As far back as 100 AD several
indigenous groups occupied
Puerto Rico - first the Arcáicos,
then the Igneris, and finally
the Taíno who arrived in 600 AD
and dubbed the island "Borinquén".
This last group had a long-lasting
effect on Puerto Rican culture
and bloodlines; many Puerto
Rican words come from the Arawak
language spoken by the Taíno,
and it is estimated that sixty
percent of Puerto Ricans today
have Taíno ancestry.
Full-blooded Taíno were
driven off the island almost
entirely by the mid-sixteenth
century, 150 years after Spanish
occupation. When Christopher
Columbus landed on Puerto Rico,
which he called San Juan
Bautista, in 1493, it was the
Taíno who guided his troops
there from Hispaniola, where the
Spanish had taken the Indians as
guides and slaves. And it was
the Taíno who safeguarded Ponce
de León's passage through Puerto
Rico in search of gold when the
Spanish government granted him
authority to colonize the island
in 1508.
Upon entering office as
Puerto Rico's first governor,
Ponce de León quickly began
converting the Taíno to
Christianity and subjecting them
to forced labour. The church
also began sanctioning
intermarriage, rendering
permissible the longstanding
Spanish tradition of keeping
Taíno mistresses. Their
offspring, called mestizos
, sustained Taíno heritage after
the Indians fled the island to
escape subjugation, save for the
remnant who took refuge in the
Central Mountain region.
In 1511, the Spanish began
migrating to a headland on the
northern shore that naturally
protected a large bay. Ponce de
León named the settlement Puerto
Rico, or rich port. Through a
cartographic error, however, the
name of the city and the island
were eventually switched, and
San Juan became the capital of
the island of Puerto Rico. The
colonists' second settlement,
after Caparra across the bay,
San Juan afforded the best
natural fortification against
invaders.
The colonists grew sugarcane,
plantains and bananas, citrus
fruits and ginger. Once the
Taíno fled, the Spanish saw the
need for new slave labourers and
began importing West Africans in
1518; by 1530 they constituted
half the population.
With its peerless vantage in
the Caribbean, Puerto Rico was
soon caught between European
rivals grappling to lay claim to
its strategic position and rich
natural resources. By 1521,
sanjuañeros recognized the
value and vulnerability of their
port, and began building a
massive stone wall around the
perimeter of the settlement.
Less than 20 years later, the
Dutch raided San Germán, a
settlement on the western coast,
inspiring sanjuañeros to
begin constructing the
formidable stone fortification
called Fuerte San Felipe del
Morro, which still stands at the
headland of Old San Juan. After
a few failed attacks, the
British managed to seize and
burn San Juan in 1598, but they
were done in by dysentery. The
Dutch attacked successfully in
1625, again burning the city,
but were also overcome by
disease soon thereafter.
Puerto Rico was left
vulnerable, and islanders were
impoverished and resentful that
they were seeing so little
return on their labour for the
Spanish. They were not allowed
to participate in government,
trade with other nations, or
move around the island. In
rebellion, they began trading
sugar and rum illegally.
The Spanish empire, though
weakening, sent General
Alejandro O'Reilly to establish
order in the latter half of the
eighteenth century. He built
roads and schools and encouraged
literate Spaniards to immigrate
to the island, while dropping
trade restrictions and lowering
taxes. From 1765 to 1800, the
economy boomed and the
population tripled, to 155,000.
By the turn of the century,
Puerto Rico was thriving. In the
wake of the French Revolution,
slaves began revolting in the
French Caribbean colonies,
driving white planters to Puerto
Rico, and stepping up sugar and
rum production on the island.
Puerto Rico began a lucrative
exchange with the US, exporting
sugar, rum and coffee. Slavery
wouldn't be abolished in Puerto
Rico until 1873.
From 1810 to 1822 Simón
Bolívar, the "Liberator", began
freeing Spanish colonies,
leaving Spain with nothing but
Puerto Rico and Cuba by the
mid-1820s. To keep the islanders
happy and nurture their loyalty,
the Spanish further lowered
taxes and opened up more ports
for trade. And to guarantee
their loyalty, they established
a military government that
lasted 42 years.
The first move toward
independence came in 1838, in a
liberation movement led by
Buenaventura Quiñones. Spain
quashed the effort, and a few
subsequent ones, but by 1897
Puerto Rico finally got what it
wanted - independence from Spain
as an autonomous state. However,
in the concluding battle of the
Spanish-American War the next
year, American forces took Ponce
and gained another US territory.
Islanders became US citizens
in 1917, but revolutionary
movements continued to brew, and
led to several bloody
altercations between radicals
and police, such as the 1937
Ponce Massacre in which twenty
protesters died. Soon, steered
by Luis Muños Marín, head of the
Popular Democratic Party and the
island's first governor under US
jurisdiction, Puerto Rico began
making strides as an
industrially developed entity;
the island drafted its first
constitution and elected Marín
as governor in 1947.
In 1967, in the first
referendum addressing the issue
of sovereignty, Puerto Ricans
voted to remain a commonwealth,
rather than become a full US
state or independent nation. Two
more referenda followed in 1993
and 1998, and both were voted
down in favour of the status
quo.
The move for independence
remains strong, fuelled in no
small part by opposition to the
US Navy's occupation of Vieques
since World War II, and its use
of this island for bombing
practice (which the current
administration says will cease
in 2003). But thus far the
voices of protest haven't been
strong enough to outweigh the
hefty subsidies that Puerto Rico
receives from the US government
each year