In 1899, inspired by the 1893 Chicago International Fair, he inaugurated the
Mercado Modelo Coelho Cintra in Recife, a modern shopping and leisure center that can be considered the first shopping center in Brazil. This undertaking was a great success and a source of pride for Recife, and attracted crowds estimated at more than 8,000 people, until it was deliberately set on fire on January 2, 1900, by the Pernambuco police, on the orders of the
Conselheiro Rosa e Silva, at the time vice-president of the country, who was a fierce political enemy of Delmiro, and at the behest of the then governor
Sigismundo Gonçalves, faithful
rocista. After the fire, started for political reasons at the
Derby Centro Comercial, and also because he fell in love with, and later kidnapped, a natural 16-year-old daughter of the then
governor of Pernambuco, his political arch-enemy, Delmiro concluded that his life was in danger in Recife and, in 1903, he moved to Pedra, in
Alagoas, a village lost in the heart of the sertão, but strategically located for its trade, in the Microregion of Alagoas in the Sertão do São Francisco, bordering Pernambuco, Sergipe and Bahia, and today called Delmiro Gouveia in his honor. Delmiro bought a farm in Pedra, on the margins of the Paulo Affonso Railroad, where he centralized his lucrative fur trade and built corrals, a dam, his residence, and buildings to house a tannery. From 1912, construction began on the yarn factory and the Vila Operária da Pedra, with more than 200 masonry houses. On January 26, 1913, he inaugurated the first hydroelectric plant in Northeast Brazil with a capacity of 1,500
HP at the Angiquinho Falls. In 1914, the new factory began its activities under the corporate name
Companhia Agro Fabril Mercantil, producing lines with the trade name "Estrela" for Brazil, and "Barrilejo" for the rest of Latin America. With prices far below "Linhas Corrente", produced in England by
Machine Cotton, which until then had monopolized the sewing thread market throughout Latin America, "Linhas Corrente", which had the machines destroyed, the buildings demolished and the machinery and debris thrown into the São Francisco River, thus getting rid of an uncomfortable competition. == Highlights ==