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El Paso Community College
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Historical Markers Project: Teresa Urrea home

Survey of thirty-three historic sites in the El Paso area, with research materials, interviews, and summary materials.

La Patria

Teresa Urrea Home:  500 South Oregon Street 

Teresa Urrea homeThis was the residence of Teresa Urrea (1873-1906), an intriguing, influential and legendary healer who helped inspire early revolutionary movements against Porfirio Diaz. She became a popular healer among Indians of northern Mexico, drew thousands of followers and became known as “La de Cabora.” Her sympathies for the poor inspired various uprisings by the Yaquis and other indigenous communities along the border. While living in El Paso from 1896 to 1898 she was portrayed by local newspapers as a Mexican Joan of Arc, a goddess, a healer, and a revolutionary. Crowds flocked to her home where she treated the poor free of charge late into the evening. After several death threats by Diaz sympathizers and threats by the local Catholic Church, Teresa Urrea left El Paso and toured the United States performing her miracles, promoting revolutionary causes, and winning beauty pageants. She died in Clifton, Arizona in 1906.

Image caption: Teresa Urrea once lived in a building that stood on this site.  Image provided by George D. Torok

 

La Casa Teresa Urrea

Esta fue la residencia de Teresa Urrea (1873-1906), curandera, seductora, influyente y legendaria quien ayudó a inspirar los movimientos revolucionarios en contra de Porfirio Díaz. Fue bastante conocida como curandera entre los indígenas del norte de México e inspire a miles de seguidores, que luego la conocían como Ala de Cabora. Su compasión por los pobres sirvió de inspiración para varias insurrecciones de los Yaquis y otras comunidades indígenas a lo largo de la frontera. Cuando vivió en El Paso, de 1896 a 1898, los diarios locales la describían como la Juana de Arco Mexicana, una diosa, curandera y revolucionaria. Las multitudes llegaban a su casa donde atendía a los pobres sin costo alguno hasta las altas de la noche. Después de recibir varias amenazas en contra de su vida de los partidarios de Díaz y amenazas de la iglesia católica local, Teresa Urrea abandonó El Paso, recorriendo Estados Undios con presentaciones sobre sus Milagros, promoviendo las causas revolucionarias y ganando concursos de belleza.

 

Related Sources

For more information on Teresa Urrea please see:

Borderlands article

For more information about the Mexican Revolution in El Paso please see:

http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/mex-revolution.htm

http://revolutions.truman.edu/mexico/

Mexican Revolution Bibliography

For an extensive bibliography on the Mexican Revolution please see:

Mexico from Revolution to Democracy.
 

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