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Vieques, Puerto Rico

Vieques (/viˈkəs/ ; Spanish pronunciation: [ˈbjekes]), officially Isla de Vieques, is an island and municipality of Puerto Rico, a United States territory in the northeastern Caribbean. Vieques is part of a group of islands sometimes known as the Spanish Virgin Islands; Puerto Rico, as a whole, is located just west of the U.S. Virgin Islands. Vieques is part of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and retains its strong Spanish influence after 400 years of Spanish colonial presence in the island.

Vieques
Municipio Autónomo de Vieques
Isla de Vieques
Sunset at Sun Bay Beach in Vieques
Nicknames: 
"Isla Nena", "Isabel Segunda"
Map of Puerto Rico highlighting Vieques Municipality
Coordinates: 18°07′N 65°25′W / 18.117°N 65.417°W / 18.117; -65.417
Sovereign state United States
Commonwealth Puerto Rico
Barrios
Government
 • MayorJosé (Junito) Corcino Acevedo (PNP)
 • Senatorial District8 – Carolina
 • Representative District36
Area
 • Total135 km2 (52 sq mi)
Population
 (2020)[2]
 • Total8,249
 • Rank76th in Puerto Rico
 • Density61/km2 (160/sq mi)
DemonymViequense
Racial groups
 • White48.7%
 • Black38.1%
 • American Indian/AN0.4%
 • Asian
Native Hawaiian/Pi
0.6%
0.8%
 • Other
Two or more races
8.8%
3.4%
Time zoneUTC−4 (AST)
ZIP Code
00765
Area code787/939
Major routes

Vieques lies about 8 miles (13 km) east of the Puerto Rican mainland, and measures about 20 miles (32 km) long by 4.5 miles (7 km) wide. Its most populated barrio is the town of Isabel Segunda (or "Isabel the Second", sometimes written "Isabel II"), the administrative center located on the northern side of the island. The population of Vieques was 8,249 at the 2020 Census.

The island's name is a Spanish spelling of a Taíno word said to mean "small island" or "small land". It also has the nickname Isla Nena, usually translated as "girl island" or "little girl island", alluding to its perception as Puerto Rico's little sister. The island was given this name by the Puerto Rican poet Luís Lloréns Torres. During the British colonial period, its name was Crab Island.

Vieques is best known internationally as the site of a series of protests, held against the United States Navy's use of the island as a bombing range and testing-ground, leading to the Navy's departure in 2003.[4] Today, the former navy lands are a national wildlife refuge; some of it is open to the public, but much remains closed off due to biological or chemical contamination or unexploded ordnance that the military is, slowly, cleaning up.[5]

Some of the most beautiful beaches on the island are on the eastern end (former site of the Marine Base) that the Navy named Red Beach, Blue Beach, Caracas Beach, Pata Prieta Beach, La Chiva Beach, and Plata Beach. At the far western tip (formerly the Navy Base) is Punta Arenas, which the Navy named 'Green Beach'. The beaches are commonly listed among the top in the Caribbean for their azure waters and white sands.[6]

History edit

Pre-Columbian history edit

Archaeological evidence suggests that Vieques was first inhabited by ancient Indigenous peoples of the Americas who traveled mostly from South America perhaps between 3000 BCE and 2000 BCE. Estimates of these prehistoric dates of inhabitation vary widely. These tribes had a Stone Age culture and were probably fishermen and hunter-gatherers.

Excavations at the Puerto Ferro site by Luis Chanlatte and Yvonne Narganes[7] uncovered a fragmented human skeleton in a large hearth area. Radiocarbon dating of shells found in the hearth indicate a burial date of c. 1900 BCE. This skeleton, popularly known as El Hombre de Puerto Ferro, was buried at the center of a group of large boulders near Vieques's south-central coast, approximately one kilometer northwest of the Bioluminescent Bay. Linear arrays of smaller stones radiating from the central boulders are apparent at the site today, but their age and reason for placement are unknown.

Further waves of settlement by Native Americans followed over many centuries. The Arawak-speaking Saladoid (or Igneri) people, thought to have originated in modern-day Venezuela, arrived in the region perhaps around 200 BC (estimates vary). These tribes, noted for their pottery, stone carving, and other artifacts, eventually merged with groups from Hispaniola and Cuba to form what is now called the Taíno culture. This culture flourished in the region from around 1000 AD until the arrival of Europeans in the late 15th century.

Spanish colonial period edit

The European discovery of Vieques is sometimes credited to Christopher Columbus, who landed in Puerto Rico in 1493. It does not seem to be certain whether Columbus personally visited Vieques, but in any case the island was soon claimed by the Spanish. During the early 16th century Vieques became a center of Taíno rebellion against the European invaders, prompting the Spanish to send armed forces to the island to quell the resistance. The native Taíno population was decimated, and its people either killed, imprisoned or enslaved by the Spanish.[8]

The Spanish did not, however, permanently colonize Vieques at this time, and for the next 300 years it remained a lawless outpost, frequented by pirates and outlaws. As European powers fought for control in the region, a series of attempts by the French, English and Danish to colonize the island in the 17th and 18th centuries were repulsed by the Spanish.

At the beginning of the 19th century, the Spanish took steps to permanently settle and secure the island. In 1811, Don Salvador Meléndez, then governor of Puerto Rico, sent military commander Juan Rosselló to begin what would become the annexation of Vieques by the Puerto Ricans.[9]

In 1832, under an agreement with the Spanish Puerto Rican administration, Frenchman Teófilo José Jaime María Le Guillou became Governor of Vieques, and undertook to impose order on the anarchic province. He was instrumental in the establishment of large plantations, marking a period of social and economic change. Le Guillou is now remembered as the founder of Vieques (though this title is also sometimes conferred on Francisco Saínz, governor from 1843 to 1852, who founded Isabel Segunda, the main town in Vieques, named after Queen Isabel II of Spain). Vieques was formally annexed to Puerto Rico in 1854.

