Laredo, Texas Laredo, Texas City of Laredo Flag of Laredo, Texas Flag Coat of arms of Laredo, Texas Laredo, Texas is positioned in the US Laredo, Texas - Laredo, Texas Laredo City Council: Airport Laredo International Airport KLRD (LRD) Laredo (/l re do / l -ray-doh; Spanish: [la eeo]) is the governmental center of county of Webb County, Texas, United States, positioned on the north bank of the Rio Grande in South Texas, athwart from Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, Mexico.
According to the 2010 census, the town/city population was 236,091, making it the tenth-most crowded city in the state of Texas and third-most populated on the Mexico United States border, after San Diego, California, and El Paso, Texas. Its urbane region is the 178th-largest in the U.S.
And includes all of Webb County, with a populace of 250,304. Laredo is also part of the cross-border Laredo-Nuevo Laredo Metropolitan Area with an estimated populace of 636,516. Because Laredo is 95.6 percent Hispanic and Latino, it is one of the least ethnically diverse metros/cities in the United States.
When economic range, homehold range and civil class range, are considered, Laredo is rated the 19th least diverse town/city overall out of the 313 biggest cities in the nation. Laredo's economy is based on global trade with Mexico.
Laredo International Airport is inside the Laredo town/city limits, while the Quetzalcoatl International Airport is close-by in Nuevo Laredo on the Mexican side.
Laredo has the distinct ion of flying seven flags (the Flag of the Republic of the Rio Grande, which is now the flag of the city, in addition to the Six Flags of Texas).
Founded in 1755, Laredo interval from a village to the capital of the brief Republic of the Rio Grande to the biggest inland port on the Mexico United States border.
Laredo has a experienced soccer team, the Heat; baseball team, the Laredo Lemurs; and a women's full contact football team, the Laredo Roses.
Texas A&M International University and Laredo Community College are positioned in Laredo.
7.3.2 City of Laredo Shiloh Trail See also: Timeline of Laredo, Texas Timeline of Laredo, Texas Laredo Center for the Arts in the downtown square The European colonial settlement of Villa de San Agustin de Laredo was established in 1755 by Don Tomas Sanchez while the region was part of the Nuevo Santander region in the Spanish colony of New Spain.
Villa de San Agustin de Laredo was titled after Laredo, Cantabria, Spain and with respect to Saint Augustine of Hippo.
In 1840, Laredo was the capital of the autonomous Republic of the Rio Grande, set up in opposition to Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna; it was brought back into Mexico by military force.
When this petition was rejected, most of the population, who were Tejano and had been in the region for generations, moved athwart the river into Mexican territory, where they established Nuevo Laredo.
Laredo was rechartered as a town/city in 1852.
Laredo is one of the earliest crossing points along the Mexico United States border, and the nation's biggest inland port of entry.
Others state that Laredo stems from a Basque word meaning "beautiful pastures". Laredo might also stem from the Latin Larida which means gull.
In 2013, Laredo ranked tenth in Texas in the rate of violent crime, with 430.9 crimes per 100,000 inhabitants.
The town/city with the highest murder rate in Texas was Beaumont Port Arthur, with a rating of 8.6, compared to Laredo's 1.5. NASA satellite image of Laredo and Nuevo Laredo (2007) Laredo is positioned on the west end of the Rio Grande Plains, south of the Edwards Plateau, west of the Coastal Plains, and east of the Mexican Mountains.
Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas 373,725 0 mi Because of its geographic location, Laredo's weather can range from long periods of heat to sudden, violent storms in a short reconstructionof time.
Laredo winters are cold by South Texas standards: with average daytime highs around 66 F (19 C) and average overnight lows of 43 F (6 C), even though temperatures may easily reach 90 F (32 C) even amid winter when the wind comes from the south.
Climate data for Laredo, Texas (1981 2010 normals, extremes 1965 present) As of the 2010, Laredo is the 81st-most crowded city in the United States and the 10th-largest in Texas.
According to the United States Enumeration Bureau, at a 2000 census, Laredo was the second-fastest burgeoning city in the United States, after Las Vegas.
