The area was named by the
conquistador Francisco Vásquez de Coronado. His expedition of 1540 camped at the confluence of the two major arroyos (Escondido and the Aduana) of present-day Álamos and made reference to local geographical landmarks, including two large rock formations on Mount Alamos known as Los Frailes, 'the monks' in English. As historian David Leighton explained, "Its first known name was Real de los Frailes or "Mining Camp of the Friars," a designation taken from some tall white rocks that appeared like hooded monks near the village." Under the name Los Frailes, Alamos was initially part of Sinaloa. In the 1670s, rumor of silver deposits at Los Frailes must already have circulated, because the position of Alcalde Mayor of Sinaloa was hotly contested in 1673. The Navarrese Isidro Atondo de Antillon won the position over Gabriel Fontes de Espinosa. Atondo had the backing of the Viceroy, while Fontes' promoter was the governor of New Vizcaya (now Chihuahua and Durango). In effect, Atondo's appointment cemented Alamos as independent of local potentates and reporting direct to the viceroy. In 1678, Atondo was promoted to Governor of Sinaloa, and Admiral of the Gulf of California. As admiral he built three ships at Nio in Sinaloa, and lead the expedition that included Jesuit Eusebio Francisco Kino 1683-85 to find a path across the Baja California peninsula to the Pacific Ocean. Alamos is in the foothills of the Sierra Madre Occidental, and the port used by Admiral Atondo was Santa Lucia, known as Javaros in the 21st century. The year 1683 is when the silver mines at Los Frailes (i.e., Alamos) were officially founded. Alamos is on the Mayo River, which flows through Navojoa into the Gulf of California. The Mayo people live along this river. Networks of upstart Spaniards from Navarre were growing in the 1673-1683 period, and Atondo was part of this, along with the incoming 1678 governor of New Vizcaya Francisco Agramont. Another famous Navarrese was Domingo Petris Gironza de Cruzat, who was 1683-86 governor of New Mexico, and in 1693-97 Alcalde Mayor of Sonora (Sonora's highest office at the time). Alamos sits at a major crossroads on the border of Sinaloa and Sonora, with a road all the way to Tucson, Arizona where Gironza de Cruzat's ally Jesuit Eusebio Kino baptized in the 1680s and 1690s. Alamos is opposite Baja California which was a bridge to trade with Asia given the galleon's route along its outer edge. The twin events of 1683 were: Los Frailes emerged as a mining center in 1683, while its Alcalde Mayor Atondo in the same year of 1683 set out to find a packtrain path across the Baja California peninsula to an anchorage that held sufficient water to replenish the galleon which carried hundreds of people. Alamos was then a center of a mining region that held significant independence from Madrid and even Mexico City, but was tightly connected to Chihuahua, Sinaloa, Arizona, and Baja California. The beautiful haciendas that stand today once were home to the major financiers of silver in this wide region. The next leader of Alamos was Domingo Teran de los Rios, and it is to him that the founding on December 8, 1685 is typically credited. Teran was a Spanish soldier,
Domingo Terán de los Ríos, and by 1785, the silver mines at Promontorios, La Aduana, Las Cabras, La Quintera had been discovered. Rios in 1686 became governor of
Sonora and Sinaloa, where he was successful in quelling Indian disturbances. Another strongman at Alamos was Andres de Rezabal who in the 1720s had like Atondo ships in the Gulf of California. Rezabal sent the ships to persuade the Pericu of the islands of southern Baja California to dive for pearls, near the Bahia de Cerralvo, where he knew the Jesuits. Eighty years later in 1768, historian Ignacio del Rio found that Jose de Galvez, the King's man in New Spain, convened a meeting of the major silver merchants of Alamos in the town's center. Galvez promised to cut the price of state-financed mercury in half if they would support consolidating the Spanish state's control over Sonora. The first half of his plan was to put down resistance of the Seri people to mines along Sonora's coast north of the Yaqui river, and the merchants of Alamos supported that. The second part of the King's plan was for the merchants of Alamos to buy shares in a silver company sponsored by the King, on which they would pay taxes at a new Caja de Alamos which Galvez prudently situated in the home of a certain Juan Agustin de Iriarte who was leader among Alamos' merchants. These independent families did not purchase shares in the King's silver company, nor are there records of significant taxes collected from Alamos in this era. Noted above was the road between Alamos and Tucson. A major expedition led by Juan Bautista de Anza II, Captain of Tubac, departed Álamos in 1775 to discover a route to
Alta California. In fact, Anza had an aunt in Culiacan married to a one-time Alcalde Mayor de Sonora. He collected settlers in Culiacan, then Alamos, and finally in Tubac (near his own ranches), before heading west to Yuma and on to the Pacific Coast at Mission San Gabriel (now Los Angeles). The Anza expedition had nearly 300 members, of which about half were from Álamos. The trek was financed by the wealthy silver mine owners of Álamos, and it established the Presidio of Monterey. Indeed, the son of merchants of Alamos, Felipe de Goycoechea, would later command the presidio on the Santa Barbara Channel until 1803. Álamos became the capital of what was then the state of Occidental in the early 1800s. Occidental encompassed today's state of
Sonora, the northern portion of the state of
Sinaloa, and some of
Baja California and southern
Arizona. Álamos was the northernmost "Silver City" in Mexico. While it has much in common, architecturally, with Mexico's other "Silver Cities," Álamos has not succumbed to large-scale commercialism and has managed to retain the charm and pace of earlier times. Álamos is known as "La Ciudad de los Portales" (
portales are tall, arched, covered verandas or walkways fronting many of the cobble-stoned streets or
calles). Álamos boasts numerous buildings exhibiting classic Andalusian architecture from Mexico's Colonial period, including numerous mansions, the Plaza de Armas, the Church of La Purísima Concepción, La Capilla and the Palacio Municipal ("city hall"). The great wealth created by the silver mines from the surrounding mining towns of
La Aduana,
Minas Nuevas, and others enabled the founders and residents of Álamos to build scores of colonial Spanish mansions throughout the town; most of them went into ruin in the early 20th century but in the late 1940s, a number of Americans and Canadians began buying and restoring the houses. Most notably, William Levant Alcorn, an American farmer, bought one of the decaying mansions there, restored it and opened a hotel. The publicity he brought to Alamos breathed new life into this once prosperous city, which in turn attracted further investment in the years ahead. By 1955, the city had electricity running from dusk to about midnight and in 1960 electrical power began to run 24 hours a day, being generated at a dam on a nearby river. In the 1980s, a study was done by the students at the University of Sinaloa, which resulted in 185 structures in town being listed as historic monuments. The Alamos Alliance was started in 1993 by
Arnold Harberger as a small gathering among friends to discuss economic policy. ==Geography==