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San Antonio Travel
With neither the modern skyline of an oil town, nor the
tumbleweed-strewn landscape of the Wild West, attractive and festive SAN
ANTONIO looks nothing like the stereotypical image of Texas - despite
being pivotal in the state's history. Standing at a geographical
crossroads, it encapsulates the complex social and ethnic mixes of all
Texas. Although the Germans, among others, have made a strong
contribution to its architecture, cuisine and music, today's San Antonio
is predominantly Hispanic : abundant Tex-Mex restaurants, the prevalent
Catholicism, the newly expanded Mexican Cultural Institute and
advertising billboards in Spanish all attest to a long history of "Texican"
culture.
Founded in 1691 by Spanish missionaries, San Antonio became a military
garrison in 1718, and was settled by the Anglos in the 1720s and 1730s
under Austin's colonization program. It is most famous for the legendary
Battle of the Alamo in 1836, when the Mexican General Santa Anna,
seeking to curb the aspirations of the Anglo-Americans, wiped out a band
of Texan volunteers: hence San Antonio's claim to be the "birthplace of
the revolution," borne out by its role during Texas's ten subsequent
years of independence. After the Civil War, it became a hard-drinking,
hard-fighting "sin city," at the heart of the Texas cattle and oil
empires. Drastic floods in the 1920s wiped out much of the downtown
area, but the sensitive WPA program which revitalized two of the city's
prettiest sites, La Villita and the River Walk , laid the foundations
for its future as a major tourist destination. San Antonio is now the
eighth largest city in the US, but it retains an unhurried, organic
feel, thanks to a winning combination of small town warmth, respect for
diversity and a self-confidence rooted in its own history.
The Town
Since mission times, the San Antonio River has been the key to the
city's fortunes. Destructive floods in the 1920s, and subsequent oil
drilling, reduced its flow, leading to plans to pave the river over.
Instead, a careful landscaping scheme, started in 1939 by the WPA,
created the Paseo del Rio, or River Walk , now the aesthetic and
commercial focus of San Antonio. Below street level, the walk is reached
by steps from various spots along the main roads and crossed by
humpbacked stone bridges. Cobbled paths, lined with tropical plants and
shaded by pine, cypress, oak and willow, wind for two and a half miles
(twenty-one blocks) beside the jade-green water, with much of the city's
eating and entertainment concentrated along the way. You can catch a
river taxi at a number of places, but strolling is cheaper and just as
much fun, for the view of the river slowly changing character between
the lively Rivercenter Mall and the quieter, more park-like outskirts.
While the Alamo is the main attraction in the downtown area, the surreal
Buckhorn Museum , 318 E Houston St (Sun-Thurs 10am-5pm, Fri & Sat
10am-6pm; $8.99), takes a pleasingly kitsch look at Americana. During
San Antonio's heyday as a cowtown, cowboys, trappers and traders would
bring their cattle horns to the original Buckhorn Saloon in exchange for
a drink. The entire bar has been transplanted to this downtown location,
which boasts an extra floor of exhibition space and, as well as
thousands of horns on display, mounted as trophies, chandeliers and
chairs, there are many stuffed animals, including "Blondie", an
unforgettable two-headed lamb.
La Villita ("little town"), on the River Walk opposite Hemisfair Park,
was San Antonio's original settlement, occupied in the mid- to late
eighteenth century by Mexican "squatters" with no titles to the land.
Only when its elevation enabled it to survive fierce floods in 1819 did
this rude collection of stone and adobe buildings become suddenly
respectable. It is now a National Historic District, turned over to a
dubious "arts community" consisting mostly of overpriced craftshops
(daily 10am-6pm). It's at its best off-season or at dusk, when the
crowds dwindle and the muted colors, smells and noises are more
evocative of earlier times. In contrast, the 25-block King William
Historic District southwest, between the river and S St Mary's Street,
contains the elegant late nineteenth-century homes of German merchants.
A pleasant incongruity in this Mexican-feeling city, it remains a
fashionable residential area and has some stylish B&Bs.
The best of several museums in HemisFair Park is the Institute of Texan
Cultures , 801 S Bowie St (Tues-Sun 9am-5pm; $5), which maps the social
histories of 26 diverse "Texan" cultures, with especially pertinent
African-American and Native American sections, and an intriguing corner
devoted to short-lived attempts to introduce the camel to West Texas as
a beast of burden. The Mexican Cultural Institute (daily 10am-5pm; free)
recently underwent a mammoth renovation, expanding into seven gallery
spaces and a theatre, while retaining its focus on historic and
contemporary Mexican art. The ugly 750ft Tower of the Americas is devoid
of interest, save for the views from its observation deck (Sun-Thurs
9am-10 pm, Fri & Sat 9am-11pm; $3).
West of the river at 115 Main Plaza, the 1731 San Fernando Cathedral is
the oldest cathedral in the US, though, contrary to the claims of the
tourist board, nobody really believes that the Alamo heroes are buried
here. Mariachi Masses are held on Saturday at 5.15pm, when crowds
overflow onto the plaza. Two blocks west at 105 Plaza de Armas, the
beautifully simple whitewashed Spanish Governors Palace (Mon-Sat
9am-5pm, Sun 10am-5pm; $1.50) was once home to Spanish officials during
the mission era. Just one story tall, it's hardly a palace, but its
flagstone floors, low doorways and beamed ceilings, religious icons and
ornate wooden carvings give it a wonderful atmosphere, and it provides
an illuminating glimpse of the lifestyles of the civil and religious
authorities in this remote outpost. Don't miss the sweet cobbled
courtyard, with its fountain, mosaic floor and lush palms.
Market Square (daily: summer 10am-8pm; rest of year 10am-6pm), a couple
of blocks further northwest, dates from 1840. Its outdoor restaurants
and bustle are still at the heart of the city's life; fruit and
vegetables are on sale early in the morning, while the shops are a
compelling mix of color and kitsch. El Mercado , an indoor complex, is
meant to resemble a traditional Mexican market, selling tourist-oriented
gifts, jewelry and oddities. A few of the shops are great, even if the
air conditioning and piped music undermine the authenticity of the
venture.
It's also worth getting to the beautiful McNay Art Museum , 6000 N New
Braunfels Ave at Austin Highway (Tues-Sat 10am-5pm, Sun noon-5pm; free).
This exquisite Moorish-style villa, complete with tranquil garden, was
built in the 1950s to house the art collection of millionaire and folk
artist Marion Koogler McNay, which includes modern sculpture, Gothic and
medieval works, as well as a sprinkling of major players (Picasso, Monet
and Van Gogh). Buses #11 (Nacogdoches) and #14 (Thousand Oaks) serve the
museum from downtown. On the way there, bus #11 passes the San Antonio
Museum of Art , 200 W Jones Ave (Tues 10am-9pm, Wed-Sat 10am-5pm, Sun
noon-5pm; $5, free on Tues 3-9pm), which occupies the old Lone Star
Brewery, but it's the added Rockefeller Center for Latin American Art
wing that holds most interest, with its particularly fine exhibit on
folk art.
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