A study released in 2015 by the Martin Prosperity Institute of the University of Toronto in Canada showed Laredo as the most "economically segregated" lesser metro region in the United States.
In 2016, Laredo was ranked the safest town/city in Texas for motorists and the 14th safest nationally.
Walker Plaza office complex in Laredo was assembled in the early 1990s by the family of South Texas rancher Gene S.
Laredo has four South Texas banking establishments based in the city: Falcon International Bank, International Bank of Commerce, BBVA Compass, and Texas Community Bank.
Laredo is the biggest inland port in the United States, and Nuevo Laredo the biggest in Latin America.
In January 2014, the Laredo customs precinct processed "$20 billion in two-way trade with Mexico", about half that for the entire US with Mexico for the month. Laredo is a shopping destination for Mexican shoppers from Northern Mexico.
View athwart the Rio Grande at Laredo, Texas (postcard, about 1909) More than 47 percent of United States global trade headed for Mexico and more than 36 percent of Mexican global trade crosses through the Laredo port of entry. Laredo's economy revolves around commercial and industrialized warehousing, import, and export.
As a primary player in global trade, the Laredo region benefited from passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement, which has encouraged trade.
The Laredo port of entry consists of four global bridges (with a proposed fifth one) crossing the Rio Grande into the Mexican states of Tamaulipas and Nuevo Leon.
Retail revenue attract shoppers from Northern Mexico and South Texas. There is one indoor shopping mall positioned in Laredo, Mall del Norte.
A proposed universal is The Outlet Shoppes at Laredo, and another has not progressed past planning: Laredo Town Center, part of downtown redevelopment.
The Streets of Laredo Urban Mall is an association created by businesses on Iturbide Street in the San Agustin historical precinct to beautify and renovate the area, which has a pedestrian scale. Laredo has had a higher job expansion rate (2%-6.5%) than the state as a whole because of period global trade through the North American Free Trade Agreement.
As of October 2007, the Laredo unemployment rate was 4.1% or 3,700 unemployed persons, as compared to 3.9% in Texas statewide.
Laredo has had positive job market expansion since the mid-1990s; setbacks in the quarrying (oil/gas) trade shifted a several thousand workers to other industries such as global trade and construction.
Many large employers in the petroleum and gas industries shut down operations in Laredo and athwart Texas, and shifted to foreign countries.
Laredo's success with global trade is also a vulnerability; it is dependent on shifts to Mexico's economy, that status of immigration laws (along with daily border crossings: shoppers and commercial trade), and terrorism. In 2014, as stated to the financial research business Nerd - Wallet, Laredo had the worst pay for women of any town/city in the United States, with a large gender gap: an average annual full time pay of $24,700 for women, compared to nearly $35,000 for men.
Only the wealthy town/city of Frisco in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, had a greater pay gap inside Texas than did Laredo.
Laredo homeholds headed by women with kids under the age of eighteen have a 51 percent poverty rate. By contrast, the San Jose, California, area, the heart of the tech industry, has an average pay of $56,000, ranking first nationally. Laredo Independent School District Education 4,500 City of Laredo Government 2,371 Because of this Republic, Laredo had flown seven flags freshwater the traditional Six Flags over Texas.
The Laredo Center for the Arts is positioned in downtown Laredo.
The Laredo Little Theater provides Laredo with live stage performances.
Imaginarium of South Texas (formerly Laredo Children's Museum), positioned in Mall del Norte, provides a hands-on experience with science, technology, and art for Laredo's youth.
Guerra Laredo Public Library was first homed on the second floor of the City Hall, now known as the Market Hall, in 1916.
In 1974, the Laredo Public Library moved to the historic Bruni Plaza in downtown Laredo.
Guerra, a former member of the Laredo City Council known for his support for the library and a personal passion for reading.
The chief library is positioned in central Laredo; the Bruni Plaza Branch is positioned downtown east of Washington Street, and the Santo Nino Branch is positioned in south Laredo. Market Plaza and Flores Avenue, Laredo, Texas (postcard, about 1907) Main article: List of buildings in Laredo, Texas Patrick's Catholic Church is positioned on Del Mar Boulevard athwart from the Laredo Fire Department.