In 1816, Vieques was briefly visited by Simón Bolívar when his ship ran aground there while fleeing defeat in Venezuela.[10]

During the second part of the 19th century, thousands of slaves of African descent were brought to Vieques to work the sugarcane plantations. They arrived from mainland Puerto Rico and nearby islands of St. Thomas, Nevis, Saint Kitts, Saint Croix, and many other Caribbean islands. Slavery was abolished in Puerto Rico in 1873.[11]

European colonial period edit

The island also received considerable attention as a possible colony from Scotland, and after numerous attempts to buy the island proved unsuccessful, the Scottish fleet, en route to Darien in 1698, made landfall and took possession of the island in the name of the Company of Scotland Trading to Africa and The Indies. Scottish sovereignty of the island proved short-lived, as a Danish ship arrived shortly afterward and claimed the island. From 1689 to 1693, the island was controlled by Brandenburg-Prussia as Krabbeninsel (German crab island), where the English name Crab Island came from.

United States control edit

 
Municipio de Vieques plaque

Puerto Rico was ceded by Spain in the aftermath of the Spanish–American War under the terms of the Treaty of Paris of 1898 and became a territory of the United States. In 1899, the United States conducted its first census of Puerto Rico finding that the population of Vieques was 6,642 (but this included 704 residents from a nearby island, Culebra).[12]

In the 1920s and 1930s, the sugar industry, on which Vieques was dependent, went into decline due to falling prices and industrial unrest. Many locals were forced to move to mainland Puerto Rico or Saint Croix to look for work.

In 1941, while Europe was in the midst of World War II, the United States Navy purchased or seized almost eighty percent[13] of Vieques as an extension to the Roosevelt Roads Naval Station nearby on the Puerto Rican mainland. It is said that the original purpose of the base (never implemented) was to provide a safe haven for the British fleet and the British royal family should Great Britain fall to Nazi Germany.[14] This assertion does not match U.S. Navy documents and the obvious fact that Canada's Halifax harbor would have been a more likely fallback position for the British fleet, with British King George VI already reigning as King of Canada. The base was however seen as the Atlantic's counterpart of Pearl Harbor in the Pacific due to its strategic location. The Naval Station at Roosevelt Roads was a perfect location to defend the strategic approaches to the Panama Canal.

Much of the land was bought from the owners of large farms and sugar cane plantations, and the expropriations triggered the final demise of the sugar industry. Without consulting the local population who had lived and worked there for centuries and protested the expropriations,[15] the decision to turn it into a bombing range was made in Washington. In a similar way as the former population of the Chagos Islands, who were displaced to make way for an Air Force Base in the Indian Ocean in the 1960s, many agricultural workers, who had no formal title to the land they occupied, were evicted and forced to migrate.[16][17]

For over sixty years, the US military used the island (with a population of over 9000 inhabitants in 1950[18]) as a live munitions target practice. According to internal Navy documents, bombardments occurred on 180 days out of a year on average. The US military used the highest possible contaminant depleted uranium (DU) munitions since 1972 on the populated (and full of exotic wildlife) island, at a rate of over 80 live bombs daily for decades.[19][17] The health consequences are felt to this day as the cancer rates are ostensibly higher for the population of Vieques, especially children, than for those on the main island.[19]

After the war, the US Navy continued to use the island for military exercises, and as a firing range and testing ground for munitions.

Protests and departure of the United States Navy edit

 
Radar in Vieques, Puerto Rico

The continuing postwar presence in Vieques of the United States Navy drew protests from the local community, angry at the expropriation of their land and the environmental impact of weapons testing. The locals' discontent was exacerbated by the island's perilous economic condition.

 
Fuera la Marina de Vieques Ya (translation: Navy out of Vieques now) sign on structure

Protests came to a head in 1999 when Vieques native David Sanes, a civilian employee of the United States Navy, was killed by a jet bomb that the Navy said misfired. Sanes had been working as a security guard. A popular campaign of civil disobedience resurged; not since the mid-1970s had Viequenses come together en masse to protest the target practices.[20] The locals took to the ocean in their small fishing boats and successfully stopped the US Navy's military exercises for a short period, until the US Navy and two US Coast Guard cutters began controlling access to the island and escorting boaters away from Vieques.

On April 27, 2001, the Navy resumed operations and protesting resumed.[21] At this point over 600 protesters had already been detained.[22]

The Vieques issue became something of a cause célèbre, and local protesters were joined by sympathetic groups and prominent individuals from the mainland United States and abroad, including political leaders Rubén Berríos, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson, singers Danny Rivera, Willie Colón[23] and Ricky Martin, actors Edward James Olmos and Jimmy Smits, boxer Félix 'Tito' Trinidad, baseball superstar Carlos Delgado, writers Ana Lydia Vega and Giannina Braschi, and Guatemala's Nobel Prize winner Rigoberta Menchú. Kennedy's son, Aidan Caohman "Vieques" Kennedy,[24] was born while his father served jail time in Puerto Rico for his role in the protests. The problems arising from the US Navy base have also featured in songs by various musicians, including Puerto Rican rock band Puya, rapper Immortal Technique and reggaeton artist Tego Calderón. In popular culture, one subplot of "The Two Bartlets" episode of The West Wing dealt with a protest on the bombing range led by a friend of White House Deputy Chief of Staff Josh Lyman; the character was modeled on future West Wing star Jimmy Smits, a native of Puerto Rico who was repeatedly arrested for leading protests there.

As a result of this pressure, in May 2003 the Navy withdrew from Vieques, and much of the island was designated a National Wildlife Refuge under the control of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service.[11] The island was also placed on the National Priorities List (NPL), the list of hazardous waste sites in the United States eligible for long-term remedial action (cleanup) financed by the federal Superfund program. Closure of Roosevelt Roads Naval Station followed in 2004, and prior to Hurricane Maria the Roosevelt Roads Naval Station was reopened.

