Points and sites of Interest for sightseeing in Baja California Mexico
If you want a place of relaxation where you can relax and forget about the stress of everyday life, The La Misión de Nuestra Señora de Loreto Baja California Conchó is the ideal place to visit, it is a place full of history and culture, the ideal place to vacation whether you are a single person or a few days of relaxation and disconnection, a couple that is adventure or a family that wants to know a little about the local culture.
In this small city full of history you will find something for all tastes, ideal to spend a few days just walking and knowing every little corner. Here we tell you a little about the history of the place.
Misión de Nuestra Señora de Loreto Conchó is a Jesuit mission that is considered the Head and Mother of the Missions of Alta and Baja California. It was founded by Jesuit missionaries in the Mongui territory, in the region that the indigenous called Concho, on October 25, 1697.
This little corner of paradise has centuries of history.
It was in the year 1697 when a group of Europeans and people from New Spain set foot on the peninsula to found missions there among Pericú, Guaycuras and Cochimíes Indians.
This city is a great mix of cultures, smells and flavors.
Throughout history there were several attempts at colonization until it was finally given the name by which we know it today.
Mission Our Lady of Conchó
On October 19, 1697, that small group under the orders of the superior father Juan María de Salvatierra disembarked from the “Santa Elvira” galleon in the bay of San Dionisio in a place located at 26 ° north latitude to the that the natives called Concho, which means red mangrove in the native language, and they took possession of the place that in time would be called Real de Loreto.
In the first days of their arrival, the missionary parents erected a tent that served as a chapel, in front of which they placed a wooden cross.
On October 25 they carried in solemn procession the image of the Virgin of Our Lady, in that rhythm of faith, proclaimed that land as Spanish territory.
Thus began the mission that bears that name.
After the independence of Mexico in 1821, the mission fell into decline, however the mission survived abandonment, unlike many other missions founded on the Baja California peninsula by Jesuits, Franciscans and Dominicans who were abandoned. until it completely disappears.
Today is the jewel of the missions founded on the peninsula.
The revival of the economy and construction of communications infrastructure in Baja California Sur from the last century has benefited the mission, leaving the days of deprivation far behind.