Amatitán | |
Settlement Type: | Municipality and town |
Mapsize: | 200px |
Pushpin Map: | Mexico Jalisco#Mexico |
Pushpin Label Position: | above |
Pushpin Mapsize: | 300 |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location in Mexico |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | Mexico |
Subdivision Type1: | State |
Subdivision Type2: | Municipal seat |
Subdivision Name2: | Amatitán |
Area Total Km2: | 172.6 |
Area Blank1 Title: | Town |
Area Blank1 Km2: | 2.83 |
Population As Of: | 2020 census |
Population Footnotes: | [1] |
Population Total: | 16490 |
Population Density Km2: | auto |
Population Blank1 Title: | Town |
Population Blank1: | 12180 |
Population Density Blank1 Km2: | auto |
Timezone: | Central (US Central) |
Utc Offset: | -6 |
Timezone Dst: | Central (US Central) |
Utc Offset Dst: | -5 |
Coordinates: | 20.835°N -103.731°W |
Postal Code Type: | postal code |
Postal Code: | 45380 |
Area Code: | 374 |
Amatitán is the seat of a municipality in the Mexican state of Jalisco, and is home to one of the world's largest tequila distilleries.
It is the location of “La Hacienda de San José del Refugio”, a distillery which makes “Tequila Herradura” and “Tequila Jimador” and is the main source of employment for the residents of the town and surrounding communities.
The Town of Amatitán is the administrative center for the "Municipio de Amatitán" which also includes the surrounding communities of Santiaguito, Villa de Cuerámbaro, Chome, La Mata, La Conchilla, El Amarrilo, Agua Fría, Santa Rosa and several other smaller settlements.
Amatitán can be visited from Guadalajara by taking the Tequila Herradura Express, a train which runs on Saturdays from Guadalajara to Amatitán, there tourists are offered tours of the local distilleries and the nearby city of Tequila, located 14km (09miles) north of Amatitán. Amatitán can also be reached from Guadalajara by car driving north on Mexican Federal Highway 15, it is a drive of about 45 minutes and the road is kept in fairly good shape.
The economy of the municipality of Amatitán, like that of the surrounding areas, relies heavily in the production of tequila beverage. Its agriculture is dominated by the cultivation of the agave plant, which is used to produce the tequila. The climate in Amatitán is hot and dry which suits the agave plant well. There is usually one rainy period during the year that lasts from June through September, when most of the residents grow their other dominant crop, corn, which requires significantly more water. There is virtually no artificial irrigation in the area and most farmers still depend on rainwater for the irrigation of their fields. Some residents also raise cattle and other livestock, mainly for regional consumption. The lifestyle of its inhabitants is mostly of a rural nature and the residents are mostly Catholic. Some commute daily or weekly to Guadalajara for employment. The area is also a source of immigrants to the United States, most of whom settle in California.
Municipal president | width=90px | Term | width=90x | Political party | width=190px | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Juan Cardona[2] | 1910–1911 | |||||
Maximiano Hernández | 1912–1913 | |||||
Florentino Orozco | 1914 | |||||
Fermín Hernández | 1915–1916 | |||||
Ismael Cruz | 1917 | |||||
Jesús Martínez | 1918 | |||||
Fermín Hernández | 1919 | |||||
Refugio Mendoza | 1919 | |||||
Domingo Ontiveros | 1920 | |||||
Ismael Cruz | 1920 | |||||
Juan Cardona | 1921 | |||||
Salvador Ontiveros | 1921 | |||||
Bartolo Cortez | 1922–1923 | |||||
Mauricio Meléndrez | 1924–1929 | |||||
Juan Cardona | 1930 | |||||
Bartolo Cortez | 1931 | PNR | ||||
Emilio Hernández | 1932 | PNR | ||||
Juan Cardona | 1933–1934 | PNR | ||||
Mauricio Meléndrez | 1935 | PNR | ||||
Nicasio C. Rosales | 1936 | PNR | ||||
Alberto Meléndrez | 1937 | PNR | ||||
Silverio Franco | 1938 | |||||
Pascual Villegas | 1939 | PRM | ||||
Nicasio C. Rosales | 1940 | PRM | ||||
Vicente Real | 1941–1942 | PRM | ||||
Rosendo Ramos | 1943–1944 | PRM | ||||
Ignacio Flores | 1945–1946 | PRM | ||||
Emilio Hernández Curiel | 1947–1948 | |||||
Sebastián Rivera | 1949–1951 | PRI | ||||
Bartolo Cortez | 1952 | PRI | ||||
Florentino Orozco Camarena | 1953 | PRI | Acting municipal president | |||
José Rivera Ocampo | 1954 | PRI | ||||
Florentino Orozco C. | 1955 | PRI | ||||
Emilio Hernández O. | 1956–1957 | PRI | ||||
Martín Ortega Calderón | 1958 | PRI | Acting municipal president | |||
L. Ramiro Cortez M. | 01-01-1959–31-12-1961 | PRI | ||||
Salvador Rivera Lizardi | 01-01-1962–31-12-1964 | PRI | ||||
Alfredo Rivera Lizardi | 01-01-1965–31-12-1967 | PRI | ||||
L. Ramiro Cortez Martínez | 01-01-1968–31-12-1970 | PRI | ||||
Salvador Rivera Lizardi | 01-01-1971–31-12-1973 | PRI | ||||
Manuel Delgado Hernández | 01-01-1974–31-12-1976 | PRI | ||||
Ma. Guadalupe Guapo Rivera | 01-01-1977–31-12-1979 | PRI | ||||
David Calderón Zepeda | 01-01-1980–31-12-1982 | PRI | ||||
Rosendo Ramos Ontiveros[3] | 01-01-1983–31-12-1985 | PRI | ||||
Manuel Delgado Hernández | 01-01-1986–31-12-1988 | PRI | ||||
Salvador Rivera Cardona[4] | 01-01-1989–1992 | PRI | ||||
Zenón Vargas Gutiérrez[5] | 1992–1995 | PRI | ||||
Benjamín Aldana González[6] | 1995–1997 | PRI | ||||
Raúl Andrés Ontiveros Bahnsen[7] | 01-01-1998–31-12-2000 | PRI | ||||
Benjamín Aldana González[8] | 01-01-2001–31-12-2003 | PRI | ||||
Joel Rodríguez Saldívar[9] | 01-01-2004–31-12-2006 | |||||
Rubén Núñez Yera[10] [11] | 01-01-2007–31-12-2009 | PRI | ||||
Eutimio Pérez Ocampo[12] | 01-01-2010–30-09-2012 | Coalition "Alliance for Jalisco" | ||||
Jaime Villalobos Rivera[13] | 01-10-2012–30-09-2015 | Coalition "Compromise for Jalisco" | ||||
David Calderón González[14] | 01-10-2015–30-09-2018 | |||||
Gildardo Partida Meléndrez[15] | 01-10-2018–30-09-2021 | |||||
Josué Saúl Pérez Ocampo[16] | 01-10-2021– |