Hurricane Maria and rebuilding efforts edit

 
Mangroves in Vieques, where electrical power lines were destroyed by Hurricane Maria in 2017

Puerto Rico was struck by Hurricane Maria on September 20, 2017, and the storm caused widespread devastation and a near-total shutdown of the island's tourism-based economy. The largest hotel on the island, The W, has not reopened since the storm, but most smaller hotels, bed and breakfasts, and Airbnb operators have resumed operations.[25]

As of December 2019, the Susana Centeno Hospital in Vieques had not been repaired and remained shuttered. Expectant mothers had to travel to the main island of Puerto Rico to give birth. People needing dialysis had to travel to the main island. In November 2018, a mobile dialysis machine was delivered to a temporary clinic.[26]

On January 21, 2020, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) approved $39.5 million to help rebuild its only hospital after damage caused by Hurricane Maria. FEMA approved the funding after the Office of Management and Budget agreed to provide money to rebuild the Susan Centeno community health center based on its "replacement value."[27]

The family of Jaideliz Moreno Ventura, 13, whose 2020 death was blamed on the lack of a functioning hospital and lifesaving medical equipment in Vieques, is suing the government for violation of human and civil rights. Funds for rebuilding the hospital were approved two weeks after Jaideliz's death, but as of January 31, 2021, it has not been rebuilt.[28]

While Governor Pedro Pierluisi expected construction to begin on the hospital rebuild in 2022,[29] it was delayed until 2023 with the holdup blamed on both construction complications on the island and further bureaucratic proceduress by FEMA.[30]

Government edit

 
Casa Alcaldía (City Hall), Isabel Segunda

Vieques is a municipio of Puerto Rico, translated as "municipality" and in this context roughly equivalent to "township". It is in the Puerto Rican electoral district of Carolina. Local government is under the leadership of a mayor, presently Junito Corcino.

Vieques belongs to the Puerto Rico Senatorial district VIII, which is represented by two Senators. In 2012, Pedro A. Rodríguez and Luis Daniel Rivera were elected as District Senators.[31]

Barrios edit

 
Topographic Map of Vieques, 1951
with barrios

Vieques is divided into eight barrios, including the downtown barrio called Isabel Segunda.[32][33]

Population and Area Statistics of Vieques Barrios
Barrio Area (m2)[34] Population
(census 2000)
Density Cays and islets
Isabel II barrio-pueblo 696997 1459 2093.3
Florida 11553856 4126 357.1
Llave 15420815 8 0.5
Mosquito 6279364 0 0.0
Puerto Diablo 45323702 984 21.7 Roca Cucaracha, Isla Yallis, Roca Alcatraz, Cayo Conejo, Cayo Jalovita, Cayo Jalova
Puerto Ferro 21199791 856 40.4 Isla Chiva, Cayo Chiva
Puerto Real 19943599 1673 83.9 Cayo de Tierra, Cayo de Afuera (Cayo Real)
Punta Arenas 11227244 0 0.0
Vieques 131645368 9106 69.2  

Sectors edit

Barrios (which are like minor civil divisions)[35] are further subdivided into smaller areas called sectores (sectors in English). The types of sectores may vary, from normally sector to urbanización to reparto to barriada to residencial, among others.[36][37][38]

Special Communities edit

Comunidades Especiales de Puerto Rico (Special Communities of Puerto Rico) are marginalized communities whose citizens are experiencing a certain amount of social exclusion. A map shows these communities occur in nearly every municipality of the commonwealth. Of the 742 places that were on the list in 2014, the following barrios, communities, sectors, or neighborhoods were in Vieques: Sector Gobeo in Barrio Florida, Bravos de Boston, Jagüeyes, Monte Carmelo, Pozo Prieto (Monte Santo) and Villa Borinquén.[39]

Geography edit

 
Sub-tropical dry forest on Vieques

Vieques measures about 21 miles (34 km) east-west, and three to four miles (6.4 km) north-south. It has a land area of 52 square miles (130 km2) and is located about ten miles (16 km) to the east of Puerto Rico. To the north of Vieques is the Atlantic Ocean, and to the south, the Caribbean. The island of Culebra is about 10 miles (16 km) north of Vieques, and the United States Virgin Islands lie to the east. Vieques and Culebra, together with various small islets, make up the Spanish Virgin Islands, sometimes known as the Passage Islands.[citation needed][40]

The former US Navy lands, now wildlife reserves, occupy the entire eastern and western ends of Vieques, with the former live weapons testing site (known as the "LIA", or "Live Impact Area") at the extreme eastern tip.[41] These areas are unpopulated. The former civilian area occupies very roughly the central third of the island and contains the towns of Isabel Segunda on the north coast, and Esperanza on the south.

Vieques has a terrain of rolling hills, with a central ridge running east–west. The highest point is Monte Pirata at 987 feet (301 m). Geologically the island is composed of a mixture of volcanic bedrock, sedimentary rocks such as limestone and sandstone, and alluvial deposits of gravel, sand, silt, and clay. There are no permanent rivers or streams. Much former agricultural land has been reclaimed by nature due to prolonged disuse, and, apart from some small-scale farming in the central region, the island is largely covered by brush and subtropical dry forest. Around the coast lie palm-fringed sandy beaches interspersed with lagoons, mangrove swamps, salt flats and coral reefs.[citation needed]

A series of nearshore islets and rocks are part of the municipality of Vieques, clockwise starting at the northernmost:

  • Roca Cucaracha (a rock of less than five meters in diameter)
  • Isla Yallis
  • Roca Alcatraz
  • Cayo Conejo
  • Cayo Jalovita
  • Cayo Jalova
  • Isla Chiva
  • Cayo Chiva
  • Cayo de Tierra
  • Cayo de Afuera (Cayo Real)

Bioluminescent Bay edit

 
Bioluminescent Bay at night
Kayaking in the Bioluminescent Bay, Vieques, Puerto Rico

The Vieques Bioluminescent Bay (also known as Puerto Mosquito, Mosquito Bay, or "The Bio Bay"), was declared the "Brightest bioluminescent bay" in the world by Guinness World Records in 2006,[42] and is listed as a national natural landmark, one of five in Puerto Rico. The luminescence in the bay is caused by a microorganism, the dinoflagellate Pyrodinium bahamense, which glows whenever the water is disturbed, leaving a trail of neon blue.

