Details for Felix Martinez

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507018419

Data

Marker Number 18419
Atlas Number 5507018419
Marker Title Felix Martinez
Index Entry Martinez, Felix
Address 101 S. El Paso St.
City El Paso
County El Paso
UTM Zone 13
UTM Easting 358967
UTM Northing 3514561
Subject Codes cities and towns; business topics; national/federal official
Marker Year 2016
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location East side of Paso del Norte Hotel, facing S. El Paso St.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42" with post
Marker Text In the early twentieth century, Felix Martinez was a prominent Hispanic businessman who worked closely with Anglo American leaders to transform El Paso into a major commercial, industrial and agricultural center of the American Southwest. Born in 1857 in the frontier town of Peñasco, New Mexico, Martinez was elected to the New Mexico Territorial House of Representatives and Territorial Council, where he fostered economic development, educational reform and public health. He published La Voz del Pueblo from 1890 to 1916, which became the leading Spanish-language newspaper in the territory. After moving to El Paso in 1897, Martinez co-established the El Paso Electric Railway company, which brought electricity to many of the city’s homes and businesses. He helped found the El Paso Realty Company, owned the El Paso Daily News (1899-1907) and contributed to the construction of today’s Centre Building (formerly the White House Department Store and Hotel McCoy) on Pioneer Plaza. Martinez worked with reformers to rid the city of gambling, crime and prostitution in the early 1900s. He also served as a director of the 11th District Federal Reserve Bank in Dallas. He was a leader in the joint U.S.-Mexico effort to construct a dam and reservoir at Elephant Butte on the Rio Grande. Completed in 1916, the dam modernized agriculture and helped control flooding throughout the Rio Grande Valley. In 1913, Martinez was named U.S. Commissioner General to South America by President Wilson. He traveled across the continent, strengthening diplomatic ties and soliciting participation in the panama-pacific international exposition in San Francisco in 1915. He continued as commissioner general until his premature death of pneumonia in 1916.

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