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Tela is a municipality which contains the town (or "aldea" in Spanish) of Tela on the northern Caribbean coast of the Atlántida Department of Honduras .
The name Tela is derived from Triunfo de la Cruz.
It became an important port in the early 1900s as headquarters of the Tela Railroad Company, later the United Fruit Company whose headquarters was there until 1970. The town's long dock burned in 1994; hasty replacement, opened in January 1995, collapsed due to high winds. The remnant is now used for fishing.
The town had an extensive railyard, and trains used to run all the way out to the dock. Passenger trains still run twice a week from Tela to San Pedro Sula and Puerto Cortés , the only routes in the country still served by trains.

To the west of town lie many miles of African palm plantations.
Three national parks are within easy reach of the town, Lancetilla Botanical Garden lies to the south of town; it was originally the experimental botanical station for the fruit company. To the east is Punto Izopo National Wildlife refuge. To the west, Janette Kawas National Park.

The park was originally Punta Sal National Park, but the name was changed to Janette Kawas, an environmental activist who was slain in early 1995 for her work trying to keep the palm plantations out of the park.
The municipality of Tela (a Honduran municipality corresponds roughly in area and population to a county in the U.S.) had, in 1988, a population of 65,146. Its area was 1163.3 square kilometers, or 449.2 square miles. There were 13,760 dwellings in the municipality, 77 aldeas (small to medium sized settlements), and 294 caserios (extremely small hamlets, many with no more than 2 or 3 families). The aldea of Tela, the "real" Tela to most Hondurans, has a population of between 5000 and 10,000, with another 5000 or so people living in the outlying barrios. (Honduran aldeas and caserios are not legal or political entities; they have no self government or official boundaries. Honduran censuses do not collect population information for any entity smaller than municipalities; therefore any figures for aldeas are informal estimates.) Tela aldea is easily the biggest aldea in Tela municipality.
Tela is one of many towns on the Caribbean Coast of Central America with many Garifuna towns nearby. Heading east along the beach from Tela, one first comes to Ensenada aldea, and then, beyond Punta del Trinfo de la Cruz, to the aldea of Truinfo de la Cruz; to the west along the beach, are San Juan aldea, which bleeds into Tela's western edge, then Tornabé aldea, and 10 miles or so beyond Tornabé, the tiny caserio of Miami.

Tela's patron saint is San Antonio. Every June, the town holds its festival in honor of San Antonio, with parades and parties throughout the week.
Tela is one the most popular beach destinations for Honduran beachgoers. It draws especially well in Easter Week, the week between Palm Sunday and Easter, when many tens of thousands of Hondurans crowd into town to party, drink, lie on the beach and swim in the Caribbean.

Tela has paved roads throughout its downtown. Many of the outlying barrios have paved main thoroughfares; smaller side streets are generally dirt roads.
Virtually all buildings in and around the aldea of Tela have running water, flush toilets and electricity (Honduras has the same electrical system as the U.S; any American appliance will run in Honduras), though the sewage system cannot handle paper, so one must throw used toilet paper into the trash, rather than flush it.
Many farther aldeas and caserios have no running water or electricity; some are made up entirely of bamboo or thatch huts.
Downtown Tela's main street is a busy business district. There is a well stocked grocery store, several small department stores, a number of hardware stores, many restaurants, internet cafes, bars, banks, poolhalls and hotels, a laundry, a bakery, and a coffinmaker's workshop. The town is well served by doctors, dentists, lawyers and veterinarians. The town also has its own small lumberyard.
Two blocks off the town park, there is a block-square market--half open and half enclosed--selling fresh vegetables, fruit and meat, brought in daily from farms in the surrounding countryside; fisherman bring in fresh fish daily to the market as well to many restaurants.
In addition to the downtown grocery store and the town market, in the barrios, nearly every streetcorner has its own "pulpería"--a small shop in the front of a family house, which sells milk, eggs, juice, beans and other everyday needs to the neighborhood.

When visiting Tela, one can stay in boarding houses for only a few dollars a night. The Hotel Tela, on the main street, costs about $10 a night; while it has no air conditioning, it has high-ceilinged, cool, airy rooms, which render air conditioning needless. It is the oldest hotel in town, and is favored by American expatriate writer Guillermo Yuscarán. Along the beaches are the more upscale hotels, such as César Marisco's and the Hotel Sherwood. Rooms here run about $40 a night and up, and the rooms have air conditioning, cable television and views of the Caribbean. In the western side of town, known as "Tela Nuevo", is the Telamar Hotel, a walled-in compound that formerly served as the housing for the American administrators of the United Fruit Company. The hotel consists of free-standing cottages and bungalows. The hotel has a swimming pool, a clubhouse, convention facilities, a restaurant, some souvenir shops, and the "Delfín", which is a thatch roofed gazebo on the beach where guests and locals alike can come to eat or drink. The hotel also has a long stretch of beach; the Telamar's beach is considered to be the best beach in town, and is open to guests and locals. It is the most expensive hotel in town.

There is a public school in Tela, and at least six smaller private schools, three of which are bilingual, teaching English along with Spanish.

Most Teleños are Catholic; the town's main Catholic church is Iglesia San Antonio, just across the river from the downtown. There are other smaller Catholic churches throughout town. There are many other denominations represented in town, however, including the Holy Spirit Episcopal Church, a Mormon Church and a large Evangelical church just off the beach downtown, colloquially known in Tela as the "Jumping Church".


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