A combination of factors creates the necessary conditions for bioluminescence: red mangrove trees surround the water (the organisms have been related to mangrove forests[43] although mangrove is not necessarily associated with this species[44]); a complete lack of modern development around the bay; the water is warm enough and deep enough; and a small channel to the ocean keeps the dinoflagellates in the bay. This small channel was created artificially, the result of attempts by the occupants of Spanish ships to choke off the bay from the ocean. The Spanish believed that the bioluminescence they encountered there while first exploring the area was the work of the devil and tried to block ocean water from entering the bay by dropping huge boulders in the channel.[citation needed] The Spanish only succeeded in preserving and increasing the luminescence in the now isolated bay.

Kayaking is permitted in the bay and may be arranged through local vendors.

Climate edit

Vieques has a warm, relatively dry, tropical climate. Temperatures vary little throughout the year, with average daily maxima ranging from 84.7 °F (29.3 °C) in January to 89.9 °F (32.2 °C) in September. Average daily minima are about 18 °F or 6 °C lower. Rainfall averages around 40 to 45 inches (1,000 to 1,100 millimetres) per year, with the month of September being the wettest. The west of the island receives significantly more rainfall than the east. Prevailing winds are easterly.

Vieques is prone to tropical storms and at risk from hurricanes from June to November. In 1989, Hurricane Hugo caused considerable damage to the island,[45] and in 2017, Hurricane Maria also caused major damage.[46]

Climate data for Vieques Island, Puerto Rico (1955–1976 normals, extremes 1955–1976)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 90
(32)
90
(32)
92
(33)
95
(35)
93
(34)
94
(34)
93
(34)
94
(34)
95
(35)
94
(34)
94
(34)
90
(32)
95
(35)
Mean daily maximum °F (°C) 84.7
(29.3)
85.2
(29.6)
86.4
(30.2)
87.5
(30.8)
88.4
(31.3)
89.4
(31.9)
89.6
(32.0)
89.7
(32.1)
89.9
(32.2)
89.3
(31.8)
87.9
(31.1)
85.7
(29.8)
87.8
(31.0)
Mean daily minimum °F (°C) 66.9
(19.4)
66.6
(19.2)
67.0
(19.4)
68.1
(20.1)
70.4
(21.3)
71.7
(22.1)
71.6
(22.0)
71.7
(22.1)
71.5
(21.9)
70.9
(21.6)
69.5
(20.8)
67.8
(19.9)
69.5
(20.8)
Record low °F (°C) 55
(13)
52
(11)
54
(12)
56
(13)
59
(15)
59
(15)
60
(16)
63
(17)
63
(17)
60
(16)
61
(16)
57
(14)
52
(11)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 2.74
(70)
1.29
(33)
1.31
(33)
2.30
(58)
4.40
(112)
3.22
(82)
3.16
(80)
5.02
(128)
5.25
(133)
5.00
(127)
4.98
(126)
3.39
(86)
42.06
(1,068)
Source: Western Regional Climate Center[47]

Demographics edit

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
19005,938
191010,42575.6%
192011,65111.8%
193010,582−9.2%
194010,362−2.1%
19509,228−10.9%
19607,210−21.9%
19707,7677.7%
19807,662−1.4%
19908,60212.3%
20009,1065.9%
20109,3012.1%
20208,249−11.3%
U.S. Decennial Census[48]
1899 (shown as 1900)[49] 1910–1930[50]
1930–1950[51] 1960–2000[52] 2010[33] 2020[53]

2020 edit

According to the 2020 Census, Vieques is the third-least populous municipality (after Maricao and Culebra) with a population of 8,249.[55]

8.0% of the population is of non-Hispanic origin, making it the second-least Hispanic municipality in Puerto Rico after Culebra. This represents an increase from 2010, when only 5.7% of the population was non-Hispanic.[56]

2010 edit

The 2010 US census,[57] showed the total population of Vieques was 9,301. 94.3% of the population are Hispanic or Latino (of any race). Natives of Vieques are known as Viequenses.

Self-defined race 2010[58]
Race Population % of population
White 5,456 48.7
Black 2,617 38.1
American Indian
and Alaska Native
62 0.7
Asian 6 0.1
Native Hawaiian
Pacific Islander
0 0
Some other race 688 7.4
Two or more races 309 3.4

Language edit

Both Spanish and English are recognized as official languages. Spanish is the primary language of most inhabitants.

Economy edit

The sugar industry, once the mainstay of the island's economy, declined during the early 20th century, and finally collapsed in the 1940s when the US Navy took over much of the land on which the sugar cane plantations stood. After an initial naval construction phase, opportunities to make a living on the island were increased to include not only fishing or subsistence farming, but also Naval jobs. Crops grown on the island include avocados, bananas, coconuts, grains, papayas and sweet potatoes. A number of permanent local jobs were provided by the US Navy, and their economy benefited. Starting in the 1970s General Electric had employed a few hundred workers at a manufacturing plant but that plant subsequently closed. Unemployment was widespread, with consequent social problems. The 2000 US census reported a median household income in 1999 dollars of $9,331 (compared to $41,994 for the US as a whole), and 35.8% of the population of 16 years and over in the labor force (compared to 63.9% for the US as a whole).[57]

Following the 2003 departure of the US Navy, the frail economy of the island was left in shambles, and efforts had to be made to redevelop the island's agricultural economy, clean up contaminated areas of the former bombing ranges, and to develop Vieques as a tourist destination. The Navy cleanup is now the island's largest employer, and has contributed over $20 million to the local economy over the last five years through salaries, housing, vehicles, taxes, and services. The Navy has provided specialized training to several local islanders.

Tourism edit

 
Bahía del Corcho (Cork Bay), or Playa Caracas (Caracas Beach), also called Red Beach, a name given to the beach by the U.S. Navy and used mostly by English speakers

For sixty years the majority of Vieques was closed off by the US Navy, and the island remained almost entirely undeveloped for tourism. This lack of development is now marketed as a key attraction. Vieques is promoted under an ecotourism banner as a sleepy, unspoiled island of rural bucolic charm and pristine deserted beaches, and is rapidly becoming a popular destination.

