• Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Exposición permanente
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Medios
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Drugstore
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Stables
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    First courtyard of the museum
    Teresa Galindo / INAH-Mediateca
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Top floor of the museum
    Teresa Galindo / INAH-Mediateca
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Museo Histórico Casa de Allende
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Exposición permanente
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Medios
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Museo Histórico Casa de Allende
    INAH-Museo Histórico Casa de Allende
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Stables
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    First courtyard of the museum
    Teresa Galindo / INAH-Mediateca
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Top floor of the museum
    Teresa Galindo / INAH-Mediateca
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Botica
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Stables
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Exposición permanente
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Medios
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Botica
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    First courtyard of the museum
    Teresa Galindo / INAH-Mediateca
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Top floor of the museum
    Teresa Galindo / INAH-Mediateca
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Stables
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Exposición permanente
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Medios
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Permanent exhibition
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Medios
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Botica
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Museo Histórico Casa de Allende
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Planta alta del museo
    Teresa Galindo / INAH-Mediateca
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Museo Histórico Casa de Allende
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Primer patio del museo
    Teresa Galindo / INAH-Mediateca
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Permanent exhibition
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Medios
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Botica
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Caballerizas
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Primer patio del museo
    Teresa Galindo / INAH-Mediateca
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Planta alta del museo
    Teresa Galindo / INAH-Mediateca
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Drugstore
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Caballerizas
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Permanent exhibition
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Medios
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Primer patio del museo
    Teresa Galindo / INAH-Mediateca
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Planta alta del museo
    Teresa Galindo / INAH-Mediateca
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Drugstore
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Caballerizas
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Permanent exhibition
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Medios
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Planta alta del museo
    Teresa Galindo / INAH-Mediateca
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Drugstore
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Primer patio del museo
    Teresa Galindo / INAH-Mediateca
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Top floor of the museum
    Teresa Galindo / INAH-Mediateca
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    Caballerizas
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

    First courtyard of the museum
    Teresa Galindo / INAH-Mediateca

Visit us

Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

Opening hours
Wednesday to Saturday from 09:00 to 17:00 h
Fee
$75.00
Adress

Cuna de Allende No. 1,
Centro Neighborhood, Zip Code 37700,
San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, Mexico.

Access

From Guanajuato take highway 67 Celaya-Dolores Hidalgo to highway 51 Celaya - San Miguel De Allende

Services
Cloakroom
Toilets
Shop
Guided tours
Audio guides
Important
  • Sundays free for mexican citizens
  • Free entrance for Mexicans under 13 years old
  • Free entrance for Mexican students and teachers
  • Free entrance for Mexican senior citizens
  • No smoking
  • No entry with food
  • Pets not allowed
  • No flash

Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

Museo Histórico Casa de Allende

This museum occupies the former residence of Don Ignacio Allende and his parents: a prosperous family at the end of the viceregal period. With its collection of original items, loans from major museums from around Mexico, and a modern design, this space offers a comprehensive overview of this important figure and the history of the War of Independence.


The museum pays tribute to Don Ignacio Allende y Unzaga, the hero of Mexico’s independence movement, within the context of the town of San Miguel el Grande and the viceregal period. Inaugurated in February 1990, the museum is housed in the former residence of one of the major players in the first stage of the War of Independence. It was the first museum to be restructured by the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) as part of the celebrations marking the Bicentenary of Independence in 2010.

Visitors to this museum will learn about the history of the town of San Miguel el Grande during the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, with exhibition designs including a “pulpería”—the name given to food stores two centuries ago—and the Botica del Sagrado Corazón, a pharmacy that was still open on the same site until 1979. Emphasis is also placed on the Bourbon Reforms, whose excessive and unfair taxes stoked generalized unrest among the population of New Spain as a prelude to the great struggle for freedom; some spaces in the house have been recreated as they would have been used on a daily basis during Allende’s life (rooms, bedrooms, prayer chamber, kitchen and stables), to give a sense of how a wealthy Criollo family lived in the early nineteenth century. The life of Ignacio Allende himself is described with information about his birth, family, descendants, the start of the War of Independence when the plans were discovered, the disagreements with Don Miguel Hidalgo, and Allende’s eventual capture, trial and execution.

