Photo Essay

Hacienda San Francisco

Hacienda San Francisco

You can see the chimney from the road, but few people venture to take a side trip and take a look at this hidden treasure.

The old Quilinchini family house is a work still in progress. According to the old lady that still lives there, the house foundations date back 300 years. Hard to believe, but when you walk around and take a look at the brick and mortar walls you got to wonder.

The family came originally from Corsica and settled in the southwest of Puerto Rico, in what is today the town of Sabana Grande. Fruits and vegetables were grown for a hundred years and then sugar cane. When king sugar was deposed they started to keep cattle, business that still generates money for the estate.

A sugar mill was constructed in 1871 but in the 1930s it stop working. Some writing on the interior walls that you can peek from outside the windows suggest it was used as a class room in the 1940s.

The house has a typical tropical architecture and over the years new additions have been made. It's garden is a bucolic place full of orange, grapefruit and mango trees, that gives a peaceful and serene ambient, a time warp to times gone right on the town metro area.

It's a place worth visit if you're in Puerto Rico.

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