest to live among them. To attend Mass or other spiritual diligence they had to go to Apóstoles, 23 km away. Many made the journey on foot. These families wrote to their relatives in Europe and in 1901 they reached a quota of 138 families and in 1902 and another quota of 1600 people. Thus began a rapid colonization of Misiones and the creation of village after village as Poles, Ruthenians, Germans, Russians, and other families arrived, attracted by the possibility of owning land to exploit without having to be servants of a ruler. ==First parish priest==