Mulege is located on Mexican Highway 1 about 650 miles south of the border of California.
The '''Mision Santa Rosalia de Mulege'''.
This privileged place was discovered by the Jesuit father Juan Maria de Salvatierra on his return from a trip to Sonora. Salvatierra made his first exploration trip in 1702. In August 1703 the fathers Francisco Maria Piccolo and Juan Maria Basaldua arrived. The last one, father Juan de Ugarte - a Honduran Missionary who left a deep mark on these lands - , founded in 1705 the mission called Santa Rosalia de Mulege. The origin of the name Mulege drifts from the Cochimies voices "Carmaanc galexa", that means "Large Ravine of the White Mouth". On September 14 of 1719 the first vessel built in the Californias was launched in the Bay of Santa Ines, with woods from the mountainous region of Mulege. The author of this feat was father Juan de Ugarte who called the ship "Triunto de la Santa Cruz". It is said that this ship served the colony for 54 years.
In 1754 father Francisco Escalante began the formal construction of the church's mission, which was completed in 1766. Built with stone, it's characterized by it's "L" form, by it's tower erected several meters behind its main facade, and by it's own suggested simplicity of the California missions. Abandoned in 1828, it has been restored several times. Actually it conserves the original appearance and in the interior a statue of Santa Rosalia and a bell, both from the XVII century.
On October the 2nd of 1847, a heroic armed action took place here against the North American invaders. The Mexican forces formed by a military group and a numerous group of volunteers, Comundenos and natives and under the command of Capitan Manuel Pineda defeated the enemy.
In Mulege you'll find the old state penitentiary, finished in 1907. Novel because it was the only jail without bars. The prisoners could go out to work during the day, they just had to be back at night. Escape attempts were rare, and when someone did, the other prisoners pursued the escapees to bring them back to jail. The Mulege population lived together with all social classes to whom they offered respect and a fondness, maybe that's why they are the best hosts in Baja California Sur.
From the original groups that inhabited the area, there are known to be extraordinary samples of rupestrian art, that exist in the surroundings of this paradise called Mulege, such as the cave paintings in the Sierra de San Borjita, the most well-known, photographed and investigated. Also the paintings and petroglyphs of La Trinidad.
Mulege has been a favorite traditional destination of the tourist that look for rest and contemplation of nature; to the sport fishing lover, the history student and ecologist; the lover of the beautiful bay; Bahia de Concepcion, a few kilometers from Mulege with awesome landscapes and a multitude of beaches with soft, white sand: Santispac, Concepcion, Los Cocos, El Burro, El Coyote, Buenaventura, El Requeson and Armenta.
In a tour through the town, a visit to the mission church; the regional museum (located in the old state penitentiary building); the banks of the river estuary and the beach at El Sombrerito are all recommended.
Mulege, of course, provides quality services for the visitor. Different hotel classes, R.V. parks, restaurants, bus depot, a national airport (Loreto) and airstrip; sport fishing and scuba diving agencies and tours combining cave paintings and ecology. Check local weather (Santa Rosalia & Loreto).
On November 10, 2006 an American tourist, Duane Curtis, was murdered in his trailer on a deserted beach near Mulege, and his Jeep was stolen. This is especially notable since the area is usually considered safe.