Today I visited the Museu Paulista (the old Museu do Ipiranga), which was built to commemorate Brazil’s independence from Portugal in 1822. I actually learned quite a bit and came back to the hotel and read up on the event in Wikipedia as well, so I have a fuller view of that slice of history.
The building was dedicated in 1895 or so and is striking from a distance, albeit a strange ochre color. Upon getting closer, you realize that it is very shallow — almost like a façade from a Hollywood set. It is very wide and ornate and seems to be a mixture of architectural styles, but mostly neoclassical. The grounds are beautiful and terraced with fountains and oddly oriental-appearing stone beasts, fish, American- (or Nazi) style eagles on poles and surrounded by lush tropical foliage.

At the bottom of a very long and skateboard-filled promenade sits a stack of marble stairs, plinths, bronze lions and ornate and patinaed heroic-sized sculptures at the Praça de Independência. It reminds me of something one would find outside of Buckingham Palace in London and commemorates Brazil’s independence. It has an oddly-placed gas flame that seems like an afterthought on the eastern side.

From a history perspective, our old mission office was in Porto Alegre on Avenida Princesa Isabel. Today I finally learned who she was and what part she played in Brazil’s history (basically finally freeing the slaves after a very slow process begun by her father years earlier. He happened to be out of the country at the time. This did not happen until 1888 and perhaps reflects to some degree why Brazilians lag behind even the US in their cultural treatment of different races).