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On 9 March 1950, SMN was transferred to the Ministerio de Asuntos Técnicos de la Nación according to Decree Nº5197 until in 22 June 1954 when Decree Nº12248 reverted SMN to being back under the Ministry of Agriculture, under the new name (Spanish: Ministerio de Agricultura y Ganadería de la Nación). [2] SMN became a member of the World ...
"Fotos de Familia: Foto 3461", La Capital de Mar del Plata (in Spanish) Gerardo Celemín, "PEDRO LURO en Mar del Plata. 1877 – 1886" , Conexiones (in Spanish) , retrieved 2016-08-10 Juarez Celman (1889), Registro nacional de la República Argentina , retrieved 2016-08-10
Mar del Plata is the second largest city in Buenos Aires Province. The name "Mar del Plata" is short for "Mar del Río de la Plata," and means "sea of the Río de la Plata basin" or "adjoining sea to the (River) Plate region." [1] Mar del Plata is one of the major fishing ports and the biggest seaside beach resort in Argentina.
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On September 26, 1886, the first train arrived to the city of Mar del Plata, which was the main tourist destination during summer season. [5] Freight trains operating in Mar del Plata station in 1910. By 1910 Mar del Plata was the main beach city of Argentina, receiving a huge number of tourists during the summer. Due to the intense traffic of ...
Mar del Plata Sud is a former railway station in the city of Mar del Plata in Buenos Aires Province, Argentina. Built and managed by the Buenos Aires Great Southern Railway, the station was conceived as an alternative to the original Mar del Plata station built in 1886, only to operate during Summer seasons. The station was inaugurated in 1910.
Pastoriza, Elisa: Los trabajadores de Mar del Plata en vísperas del peronismo. Biblioteca Política Argentina series, Buenos Aires, 1993. Ruiz Moreno, Isidoro: La Neutralidad Argentina en la Segunda Guerra. Emecé Editores, 1997. ISBN 950-04-1762-6; Sebreli, Juan José: Mar del Plata: el ocio represivo. Editorial Tiempo Contemporáneo, 1970
Commissioned by the Ortíz Basualdo family of Buenos Aires, the villa on Mar del Plata's Stella Maris Hill was built in 1909 as a summer residence.Designed by Luis Dubois and Pablo Pater, the eclecticist, the Art Nouveau villa followed a picturesque movement in French architecture common to new, upscale residences in both France and Argentina, at the time (the exterior's half-timber motif ...