Most of Laredo's Spanish Colonial style buildings are positioned in downtown Laredo.
San Augustin de Laredo Historic District In the 1957 Christmas episode entitled "Laredo" of NBC's series, Tales of Wells Fargo, series character Jim Hardie (Dale Robertson) must track gunrunners athwart the United States/Mexican border, a quest which keeps him from spending the holiday with friends in Laredo as he had intended.
In the episode "Cactus Lady" (February 21, 1961) of the NBC tv series, Laramie, it is revealed that series regular Jess Harper, played by Robert Fuller, had been nearly hanged by mistake in the border town/city of Laredo c.
A spin-off of The Virginian, Laredo, with elements of comedy, focuses on Texas Rangers in the border country.
While performing at a prison rodeo in Huntsville, Texas, he escapes and heads for Laredo, where he hopes to join his family in Mexico.
The 2011 series, Bordertown: Laredo, is a 10-episode documentary on the Arts and Entertainment Network based on the work of the narcotics unit of the Laredo Police Department. Laredo is a town/city that has been the subject of a several music in prominent culture.
Carlos Saenz Landin, the lead singer, left the group to work for the Dallas Independent School District but years later returned to Laredo.
Another prominent song is "Laredo" by nation music star Chris Cagle, who sings about Laredo having a positive influence on his momentous other.
The Laredo Heat is a United Soccer Leagues Premier Development League team.
Laredo Swarm is also a experienced basketball team in Laredo.
The Laredo Honey Badgers, is experienced indoor soccer team to be based in Laredo, Texas.
The Laredo Lemurs, a experienced baseball team based in Laredo, played their first season in the autonomous American Association in 2012.
The Laredo Roses are a experienced women's full contact football team in the South Texas Sugar N Spice Football League that began play in the 2012 season.
Laredo Heat Soccer USL PDL TAMIU Soccer Complex 2004 1 (2006) Laredo Honey Badgers Indoor Soccer Professional Arena Soccer League Laredo Energy Arena 2013 Laredo Bucks Ice hockey CHL Laredo Energy Arena 2 2002 12 Laredo Law Arena football AF2 Laredo Energy Arena 0 2003 04 Laredo Lobos Arena football AF2 Laredo Energy Arena 0 2005 07 Laredo Rattlesnakes Arena football LSFL Laredo Energy Arena 0 2011 13 Toros de Los Dos Laredos Basketball LNBP Laredo Energy Arena 2 2007 13 Laredo Energy Arena, formerly the Laredo Entertainment Center The Laredo Energy Arena, formerly Laredo Entertainment Center, is positioned at Loop 20 and Jacaman Road.
The arena also hosts many affairs such as The Laredo Hunting and Fishing Show, Miss Texas USA, Laredo Home and Garden Show, and high school graduation ceremonies.
The stadium is positioned near the Laredo Energy Arena.
The Dustdevil Field is the new home stadium to the 2007 champion team Laredo Heat member of the United Soccer Leagues Premier Development League (PDL) and the TAMIU Dustdevils women and men's soccer squads member of the Heartland Conference, NCAA Division II. Shirley Field was the locale for outside athletics for Laredo Independent School District and also hosts the annual Border Olympics affairs.
Krueger Field is positioned in north Laredo and is owned by United Independent School District.
Veterans Field was also the home to the five-time champion Mexican Baseball League team Tecolotes de los Dos Laredos from 1985 to 2003.
Prior to the assembly of the Laredo Energy Arena most primary concerts and shows were performed at the Laredo Civic Center.
The park was directed by the City of Laredo and Webb County before it was acquired by the state in 1990 and opened in March 1991.
Laredo has three 18-hole golf courses: the Laredo Country Club, the Casa Blanca Golf Course. and Laredo's newset course Max A.
The City of Laredo owns eight recreational centers, thirty-four advanced parks, twenty-two undeveloped parks or under construction, five baseball fields, and four plazas.
A memorial honoring the forty-one Hispanic soldiers who have received the Medal of Honor was assembled in Laredo, Texas in 2002.
