Bom Despacho is a Brazilian municipality located in the west of the state of Minas Gerais. The population is 49,236 in an area of 1213.55 km². The city belongs to the meso-region of Central Mineira and to the micro-region of Bom Despacho. It became a municipality in 1912.
The city center of Bom Despahco is located at an elevation of 768 meters just off the major federal highway BR-262, which links Belo Horizonte to Uberaba. State highway MG-164 leads to Martinho Campos in the north. The São Francisco River forms the western municipal boundary. Neighboring municipalities are: Martinho Campos, Leandro Ferreira, Araújos, Moema, and Luz, and Dores do Indaiá. Distances to other cities
Belo Horizonte/MG - 141 km
Brasília/DF - 730 km
Rio de Janeiro/RJ - 576 km
São Paulo/SP - 580 km
Martinho Campos/MG - 50 km
Araújos/MG - 19 km
Luz/MG - 49 km
Moema/MG - 23 km
Economic activities
Services, light industry, and agriculture are the most important economic activities. The GDP in 2005 was approximately R$393 million, R$41 million from taxes, 223 million reais from services, 77 million reais from industry, and 51 million reais from agriculture. There were 560 rural producers on 63,000 hectares of land. 179 farms had tractors. Approximately 2,000 persons were involved in agriculture. The main crops are watermelon, soybeans, rice, sugarcane, and corn. There were 78,000 head of cattle. Poultry raising was also substantial with over one million head in 2006. There were 5 banks. The motor vehicle fleet had 8,354 automobiles, 1,049 pickup trucks, and 2,520 motorcycles. The ratio of inhabitant per motor vehicle was 2/1. Working population by sector
Transformation industries : 1,929 workers
Commerce : 3,430 workers
Lodging and restaurants : 302 workers
Transport, storage, communications : 450 workers
Public administration: 1,000 workers
Health and social services: 332 workers
Health and education
In the health sector there were 12 public health clinics and 2 private hospitals with 96 beds. Patients with more serious health conditions are transported to Belo Horizonte. Educational needs of 9,700 students were met by 20 primary schools, 6 middle schools, and 18 pre-primary schools.
State ranking: 42 out of 853 municipalities as of 2000
National ranking: 584 out of 5,138 municipalities as of 2000
Literacy rate: 90%
Life expectancy: 72
In 2000 the per capita monthly income of R$307.00 was above the state and national average of R$276.00 and R$297.00 respectively. Poços de Caldas had the highest per capita monthly income in 2000 with R$435.00. The lowest was Setubinha with R$73.00. The highest ranking municipality in Minas Gerais in 2000 was Poços de Caldas with 0.841, while the lowest was Setubinha with 0.568. Nationally the highest was São Caetano do Sul in São Paulo with 0.919, while the lowest was Setubinha. In more recent statistics Manari in the state of Pernambuco has the lowest rating in the country—0,467—putting it in last place.
History of Immigration
The city of Bom Despacho has seen a significant influx of German settlers in the 1920s, however, their tradition has vanished and their history is almost forgotten. Due to the efforts of the Brazilian politician Faustino Assunção the city of Bom Despacho was chosen to participate in the settlement program initiated by the Ministry of Agriculture during the Bernardes government. The aim of this program was to attract European settlers to cultivate the soil surrounding Bom Despacho. For this purpose, the city provided two large areas of farmland in the direct vicinity of Bom Despacho which were named after Brazilian politicians, Colônia David Campista and Colônia Álvaro da Silveira. At the beginning of the 1920s settlers from various European countries arrived in several waves. Most of them were from Germany as the country was in political and economical turmoil after the defeat in World War 1. The new settlers received agricultural plots, houses, tools, and seeds on a credit basis which they had to pay off from the proceeds of their crop. The German embassy even established and operated a German school on Colonia David Campista. The school served the families of both settlements, a known total of at least 54 families. However, the German immigrants on these two settlements dispersed within the next two decades. Unfrugal soil and tropical diseases let many settlers to abandon their lot quickly and seek work in the big cities, such as Belo Horzionte. Some German families even returned to Germany. When Brazil joined World War 2on the side of the Allies in 1942, the German school was closed and it was forbidden to even speak German. As a result, many more settlers left their plots. Today, there are only very few descendants of the original German settlers still living on Colonia David Campista and on Colonia Alvaro Da Silveira. However, some of them still speak German. The cemetery belonging to the two farmlands is called German cemetery by the locals. Its official inscription on the gate reads Imigrantes da Colonia.