The independence hero’s father, Domingo Narciso de Allende, ordered the construction of this residence in 1769 as a wedding gift for his wife María Ana Unzaga and the house was probably finished in 1785. During the War of Independence, the house was confiscated by the viceregal government, but at the end of the conflict it was returned to its owners, before it was later sold to new private owners. In 1976 it was acquired by the Guanajuato state government, which in turn ceded it to the INAH in 1984 to turn it into a historical museum. A process of architectural restoration and a new exhibition design began in 2008.

This mid-eighteenth-century residence of New Spain is a harmonious blend of Baroque and Neoclassical architecture, revealing the beauty of period civil architecture of the period and the fleeting years of prosperity enjoyed in New Spain during the final decades of the 1700s. The facade, mainly built of gray “cantera” stone, contrasts with the pink cantera frames of its Baroque balconies, each one different and lavishly decorated. The arcade on the main patio stands out for an arch which is missing a column, giving the impression that it is floating; this is not only an aesthetically interesting feature but also served the practical purpose of allowing carriages to pass underneath.

The museum holds 1,047 items, and most of this collection was created with the new restoration work and consists of originals and reproductions of easel paintings, documents, sculptures, domestic objects, decorative art work, silverwork, textiles, horse-riding accessories for the sport of “charrería,” products related to the "estanco" stores operated as a state monopoly by the viceregal government, religious artefacts, flags, furniture, musical instruments, table linens, toys and weapons. This array of objects comes from Mexico’s national archives (Archivo General de la Nación), the historical archives of the Casa de Morelos in Morelia, the INAH’s National Viceregal Museum, the National Museum of Anthropology and other museums and collections.


 

  • Dirección
    Martha Patricia Guerra Vallejo
    martha_guerra@inah.gob.mx
    +52 (415) 152 2499
Pulpería

Pulpería

These were commercial establishments where products from the family's haciendas, ranches, and mills were sold.

They were usually located in ground-floor rooms or annexes of the residence, with direct access from the street.

Sala Introductoria

Introductory Room

This is the welcoming space. Visitors can watch a five-minute video offering a general overview of the museum and its contents.

Sala Siglo XVIII

18th Century

This room presents the artistic development, industrial growth, and economic importance of the Bajío region as a center of Enlightenment thought—ideas that would eventually shape the ideological foundation of the independence movement.

Sala Reformas Borbónicas

Bourbon Reforms

This section refers to a pivotal moment in Spanish history: when the last Habsburg king of the Spanish Monarchy, Charles II, named Philip V of Bourbon as his successor shortly before his death.

Sala Memorial

Memorial

Displays include objects such as oil paintings, flags, and coins.

Oratorio

Oratory

This was the designated space within the home for prayer and meditation.

Sala Inicio de la guerra

Outbreak of the War

This exhibit features objects related to the beginning of Mexico’s War of Independence.

Recámara del Niño

Child’s Bedroom

Some families with financial means were able to provide a dedicated space for their children’s rest and care.

Sala Perfil de un héroe

Profile of a Hero

Sala Siglo XVI

16th Century

This gallery displays some of the items brought by the Spanish during the 1500s.

Botica

Apothecary

In 1919, Enrique González purchased the house that had belonged to the Allende family. A few months later, the Sacred Heart Apothecary opened in the corner annex facing the main square and Umarán Street, where it remained until 1979.

Sala Siglo XVII

17th Century

This section explores the strategic role of San Miguel el Grande as part of the Camino Real de Tierra Adentro trade route.

Corredor planta alta

Upper Floor Corridor

Primer patio

First Courtyard

Segundo patio

Second Courtyard

Contacto

+52 (415) 152 2499

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