City of Laredo Shiloh Trail The Laredo town/city government is a strong town/city council weak mayor system.
He was accused of having earlier in the week offered cocaine to an off-duty agent of the United States Border Patrol and her friends outside a Laredo restaurant.
The United States Border Patrol Laredo Sector Headquarters is at 207 W.
Del Mar Blvd, Laredo, Texas.
The United States Postal Service operates its chief Post Office at 2700 East Saunders Street south of Laredo International Airport. Postal chapters are positioned downtown and at 2395 East Del Mar Boulevard. Bob Bullock Loop 20 Laredo, Texas.
The Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) operates the Laredo Parole Office. The private prison operator GEO Group runs the Rio Grande Detention Center in Laredo, which opened in 2008 and holds a maximum of 1900 federal detainees. In March 2014, it was reported that Laredo and Webb County have a child abuse rate at nearly double the state average.
Laredo is served by two school districts, the Laredo Independent School District and the United Independent School District, as well as eight private schools.
The Laredo Independent School District (LISD) serves the areas in central Laredo.
Nixon High School and the Laredo Early College High School.
The United Independent School District serves the rest of Laredo and northern Webb County.
Laredo is home to Laredo Community College and Texas A&M International University (TAMIU).
The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio has a ground in Laredo.
The chief campus is positioned at the end of downtown Laredo near the Rio Grande, on the site of the former Fort Mc - Intosh.
The smaller, newer second campus, Laredo Community College South Campus, is positioned in south Laredo along U.
In International Business Administration. TAMIU's College of Business Administration has been titled an outstanding company school in The Princeton Review's "Best 282 Business Schools", 2007 Edition, and ranked third in the country for the category: "Greatest Opportunity for Minority Students." The university's ground is positioned in Northeast Laredo along Loop 20.
The college was once an extension of Texas A&I-Kingsville and later the former Laredo State University.
Prior to its current locale along Bob Bullock Loop 20, the college was homed with the Laredo Community College downtown campus.
The University of Texas Health Science Center ground is positioned in East Laredo near U.S.
Laredo Morning Times Daily English Laredo lmtonline.com Lare - DOS (Defunct, 2014) Monthly English Laredo laredosnews.com El Manana / Laredo Sun Daily Spanish / English Nuevo Laredo/Laredo elmanana.com.mx / laredosun.us El Lider Informativo Daily Spanish Nuevo Laredo elquiosco.mx El Diario de Nuevo Laredo Daily Spanish Nuevo Laredo diario.net Primera Hora Daily Spanish Nuevo Laredo primerahora.com Ultima Hora Daily Spanish Nuevo Laredo ultimahora.com According to Nielsen Media Research, the Laredo region (which includes Webb and Zapata counties) is ranked 185th market by populace size in the United States. The first station to broadcast in Laredo was KGNS in 1956, followed by KVTV in 1973, then KJTB (now KLDO) in 1985.
