Trancas, Argentina
Trancas is a municipality in Tucumán Province, Argentina, administrative seat of Trancas Department. The town is located in a large valley between high mountains and hills covered with forest and jungle. Trancas was a strategic point for the defense of the North and witnessed important events during the struggle for Argentina's independence.
History
- 1600, A settlement is started at the place called "Pozo del Pescado", protected by a fort.
- 1700. About this time the Jesuits build the first church of the village of Trancas, a stage on the journey from Tucumán to Salta Province.
- 1763. the population moves south to land donated by José Torino.
- 1816. August 7, General Manuel Belgrano resumes command of the Northern Army in Trancas after relieving José Rondeau.
- 1820. Colonel Bernabé Aráoz becomes President of the "Republic of Tucumán".
- 1824. Bernabé Aráoz is shot against the south wall of the church.
- 1826. The town is destroyed by the earthquake of 1826.
- 1827. Reconstruction begins on the old foundations.
- 1885. The railroad arrives. Neighbors begin to petition the provincial authorities to move the town, as the land on which it stood was low-lying, allowing the proliferation of diseases.
- 1906. A decree establishes the village called "Trancas Station" and which then came to be called Trancas.