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CORDOVA ISLAND.
Cordova Island, also known as Isla de Córdoba, is not a
true island, but is located on both sides of the current channel
of the Rio Grande in El Paso and Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua,
Mexico. In 1899 the United States and Mexico dug a channel across
the heel of the horseshoe-shaped peninsula to control the flood-prone
Rio Grande, but left the original riverbed, which wound to the
north around the island, as the international boundary. Thus the
385-acre tract was part of Mexico, though it lay north of the
Rio Grande, for most of the twentieth century. During prohibitionqv Cordova Island was a notorious haven for smugglers; it was almost
completely surrounded by American soil, but lay outside the city
limits of Juárez. The famous Hole in the Wall, a saloon
and gambling parlor, flourished just a few yards from the border
in defiance of United States and Mexican authorities, before it
was finally torn down in January 1931. In 1963 the treaty that
settled the Chamizal Disputeqv transferred 193 acres on Cordova Island to the United States in
exchange for an equal area further downstream. In the 1990s the
channel of the Rio Grande bisected the old island from east to
west, and Interstate Highway 110 crossed it from north to south.
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Copyright ©, The Texas State Historical Association, 1997-2002 |