In December 2014, all Nuevo Laredo stations must turn off analog tv broadcasting and broadcast only digitally. 2 2.1 17.1 99 XEFE Televisa small-town 480i Nuevo Laredo Last station to broadcast in digital 11 11.1 25.1 14 XHBR Canal de las Estrellas HD 1080i Nuevo Laredo televisa.com 13.20 51.2 XHLAT-TDT2 Dark SD 480i Nuevo Laredo ID: FVDld 15.4 15.4 KLMV-LD4 Televida Laredo SD 480i Laredo buenav.net 21 21.1 50.1 98 XHLNA Azteca 13 HD 1080i Nuevo Laredo tvazteca.com 21.2 50.2 XHLNA-TDT2 Proyecto 40 HD 1080i Nuevo Laredo proyecto40.com 33 33.1 51.1 XHLAT Azteca 7 HD 1080i Nuevo Laredo tvazteca.com 45 45.1 32.1 15 XHNAT Multimedios Plus SD 480i Nuevo Laredo multimedios.tv 45.2 32.2 XHNAT-TDT2 Milenio TV HD 1080i Nuevo Laredo milenio.tv 45.3 32.3 XHNAT-TDT3 Teleritmo SD 480i Nuevo Laredo multimedios.tv 57 57.1 38.1 XHLAR Televisa Regional HD 1080i Nuevo Laredo televisa.com 790 XEFE La Mera Ley Nuevo Laredo listen live 960 XEK La Grande Nuevo Laredo xek.com listen live 1000 XENLT Radio Formula Nuevo Laredo radioformula.com listen live 1090 XEWL La Romantica Nuevo Laredo radiorama.com listen live 1300 KLAR Radio Poder Laredo feypoder.com listen live 1340 XEBK Mega 95.7 Nuevo Laredo radiorama.com listen live 1370 XEGNK Radio Mexicana Nuevo Laredo radiorama.com listen live 1410 XEAS Ke Buena Nuevo Laredo kebuena.com listen live 1490 KLNT Super Tejano Laredo klnt - 1490.com listen live 1550 XENU La Rancherita Nuevo Laredo radiorama.com listen live 88.1 KHOY Catholic Radio Religious Laredo khoy.org listen live 88.9 XHLDO Radio Tamaulipas Public Radio Nuevo Laredo tamaulipas.gob listen live 89.9 KBNL Radio Manantial Spanish theological Laredo kbnl.com listen live 91.3 XHNOE Stereo 91 Spanish Contemporary Nuevo Laredo xhnoe.com listen live 92.7 KJBZ Z93 Tejano Laredo z93laredo.com listen live 93.7 "XHNLT"PR Radio Estereo Uncion FM Christian Radio Nuevo Laredo uncionfeypoder.com listen live 94.1 XHTLN Imagen / RMX Laredo Talk / Contemporary Nuevo Laredo rmx.com.mx listen live 94.9 KQUR Digital 94.9 Spanish Pop Laredo digital949.com listen live 95.7 XHBK Mega 95.7 Spanish Contemporary Nuevo Laredo radioavanzado.com listen live 96.5 "XHTWO"PR Radio Two Norteno Nuevo Laredo listen live 97.1 XHNLO La Caliente Norteno Nuevo Laredo mmradio.com listen live 98.1 KRRG Big Buck Country Country Laredo bigbuck98.com listen live 99.3 XHNK 40 Principales Top 40 Nuevo Laredo radiorama.com listen live 100.5 KBDR La Ley Tejano Laredo laley - 1005.com listen live 101.5 XHAS Ke Buena Norteno Nuevo Laredo kebuena.com listen live 102.3 XHMW Stereo Vida AC/Oldies Nuevo Laredo radiorama.com listen live 102.9 none - PR La Guerrera de la Frontera International Nuevo Laredo laguerrera.mx listen live 103.3 none - PR XRock Classic modern Nuevo Laredo listen live 104.5 none - PR 2 Beat Electronica Nuevo Laredo 104.9 XHNLR Radio UAT University Radio Nuevo Laredo uat.mx listen live 105.1 none - PR RN Radio Spanish Nuevo Laredo rn105.com listen live 105.5 none - PR Mas Musica Spanish Nuevo Laredo 106.1 KNEX Hot 106.1 Urban / Rhythmic Top 40 Laredo hot - 1061.com listen live 106.5 none - PR Radio Voz Norteno Nuevo Laredo radiovoz - 1065.net listen live 107.3 XHGTS 107.3 Me Gusta Spanish Pop Nuevo Laredo xhgts.com listen live PR:Suspected pirate airways broadcasts since they are not licensed with Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in the United States or COFETEL in Mexico. Some pirate stations are suspected, due to the fact that other licensed stations close-by share the same recurrence, such as 106.5 Radio Voz and KMAE from close-by Bruni, Texas and 103.3 Radio 33 and XHAHU-FM from close-by Anahuac, Nuevo Leon, each town/city less than 50 miles from Laredo.
Laredo Medical Center, formerly Mercy Hospital, is the biggest hospital in Laredo.
Laredo Specialty Hospital, near the Laredo Medical Center, handles certain patients requiring long-term care.
