. Mexico, a history of its progress and development in one hundred years. STREET SCENE, GUADALAJARA. CHAPTER XXVIII JALISCO JALISCO borders on the Pacific Ocean as well as on the States of Sinaloa,Durango, Zacatecas, Guanajuato, Michoacan and Colima. In colonialtimes it was known as the kingdom of Nueva Galicia. There are many beau-tiful valleys and rivers, the largest of the latter, the Santiago, being six hundredmiles long, rising in Lake Lerma in the State of Mexico and flowing throughLake Chapala, which is itself seventy miles long and from ten to thirty-five Sayula and Magdalena


. Mexico, a history of its progress and development in one hundred years. STREET SCENE, GUADALAJARA. CHAPTER XXVIII JALISCO JALISCO borders on the Pacific Ocean as well as on the States of Sinaloa,Durango, Zacatecas, Guanajuato, Michoacan and Colima. In colonialtimes it was known as the kingdom of Nueva Galicia. There are many beau-tiful valleys and rivers, the largest of the latter, the Santiago, being six hundredmiles long, rising in Lake Lerma in the State of Mexico and flowing throughLake Chapala, which is itself seventy miles long and from ten to thirty-five Sayula and Magdalena are smaller, but noted for their delicious fish. The climate of Jalisco varies from generally cold in the higher and northernaltitudes to delightfully mild in Guadalajara and hot on the west coast. Thecapital of Jalisco is Guadalajara, the population of which is estimated at twohundred thousand. The city is beautifully located and is constructed withelegant blocks of houses fronting on clean, wide and well-paved streets, and thepeople are noted for hospitality, cultur


Size: 2252px × 1109px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublisheretcetc, bookyear191