Since the Navy's departure, tensions on the island have been low, although land speculation by foreign developers and fears of overdevelopment have caused some resentment among local residents, and there are occasional reports of lingering anti-American sentiment.[59]

The lands previously owned by the Navy have been turned over to the U.S. National Fish and Wildlife Service and the authorities of Puerto Rico and Vieques for management. The immediate bombing range area on the eastern tip of the island suffers from severe contamination, but the remaining areas are mostly open to the public, including many beautiful beaches that were inaccessible to civilians while the military was conducting training maneuvers.

Snorkeling is excellent, especially at Blue Beach (Bahía de la Chiva). Aside from archeological sites, such as La Hueca, and deserted beaches, a unique feature of Vieques is the presence of two pristine bioluminescent bays, including Mosquito Bay. Vieques is also famous for its paso fino horses, which are owned by locals and left to roam free over parts of the island.[59][60]

In 2011, TripAdvisor listed Vieques among the Top 25 Beaches in the World, writing "If you prefer your beaches without the accompanying commercial developments, Isla de Vieques is your tanning turf, with more than 40 beaches and not one traffic light."[61]

As of summer 2020, travel to the island was restricted due to the COVID-19 outbreak.[62]

Landmarks and places of interest edit

 
Very old Ceiba tree in Vieques Island, Puerto Rico

Culture edit

Festivals and events edit

 
Fiestas Patronales, Isabel Segunda, 2008

Vieques celebrates its patron saint festival in July. The Fiestas Patronales de Nuestra Señora del Carmen is a religious and cultural celebration that generally features parades, games, artisans, amusement rides, regional food, and live entertainment.[40][65]

Other festivals and events celebrated in Vieques include:

  • Three Kings Festival – (or Epiphany Festival) – January 6
  • Festival Cultural Viequense (Vieques Cultural Festival) – June
  • Festival de la Arepa – August/September

Symbols edit

The municipio has an official flag and coat of arms.[66]

Flag edit

The Vieques flag, approved in 1975, contains a representation of the municipal coat of arms and maintains its same symbolism. It consists of seven horizontal straight stripes, of equal width, four white and three blue, alternated. In its center is a green rhombus where a simplified design of the castle appears in yellow. The naval crown seen on the coat of arms is omitted from the flag.[67]

Coat of arms edit

On a barry shield with silver and blue waves is a green rhombus with a gold castle and on top is a golden crown with silver sails. The silver and blue waves symbolize the sea around Vieques. In the green rhombus is a historic Vieques fort represented by the traditional Spanish heraldic castle.[67]

Transportation edit

Vieques is served by Antonio Rivera Rodríguez Airport, which currently accommodates only small propeller-driven aircraft. Services to the island run from San Juan's Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport, Isla Grande Airport (20- to 30-minute flights) and from Ceiba Airport (5-minute flights) and to Culebra. Flights are also available between Vieques and Saint Croix, Tortola, Virgin Gorda and Saint Thomas.

Also, a ferry runs from Ceiba several times a day. The ferry service is administered by the Autoridad de Transporte Marítimo (ATM) in Puerto Rico.[68] In 2019, governor Wanda Vázquez Garced said she would address the troubled, inconsistent ferry service between the islands and Ceiba.[69]

There are 13 bridges in Vieques, none of them distinguished.[70]

Public health edit

There have been claims linking Vieques' higher cancer rate[71] to the long history of weapons testing on the island.

Nayda Figueroa, an epidemiologist for Puerto Rico's Cancer Registry, stated that research showed Vieques' cancer rate from 1995 to 1999 was 31 percent higher than for the main island. Michael Thun, head of epidemiological research at the American Cancer Society, cautioned that the variations in the rates could be attributed to chance, given the small population on Vieques.[72] A 2000 Nuclear Regulatory Commission report concluded that "the public had not been exposed to depleted uranium contamination above normal background (naturally occurring) levels".[73]

Surveys of the wreckage of a target ship in a shallow bay at the bombing range, however, revealed its identity to be that of the USS Killen, a target ship in nuclear tests in the Pacific in 1958. By 2002, it was evident that thousands of tons of steel that had originally been irradiated in the 1958 nuclear tests was missing from the wreckage in the bay. That steel has been missing for over 35 years and is still unaccounted for by the US Navy, Environmental Protection Agency and US Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR). Hundreds of steel drums of unknown origin were found among the wreckage. Their identity and contents have not been adequately verified.[citation needed]

In response to concerns about potential contamination from toxic metals and other chemicals, the ATSDR conducted a number of surveys in 1999–2002 to test Vieques' soil, water supply, air, fish and shellfish for harmful substances. The general conclusion of the ATSDR survey was that no public health hazard existed as a result of the Navy's activities.[73] However, scientists have pointed out that fish samples were drawn from local markets, which often import fish from other areas. Also sample sizes from each location were too small to provide compelling evidence for the lack of a public health danger (Wargo, Green Intelligence). The conclusions of the ATSDR report have more recently, as of 2009, been questioned and discredited. A review is underway.[74][75][76]

Casa Pueblo, a Puerto Rican environmental group, reported "a series of studies pertaining to the flora and fauna of Vieques that clearly demonstrates sequestration of high levels of toxic elements in plant and animal tissue samples. Consequently, the ecological food web of the Vieques Island has been adversely impacted."[77]

Notable natives and residents edit

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Vieques, Puerto Rico on Facebook
  • Topographic map of Vieques in the Library of Congress archives
  • Vieques, Puerto Rico: ATSDR Documents Dealing with the Isla de Vieques Bombing Range
  • Welcome to Puerto Rico! Vieques
  • Archivo Histórico de Vieques Collection hosted in the Digital Library of the Caribbean
  • Diaspora Project DH Center at UPR-RP Collection hosted in the Digital Library of the Caribbean

