Volta Redonda is the name of a city in the Rio de Janeiro state with 182,81 km² of area, located from 350m to 707m from the sea level (22º31'23" S, 44º06'15" W) and with a population of 253.226 inhabitants (estimated in 2004). Its name, Portuguese for round turn, is due to the shape of a curve in the Paraíba do Sul river around which the city was built.
In 1744, the first tamers named the curious curve of the Paraíba do Sul river of Volta Redonda. Big farms were installed in the region and some farm names are the names of some districts nowadays.
Between the years of 1860 and 1870, the navigation through the Paraíba do Sul river had its golden period between the cities of Resende and Barra do Piraí and at the same time the railroad D. Pedro II was built in Barra do Piraí and Barra Mansa.
With these facts, in 1875, the village of Santo Antonio de Volta Redonda started to have great impulse. With the freedom of slaves in 1888, the decay of the Vale do Paraiba became visible, destroying the agriculture, that would not recover more satisfactorily.
This situation would be reverted in 1941, when the cycle of industrialization of Volta Redonda began. Chosen as local for installation of the Companhia Siderúrgica Nacional (CSN), in the middle of World War II, it marked the bases of brazilian industrialization. Laborers from the most diverse regions of the country came to Volta Redonda to work in CSN.
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