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Just a few kilometres from Pinoso, on the road to Monóvar, is a small village called Hondón. In May 1938 a group of Republican soldiers turned up in the village, requisitioned the house next door to the pine tree that gave the best shade and set about building a munitions dump, a couple of machine gun nests, a lookout tower and an aerodrome. Nearly a year later the reasons became clear.

First a bit more background. On July 18th 1936 the Spanish Army raised a rebellion against the elected Republican Government of Spain and so the Spanish Civil War began. At first it was a pretty equal contest but slowly but surely the rebels gained territory. On 30th March 1939 Alicante City fell to the rebels and a day later rebel troops entered Murcia, Cartagena and Almeria. The war was officially won, or lost, on 1st April 1939. So areas very close to Pinoso were the last bits of Spain to fall to, what were by then, Franco’s troops. Franco ruled, as a dictator, in Spain until November 1975.

Alicante province was loyal, right to the end, and for that reason the last headquarters of the legitimate government of the day, given the codename Posición Yuste, was in Elda/Petrer which is only about 25km from Pinoso. That must have been one possible contingency plan from the time those troops were sent to Hondón.

Elda/Petrer fell on the 29th March. At the very end there was infighting within the Republican Government as the situation became hopeless. The recently promoted Colonel Casado raised a revolt with the intention of doing a deal with Franco to end the war. In the event the Official Government fled Spain in the early morning of 5th March. Doctor Negrín the President, Dolores Ibarruri or La Pasionaria a Communist Party leader, Rafael Alberti a famouswriter of the time, Enrique Lister one of the Republic’s top military commanders and several others were among the group that left in two twin engined Douglas planes heading for Oran in Algeria from the aerodrome at Hondón.

I’d been told most of this by someone I used as a Spanish teacher. In fact the recentlyish renovated house with the yellow monocapa finish just to the left of the junction where the Salinas road branches off the Monóvar road was used by lots of Republican big wigs at the end of the war. It’s one of the things our occasional visitors get pointed out. I’d seen the plaque in Hondón village which tells of the flight, literally, of the Government but it wasn’t till there were a few minor events to celebrate the 85th anniversary of the founding of the Republic that I heard about the air raid shelters in Hondón.

Before I went to have a look I did a bit of Googling to see if there were any other artefacts to look out for. Whilst I was drifting through cyberspace I came across a walker’s itinerary. The particular group had been to Hondón to see the shelter and then walked on to a place called Las Casas de Collado Azorín where the, one time famous, writer Azorín used to spend his summers. Azorín was born in Monóvar, another local town, and was one of several Spanish writers known as the Generation of ’98 – the year in which Spain lost Cuba and the Philippines, the last remnants of its once mighty empire. That turned out to be an interesting little spot too. I can’t find out whether the hamlet takes its name from the writer or if the writer, José Augusto Trinidad Martínez Ruiz, took his pen name from the place. The latter seems more likely.

This, and much more in the same vein at my own blog, Life in Culebrón.

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