vieques, puerto, rico, vieques, spanish, pronunciation, ˈbjekes, officially, isla, vieques, island, municipality, puerto, rico, united, states, territory, northeastern, caribbean, vieques, part, group, islands, sometimes, known, spanish, virgin, islands, puert. Vieques v i ˈ eɪ k e s Spanish pronunciation ˈbjekes officially Isla de Vieques is an island and municipality of Puerto Rico a United States territory in the northeastern Caribbean Vieques is part of a group of islands sometimes known as the Spanish Virgin Islands Puerto Rico as a whole is located just west of the U S Virgin Islands Vieques is part of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and retains its strong Spanish influence after 400 years of Spanish colonial presence in the island Vieques Municipio Autonomo de ViequesIsla de ViequesIsland MunicipalitySunset at Sun Bay Beach in ViequesFlagCoat of armsNicknames Isla Nena Isabel Segunda Map of Puerto Rico highlighting Vieques MunicipalityCoordinates 18 07 N 65 25 W 18 117 N 65 417 W 18 117 65 417Sovereign state United StatesCommonwealth Puerto RicoBarrios8 barrios Isabel II barrio puebloFloridaLlaveMosquitoPuerto DiabloPuerto FerroPuerto RealPunta ArenasGovernment MayorJose Junito Corcino Acevedo PNP Senatorial District8 Carolina Representative District36Area 1 Total135 km2 52 sq mi Population 2020 2 Total8 249 Rank76th in Puerto Rico Density61 km2 160 sq mi DemonymViequenseRacial groups 3 White48 7 Black38 1 American Indian AN0 4 Asian Native Hawaiian Pi0 6 0 8 OtherTwo or more races8 8 3 4 Time zoneUTC 4 AST ZIP Code00765Area code787 939Major routes Vieques lies about 8 miles 13 km east of the Puerto Rican mainland and measures about 20 miles 32 km long by 4 5 miles 7 km wide Its most populated barrio is the town of Isabel Segunda or Isabel the Second sometimes written Isabel II the administrative center located on the northern side of the island The population of Vieques was 8 249 at the 2020 Census The island s name is a Spanish spelling of a Taino word said to mean small island or small land It also has the nickname Isla Nena usually translated as girl island or little girl island alluding to its perception as Puerto Rico s little sister The island was given this name by the Puerto Rican poet Luis Llorens Torres During the British colonial period its name was Crab Island Vieques is best known internationally as the site of a series of protests held against the United States Navy s use of the island as a bombing range and testing ground leading to the Navy s departure in 2003 4 Today the former navy lands are a national wildlife refuge some of it is open to the public but much remains closed off due to biological or chemical contamination or unexploded ordnance that the military is slowly cleaning up 5 Some of the most beautiful beaches on the island are on the eastern end former site of the Marine Base that the Navy named Red Beach Blue Beach Caracas Beach Pata Prieta Beach La Chiva Beach and Plata Beach At the far western tip formerly the Navy Base is Punta Arenas which the Navy named Green Beach The beaches are commonly listed among the top in the Caribbean for their azure waters and white sands 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Pre Columbian history 1 2 Spanish colonial period 1 3 European colonial period 1 4 United States control 1 5 Protests and departure of the United States Navy 1 6 Hurricane Maria and rebuilding efforts 2 Government 2 1 Barrios 2 2 Sectors 2 3 Special Communities 3 Geography 3 1 Bioluminescent Bay 3 2 Climate 4 Demographics 4 1 2020 4 2 2010 4 3 Language 5 Economy 6 Tourism 6 1 Landmarks and places of interest 7 Culture 7 1 Festivals and events 8 Symbols 8 1 Flag 8 2 Coat of arms 9 Transportation 10 Public health 11 Notable natives and residents 12 Gallery 13 See also 14 References 15 External linksHistory editPre Columbian history edit Archaeological evidence suggests that Vieques was first inhabited by ancient Indigenous peoples of the Americas who traveled mostly from South America perhaps between 3000 BCE and 2000 BCE Estimates of these prehistoric dates of inhabitation vary widely These tribes had a Stone Age culture and were probably fishermen and hunter gatherers Excavations at the Puerto Ferro site by Luis Chanlatte and Yvonne Narganes 7 uncovered a fragmented human skeleton in a large hearth area Radiocarbon dating of shells found in the hearth indicate a burial date of c 1900 BCE This skeleton popularly known as El Hombre de Puerto Ferro was buried at the center of a group of large boulders near Vieques s south central coast approximately one kilometer northwest of the Bioluminescent Bay Linear arrays of smaller stones radiating from the central boulders are apparent at the site today but their age and reason for placement are unknown Further waves of settlement by Native Americans followed over many centuries The Arawak speaking Saladoid or Igneri people thought to have originated in modern day Venezuela arrived in the region perhaps around 200 BC estimates vary These tribes noted for their pottery stone carving and other artifacts eventually merged with groups from Hispaniola and Cuba to form what is now called the Taino culture This culture flourished in the region from around 1000 AD until the arrival of Europeans in the late 15th century Spanish colonial period edit The European discovery of Vieques is sometimes credited to Christopher Columbus who landed in Puerto Rico in 1493 It does not seem to be certain whether Columbus personally visited Vieques but in any case the island was soon claimed by the Spanish During the early 16th century Vieques became a center of Taino rebellion against the European invaders prompting the Spanish to send armed forces to the island to quell the resistance The native Taino population was decimated and its people either killed imprisoned or enslaved by the Spanish 8 The Spanish did not however permanently colonize Vieques at this time and for the next 300 years it remained a lawless outpost frequented by pirates and outlaws As European powers fought for control in the region a series of attempts by the French English and Danish to colonize the island in the 17th and 18th centuries were repulsed by the Spanish At the beginning of the 19th century the Spanish took steps to permanently settle and secure the island In 1811 Don Salvador Melendez then governor of Puerto Rico sent military commander Juan Rossello to begin what would become the annexation of Vieques by the Puerto Ricans 9 In 1832 under an agreement with the Spanish Puerto Rican administration Frenchman Teofilo Jose Jaime Maria Le Guillou became Governor of Vieques and undertook to impose order on the anarchic province He was instrumental in the establishment of large plantations marking a period of social and economic change Le Guillou is now remembered as the founder of Vieques though this title is also sometimes conferred on Francisco Sainz governor from 1843 to 1852 who founded Isabel Segunda the main town in Vieques named after Queen Isabel II of Spain Vieques was formally annexed to Puerto Rico in 1854 In 1816 Vieques was briefly visited by Simon Bolivar when his ship