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Alcaniz Street

1 byte added, 23:46, 10 November 2008
Spanish origins
==Spanish origins==
One of their earliest appearances of the name Alcaniz is on the [[Plan of PensacolaPintado plan]](18131812), which, as Dr. [[Bill Coker]] noted, is the first map of the downtown map area prepared by a municipal government for the City of Pensacola. The Spanish Constitution of 1812 first permitted the organization of democratically-elected city governments, and by 1813, Pensacola had a city government of a mayor and councilmen. The 1813 map, found in the Vicente Pintado Papers of the Library of Congress (copies at the [[John C. Pace Library|University of West Florida Library]]), shows the town of Pensacola from the water to Romana Street. The three named north-south streets are [[Palafox Street|Palafox]], [[Tarragona Street|Tarragona]], and [[Alcaniz Street|Alcaniz]]. Three other street names on the map are significant; these are [[Intendencia Street|Intendencia]], [[Zaragoza Street|Zaragoza]], Gobierno ([[Government Street|Government]]), and Church Street, although this latter is different than present-day [[Church Street]] in [[Seville Square]]. Gobierno on the 1813 map is “Gobierno Nueve” or New Government Street.
The name Alcaniz is Spanish in origin; it comes from the town of [[Wikipedia:Alcañiz|Alcañiz]] in [[Wikipedia:Teruel|Teruel Province]], [[Wikipedia:Aragon|Aragon]]. Another Spanish province is [[Wikipedia:Tarragona (province)|Tarragona]], whose capital city [[Wikipedia:Tarragona|of the same name]] is traditionally where St. Paul founded the Christian church in Spain in A.D. 60. Another town in Tarragona Province is [[Wikipedia:Reus|Reus]].