San José, city, southern Uruguay. It lies northwest of Montevideo along the San José River. It originated in 1783, when Eusebio Vidal, acting under orders of the viceroy, Don Juan José de Vertíz, organized the San José district, naming it for the river that ran through the territory. The city developed within the district, which was created as a haven for Spanish colonists from the ill-fated Patagonian settlements. It served briefly as the provisional capital of Uruguay during the 1825 uprising against Brazil.
An agricultural and industrial centre, San José specializes in meat and dairy products, leather goods, clothing, furniture, and automobile parts. A farm machinery school is located in San José. The city’s Basilica Cathedral, built in 1857–74 in the Baroque style, has an imposing clock tower. Pop. (2004) 36,339.