ran aground there while fleeing defeat in Venezuela 10 During the second part of the 19th century thousands of slaves of African descent were brought to Vieques to work the sugarcane plantations They arrived from mainland Puerto Rico and nearby islands of St Thomas Nevis Saint Kitts Saint Croix and many other Caribbean islands Slavery was abolished in Puerto Rico in 1873 11 European colonial period edit The island also received considerable attention as a possible colony from Scotland and after numerous attempts to buy the island proved unsuccessful the Scottish fleet en route to Darien in 1698 made landfall and took possession of the island in the name of the Company of Scotland Trading to Africa and The Indies Scottish sovereignty of the island proved short lived as a Danish ship arrived shortly afterward and claimed the island From 1689 to 1693 the island was controlled by Brandenburg Prussia as Krabbeninsel German crab island where the English name Crab Island came from United States control edit nbsp Municipio de Vieques plaque Puerto Rico was ceded by Spain in the aftermath of the Spanish American War under the terms of the Treaty of Paris of 1898 and became a territory of the United States In 1899 the United States conducted its first census of Puerto Rico finding that the population of Vieques was 6 642 but this included 704 residents from a nearby island Culebra 12 In the 1920s and 1930s the sugar industry on which Vieques was dependent went into decline due to falling prices and industrial unrest Many locals were forced to move to mainland Puerto Rico or Saint Croix to look for work In 1941 while Europe was in the midst of World War II the United States Navy purchased or seized almost eighty percent 13 of Vieques as an extension to the Roosevelt Roads Naval Station nearby on the Puerto Rican mainland It is said that the original purpose of the base never implemented was to provide a safe haven for the British fleet and the British royal family should Great Britain fall to Nazi Germany 14 This assertion does not match U S Navy documents and the obvious fact that Canada s Halifax harbor would have been a more likely fallback position for the British fleet with British King George VI already reigning as King of Canada The base was however seen as the Atlantic s counterpart of Pearl Harbor in the Pacific due to its strategic location The Naval Station at Roosevelt Roads was a perfect location to defend the strategic approaches to the Panama Canal Much of the land was bought from the owners of large farms and sugar cane plantations and the expropriations triggered the final demise of the sugar industry Without consulting the local population who had lived and worked there for centuries and protested the expropriations 15 the decision to turn it into a bombing range was made in Washington In a similar way as the former population of the Chagos Islands who were displaced to make way for an Air Force Base in the Indian Ocean in the 1960s many agricultural workers who had no formal title to the land they occupied were evicted and forced to migrate 16 17 For over sixty years the US military used the island with a population of over 9000 inhabitants in 1950 18 as a live munitions target practice According to internal Navy documents bombardments occurred on 180 days out of a year on average The US military used the highest possible contaminant depleted uranium DU munitions since 1972 on the populated and full of exotic wildlife island at a rate of over 80 live bombs daily for decades 19 17 The health consequences are felt to this day as the cancer rates are ostensibly higher for the population of Vieques especially children than for those on the main island 19 After the war the US Navy continued to use the island for military exercises and as a firing range and testing ground for munitions Protests and departure of the United States Navy edit Main article United States Navy in Vieques Puerto Rico nbsp Radar in Vieques Puerto Rico The continuing postwar presence in Vieques of the United States Navy drew protests from the local community angry at the expropriation of their land and the environmental impact of weapons testing The locals discontent was exacerbated by the island s perilous economic condition nbsp Fuera la Marina de Vieques Ya translation Navy out of Vieques now sign on structure Protests came to a head in 1999 when Vieques native David Sanes a civilian employee of the United States Navy was killed by a jet bomb that the Navy said misfired Sanes had been working as a security guard A popular campaign of civil disobedience resurged not since the mid 1970s had Viequenses come together en masse to protest the target practices 20 The locals took to the ocean in their small fishing boats and successfully stopped the US Navy s military exercises for a short period until the US Navy and two US Coast Guard cutters began controlling access to the island and escorting boaters away from Vieques On April 27 2001 the Navy resumed operations and protesting resumed 21 At this point over 600 protesters had already been detained 22 The Vieques issue became something of a cause celebre and local protesters were joined by sympathetic groups and prominent individuals from the mainland United States and abroad including political leaders Ruben Berrios Robert F Kennedy Jr Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson singers Danny Rivera Willie Colon 23 and Ricky Martin actors Edward James Olmos and Jimmy Smits boxer Felix Tito Trinidad baseball superstar Carlos Delgado writers Ana Lydia Vega and Giannina Braschi and Guatemala s Nobel Prize winner Rigoberta Menchu Kennedy s son Aidan Caohman Vieques Kennedy 24 was born while his father served jail time in Puerto Rico for his role in the protests The problems arising from the US Navy base have also featured in songs by various musicians including Puerto Rican rock band Puya rapper Immortal Technique and reggaeton artist Tego Calderon In popular culture one subplot of The Two Bartlets episode of The West Wing dealt with a protest on the bombing range led by a friend of White House Deputy Chief of Staff Josh Lyman the character was modeled on future West Wing star Jimmy Smits a native of Puerto Rico who was repeatedly arrested for leading protests there As a result of this pressure in May 2003 the Navy withdrew from Vieques and much of the island was designated a National Wildlife Refuge under the control of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service 11 The island was also placed on the National Priorities List NPL the list of hazardous waste sites in the United States eligible for long term remedial action cleanup financed by the federal Superfund program Closure of Roosevelt Roads Naval Station followed in 2004 and prior to Hurricane Maria the Roosevelt Roads Naval Station was reopened Hurricane Maria and rebuilding efforts edit nbsp Mangroves in Vieques where electrical power lines were destroyed by Hurricane Maria in 2017 Puerto Rico was struck by Hurricane Maria on September 20 2017 and the storm caused widespread devastation and a near total shutdown of the island s tourism based economy