Hispanic Heritage in Alexandria

Hispanic Heritage in Alexandria
Alexandria has a long history of residents who moved here from Central and South America. Beginning in the 1980s, a large community from El Salvador settled in the neighborhood we now call “Chirilagua,” after the city in El Salvador of the same name.
A Cultural History of Arlandria-Chirilagua
As part of the 2020-2021 Arlandria-Chirilagua Planning process, Environmental Research Group, LLC (ERG) conducted a study to document historic and cultural resources in the Arlandria neighborhood to inform the overall Plan. The report is comprised of a cultural history, transcribed oral history interviews with residents, and collected data on points of interest, cultural landscapes, and neighborhood themes through 2020, including COVID-19 and social justice protests.
This booklet, in English and Spanish, includes highlights from the full study.
Oral Histories from the Immigrant Alexandria Project
Read transcriptions of interviews conducted as part of Immigrant Alexandria: Past, Present and Future, a project funded by the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities.
- Rodrigo A. Guajardo (Chile)
- Myriam Lechuga (Cuba)
- Onelio Mencho-Aguilar (Guatemala)
- German Mejia (El Salvador)
- Nora Partlow (Cuba)
- Evelin Urrutia (El Salvador)
Out of the Attic
“Out of the Attic” is published each week in the Alexandria Times newspaper. These articles appear with the permission of the Alexandria Times and were authored by staff of the Office of Historic Alexandria and invited guests.
The power of neighboring in Chirilagua
September 30, 2021
This column is by guest authors Adriana Gómez Schellhaas and Juan Martínez Ovalle.
Domingo Sarmiento's visit to Washington
September 23, 2021
This column is by guest author Enrique Pumar, Ph.D.
Julio Duran: The role of Impacto
October 3, 2019