During the two world wars, millions of soldiers in the trenches of Europe ate canned meat that came from a single place on the planet: a factory on the banks of the Uruguay River, in a small litoral city called Fray Bentos. The name of this South American corner came to be, for several generations of Britons, synonymous with canned food —so much so that 'Fray Bentos' is today a food brand in the United Kingdom. That astonishing story, that of a town that fed the world, is what made Fray Bentos a World Heritage Site. But before the factory, there was barely a cattle-raising spot on the river.
Fray Bentos sits on the eastern bank of the Uruguay River, in an area that during the colonial era was sparsely populated, devoted to cattle-raising and the use of the river. The name of the town, according to the most widespread tradition, comes from a figure or hermit known as 'Fray Bentos' who is said to have inhabited or frequented the area, giving rise to the place name that over time identified the spot and later the city.
The town gradually consolidated in the mid-19th century, in a context of growth of the Uruguayan litoral tied to river commerce and cattle-raising. The Uruguay River was a key route of communication, and the riverside ports gained importance for the shipping of the region's products. Fray Bentos gradually took shape as one of those strategic points on the river.
The town obtained its formal city status and became the capital of the department of Río Negro, created in the country's political-administrative organization. But what really catapulted Fray Bentos —and what explains its worldwide fame— was not its founding, but what happened a few years later: the installation, in 1863, of an innovative industrial plant that would change the destiny of the city forever.
The event that transformed Fray Bentos forever occurred in 1863, when a plant was installed in the city to produce meat extract according to the method developed by the famous German chemist Justus von Liebig. The idea was to make use of the enormous abundance of cattle in the Río de la Plata —where meat was cheap and often wasted— to produce a nutritious and exportable concentrate: meat extract.
Thus the Liebig's Extract of Meat Company was born, which turned Fray Bentos into a pioneering industrial hub. The factory processed large quantities of cattle to produce the extract, which was exported to Europe as a concentrated food, easy to transport and preserve. It was an early and successful application of industry to food production, in the midst of the industrial revolution.
The industrial complex grew quickly and attracted workers of dozens of nationalities, becoming a true 'company town': a city organized around the factory, with its own housing neighborhood, services and hierarchies. Fray Bentos went from being a peaceful riverside port to an internationally known industrial center, with a product —Liebig meat extract— that carried the name of the city to the tables of Europe.
In 1924, the industrial complex of Fray Bentos passed into British hands and became the Anglo meat plant (linked to English capital). Under this new stage, production expanded and diversified: besides the historic meat extract, the factory specialized in corned beef, the canned preserved meat that would become the emblematic product associated with the name 'Fray Bentos' in much of the world, especially the Anglo-Saxon world.
The meat plant lived its period of greatest splendor in relation to the two world wars. Canned meat was an ideal food for troops and populations in wartime: nutritious, durable and easy to transport. From Fray Bentos left millions of cans heading for Europe to feed soldiers and civilians, which gave the small Uruguayan city a surprising role in the global history of the 20th century.
The Anglo was, for decades, the economic and social heart of Fray Bentos. It employed thousands of people, organized the life of the workers' neighborhood and set the rhythm of the city. The factory functioned almost as an autonomous world, with its port, its workshops, its machine room and its multinational community of workers. The 'Fray Bentos' brand became forever associated, above all in the United Kingdom, with cans of meat.
Beyond production, what makes Fray Bentos exceptional is that the meat plant was not just a factory, but shaped an entire society. A 'company town' model developed around the plant: the factory organized the housing, the services, the social life and even the leisure of the population linked to it.
The Anglo Quarter, adjacent to the factory, reflected that organization. The housing was distributed according to the company's hierarchies: simple houses for the workers, others for the technicians and employees, and larger residences for the executives, many of them British. That social architecture, still legible in the layout of the quarter, shows how the industry structured the everyday life of thousands of people.
One of the most fascinating features was the multinational character of its population. Work at the meat plant attracted people of dozens of nationalities, who lived together in Fray Bentos forming a cosmopolitan community uncommon for a city of its size. That mix of origins, together with the British presence in management, left a particular cultural mark. Life around the Anglo —the work, the neighborhood, the community— is an essential part of the heritage value that UNESCO would later recognize.
After a century of activity, the great meat plant of Fray Bentos entered decline in the second half of the 20th century, in a context of changes in the meat industry, in international markets and in the Uruguayan economy. The Anglo ended up closing its doors, which meant a deep blow to the city, which for generations had revolved around the factory.
However, instead of letting the enormous complex be lost, the choice was made to preserve it. The facilities, with their machine room, their sheds and their neighborhood, were preserved and gave rise to the Museum of the Industrial Revolution, which opened the doors of the factory past to visitors and kept alive the memory of the work and the community of the Anglo.
The greatest recognition came in 2015, when UNESCO inscribed the site on the World Heritage List under the name 'Fray Bentos Industrial Landscape'. The distinction valued the integrity and authenticity of the whole —the factory, the port, the housing and the entire system that articulated production, work and export— as an exceptional testimony of world industrial history and of the globalization processes of food production. With that, Fray Bentos joined Colonia del Sacramento among Uruguay's World Heritage sites, turning its industrial legacy into its greatest tourist and cultural treasure.