In addition to the University of Texas Health Science Center branch, there are five other principal medical centers in Laredo: the Laredo Medical Center, Doctor's Hospital, Gateway Community Health Center, Providence Surgical & Medical Center, and the Laredo Specialty Hospital.
Affiliated with Universal Health Services, it is positioned on Loop 20 in north Laredo.
The Providence Surgical & Medical Center is an ambulatory community care center positioned in north-central Laredo and also owned by Universal Health Services.
The Gateway Community Health Center is the third-largest medical center in Laredo.
The chief Gateway Community Health Center is positioned in East Laredo, close to U.S.
It also has three chapters in the Laredo area: the South Clinic, El Cenizo Community Center, and Quad City Community Center.
The Laredo Specialty Hospital is the fourth-largest medical center in Laredo.
Laredo is served by the Laredo International Airport.
After Laredo Air Force Base closed in the mid-1970s, the federal government handed over the old air force base and property to the City of Laredo for a new municipal airport.
Laredo also has two medical helipads, at Laredo Medical Center and Doctor's Hospital.
The El Metro core is positioned in downtown Laredo at El Metro Transit Center.
Main article: International bridges in Laredo, Texas Texas Loop 20.svg State Loop 20 Loop around Laredo Texas FM 1472.svg Farm to Market Road 1472 Laredo Colombia Solidarity International Bridge Major highways in Nuevo Laredo and their starting and ending points: Peter Arguindegui (1931 2014), oilman and former member of the Laredo City Council Bruni (born 1949), businessman; former Webb County county judge and former member of the Laredo City Council Esther Buckley (1948 2013), member of the United States Commission on Civil Rights from 1983 to 1992; Laredo educator Guerra (1934 2010), Laredo businessman; 20-year member of the town/city council; Republican political activist Armando Hinojosa (born 1944), sculptor, designed Tejano Monument in Austin and "Among Friends There Are No Borders" at the Laredo International Airport Mercurio Martinez, Jr., former Webb County judge and former Laredo town/city councilman, trustee of Laredo Community College Pete Saenz (born 1951), mayor of Laredo since November 12, 2014; former trustee of Laredo Community College and Laredo lawyer Davis (1827 1883), governor of Texas from 1869 to 1873; resided in Laredo amid parts of the 1850s.
Salinas, mayor of Laredo from 2006 2014; native of Alice, Texas Kevin Patrick Yeary (born 1966), Republican member of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals; born in Cotulla, reared in Laredo, resides in San Antonio During the month of July, Laredo sponsors the Laredo International Sister Cities Festival, which was established in 2003.
All of Laredo's sister metros/cities are invited to participate.
In 2004, the Laredo International Sister Cities Festival received the best overall Program award from the Sister Cities International. The following list is of Laredo's sister metros/cities and friendship cities: Tamaulipas Mexico Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas, Mexico 1986 Laredo Nuevo Laredo Nuevo Laredo City of Laredo.
City of Laredo.
Mikaela Rodriguez, "It's Chief Garner: UISD chief is new top cop at Laredo Police Department", Laredo Morning Times, March 19, 2013, p.
Enumeration Factfinder 2010 Population estimate for Laredo, Texas "Study says Laredo is least racially diverse town/city in America".
Laredo Morning Times.
"Aldo Amato, "Plaza Theater: Future Glory Eyed: Investors willing to give it another try", Laredo Morning Times, April 9, 2014, p.
Laredo Origin Laredo Origin Archived 2011-05-17 at the Wayback Machine.(Spanish) Trevino, "Flood of 1954: Devastating natural disaster caused serious damage", Laredo Morning Times, June 28, 2015, pp.
"Most Dangerous Cities in Texas", Laredo Morning Times, January 25, 2015, p.
"Boundary Map of Laredo, Texas".
"TX Laredo 2".
Enumeration Bureau Estimate for the Laredo, Texas Area in 2005 Enumeration Bureau Estimate for the Laredo, Texas Metropolitan Area in 2006 1 rankjing: Laredo's wealthy are most segregated", Laredo Morning Times, April 20, 2015, pp.
"Laredo titled one of the safest metros/cities for drivers".
The Laredo Morning Times.
In January alone, the Laredo customs precinct saw about $20 billion in two-way trade with Mexico, as stated to World - City, a Florida-based business that uses census data to track trade patterns.
"The City of Laredo Transfers Ownership of World Trade Bridge to GSA".
"National report lists Laredo as biggest inland port", Laredo Morning Times Shopping Demographics in the Laredo Area Lare - DOS Article "Streets of Laredo Urban Mall Kendra Ablaza, "Official confirms 31 stores: Opening set for 2016, Laredo Morning Times, July 9, 2015, pp.
Laredo Labor Market, South Texas Workforce Commission Aldo Amato, "Gender: Pay gap called large, Laredo Morning Times, April 1, 2014, p.
Matthew Nelson, "Financial Research: Laredo ranked worst in pay", Laredo Morning Times, February 6, 2014, p.
Texas Metro Market Overview: Laredo: Labor page 14 Trevino, "Chavez's March for Justice observed", Laredo Morning Times, March 30, 2014, p.
Laredo Center for the Arts Home Page Laredo Public LIbrary Homepage "Laredo Public Library retitled after former town/city councilman".
The Laredo Morning Times.
Laredo Public Library Bruni Branch Laredo Public Library Santo Nino Branch KGNS: Two new libraries coming to Laredo Emporis; Laredo Buildings ""Laredo" on Tales of Wells Fargo, December 23, 1957".
"Gunmen from Laredo (1959)".
Laredo Morning Times.
Laredo, Texas: KGNS-TV.
"Professional Arena Soccer League Coming to Laredo Energy Arena".
Laredo, Texas: KGNS-TV.
Laredo Roses homepage Laredo Morning Times; Webb County Vote Totals Laredo Morning Times article; Laredoans of the Year; LMT names sports leaders Shashi and Priya Vaswani (renovation of the TAMIU Soccer Complex) Archived 2011-11-02 at the Wayback Machine.
Laredo Civic Center Archived 2007-08-08 at the Wayback Machine.
Laredo Country Club Website Golf Link; Laredo Country Club golf course knowledge Laredo Morning Times; Monument to medal holders unveiled early Archived 2011-07-26 at the Wayback Machine.
City of Laredo Government Kendra Ablaza, "City manager contract allowed: Olivares will receive $250k plus benefits, Laredo Morning Times, April 22, 2015, p.
Laredo Morning Times, August 1, 2013, p.
"Compensation for Laredo City Council members, mayor to increase".
Laredo Morning Times.
Rodriguez, "Councilman Vera busted: Faces felony drug possession charges", Laredo Morning Times, August 2, 2014, pp.
Laredo Morning Times, August 22, 2014, pp.
Laredo Morning Times.
"Child abuse alert: Local totals are double the rate of state average", Laredo Morning Times, March 30, 2014, p.
Laredo Community College Home Page.
University of Texas Health Science Center Laredo Campus Home Page Archived 2015-06-17 at the Wayback Machine..
Tdt.com.mx Apagon Analogico en Nuevo Laredo (Spanish) FCC: FM Stations in Nuevo Laredo Doctor's Hospital Of Laredo Homepage Archived 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine.
Laredo Specialty Hospital Patrick's Church", Laredo Morning Times, August 6, 2014, pp.
Laredo Morning Times.
Lecuona (1928 2014), Laredo Morning Times, June 11, 2014, p.
Visitlaredo.com Laredo International Sister Cities Festival City of Laredo: Sister City List Sister Cities International: Laredo, Texas See also: Bibliography of the history of Laredo, Texas Laredo, Texas City of Laredo Homepage Laredo, Texas from the Handbook of Texas Online Laredo History provided by the City Of Laredo Historic Photos from the Laredo Public Library hosted by the Portal to Texas History City of Laredo
Categories: Laredo, Texas - Cities in Texas - Cities in Webb County, Texas - Mexico United States border crossings - County seats in Texas - Former colonial and territorial capitals in the United States - Populated places established in 1755 - Divided metros/cities - Mexico United States border suburbs - Capitals of former nations
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