The largest hotel on the island The W has not reopened since the storm but most smaller hotels bed and breakfasts and Airbnb operators have resumed operations 25 As of December 2019 the Susana Centeno Hospital in Vieques had not been repaired and remained shuttered Expectant mothers had to travel to the main island of Puerto Rico to give birth People needing dialysis had to travel to the main island In November 2018 a mobile dialysis machine was delivered to a temporary clinic 26 On January 21 2020 the Federal Emergency Management Agency FEMA approved 39 5 million to help rebuild its only hospital after damage caused by Hurricane Maria FEMA approved the funding after the Office of Management and Budget agreed to provide money to rebuild the Susan Centeno community health center based on its replacement value 27 The family of Jaideliz Moreno Ventura 13 whose 2020 death was blamed on the lack of a functioning hospital and lifesaving medical equipment in Vieques is suing the government for violation of human and civil rights Funds for rebuilding the hospital were approved two weeks after Jaideliz s death but as of January 31 2021 it has not been rebuilt 28 While Governor Pedro Pierluisi expected construction to begin on the hospital rebuild in 2022 29 it was delayed until 2023 with the holdup blamed on both construction complications on the island and further bureaucratic proceduress by FEMA 30 Government edit nbsp Casa Alcaldia City Hall Isabel Segunda See also Government of Puerto Rico Vieques is a municipio of Puerto Rico translated as municipality and in this context roughly equivalent to township It is in the Puerto Rican electoral district of Carolina Local government is under the leadership of a mayor presently Junito Corcino Vieques belongs to the Puerto Rico Senatorial district VIII which is represented by two Senators In 2012 Pedro A Rodriguez and Luis Daniel Rivera were elected as District Senators 31 Barrios edit nbsp Topographic Map of Vieques 1951with barrios Vieques is divided into eight barrios including the downtown barrio called Isabel Segunda 32 33 Population and Area Statistics of Vieques Barrios Barrio Area m2 34 Population census 2000 Density Cays and islets Isabel II barrio pueblo 696997 1459 2093 3 Florida 11553856 4126 357 1 Llave 15420815 8 0 5 Mosquito 6279364 0 0 0 Puerto Diablo 45323702 984 21 7 Roca Cucaracha Isla Yallis Roca Alcatraz Cayo Conejo Cayo Jalovita Cayo Jalova Puerto Ferro 21199791 856 40 4 Isla Chiva Cayo Chiva Puerto Real 19943599 1673 83 9 Cayo de Tierra Cayo de Afuera Cayo Real Punta Arenas 11227244 0 0 0 Vieques 131645368 9106 69 2 Sectors edit Further information List of barrios and sectors of Vieques Puerto Rico Barrios which are like minor civil divisions 35 are further subdivided into smaller areas called sectores sectors in English The types of sectores may vary from normally sector to urbanizacion to reparto to barriada to residencial among others 36 37 38 Special Communities edit Main article Puerto Rico Office for Socioeconomic and Community Development Comunidades Especiales de Puerto Rico Special Communities of Puerto Rico are marginalized communities whose citizens are experiencing a certain amount of social exclusion A map shows these communities occur in nearly every municipality of the commonwealth Of the 742 places that were on the list in 2014 the following barrios communities sectors or neighborhoods were in Vieques Sector Gobeo in Barrio Florida Bravos de Boston Jagueyes Monte Carmelo Pozo Prieto Monte Santo and Villa Borinquen 39 Geography edit nbsp Sub tropical dry forest on Vieques Vieques measures about 21 miles 34 km east west and three to four miles 6 4 km north south It has a land area of 52 square miles 130 km2 and is located about ten miles 16 km to the east of Puerto Rico To the north of Vieques is the Atlantic Ocean and to the south the Caribbean The island of Culebra is about 10 miles 16 km north of Vieques and the United States Virgin Islands lie to the east Vieques and Culebra together with various small islets make up the Spanish Virgin Islands sometimes known as the Passage Islands citation needed 40 The former US Navy lands now wildlife reserves occupy the entire eastern and western ends of Vieques with the former live weapons testing site known as the LIA or Live Impact Area at the extreme eastern tip 41 These areas are unpopulated The former civilian area occupies very roughly the central third of the island and contains the towns of Isabel Segunda on the north coast and Esperanza on the south Vieques has a terrain of rolling hills with a central ridge running east west The highest point is Monte Pirata at 987 feet 301 m Geologically the island is composed of a mixture of volcanic bedrock sedimentary rocks such as limestone and sandstone and alluvial deposits of gravel sand silt and clay There are no permanent rivers or streams Much former agricultural land has been reclaimed by nature due to prolonged disuse and apart from some small scale farming in the central region the island is largely covered by brush and subtropical dry forest Around the coast lie palm fringed sandy beaches interspersed with lagoons mangrove swamps salt flats and coral reefs citation needed A series of nearshore islets and rocks are part of the municipality of Vieques clockwise starting at the northernmost Roca Cucaracha a rock of less than five meters in diameter Isla Yallis Roca Alcatraz Cayo Conejo Cayo Jalovita Cayo Jalova Isla Chiva Cayo Chiva Cayo de Tierra Cayo de Afuera Cayo Real Bioluminescent Bay edit nbsp Bioluminescent Bay at night source source source source source source source Kayaking in the Bioluminescent Bay Vieques Puerto RicoMain article Puerto Mosquito The Vieques Bioluminescent Bay also known as Puerto Mosquito Mosquito Bay or The Bio Bay was declared the Brightest bioluminescent bay in the world by Guinness World Records in 2006 42 and is listed as a national natural landmark one of five in Puerto Rico The luminescence in the bay is caused by a microorganism the dinoflagellate Pyrodinium bahamense which glows whenever the water is disturbed leaving a trail of neon blue A combination of factors creates the necessary conditions for bioluminescence red mangrove trees surround the water the organisms have been related to mangrove forests 43 although mangrove is not necessarily associated with this species 44 a complete lack of modern development around the bay the water is warm enough and deep enough and a small channel to the ocean keeps the dinoflagellates in the bay This small channel was created artificially the result of attempts by the occupants of Spanish ships to choke off the bay from the ocean The Spanish believed that the bioluminescence they encountered there while first exploring the area was the work of the devil and tried to block ocean water from entering the bay by dropping huge boulders in the channel citation needed The Spanish only succeeded in preserving and increasing the luminescence in the now isolated bay Kayaking is permitted in the bay and may be arranged through local vendors Climate edit Vieques has a warm relatively dry tropical climate Temperatures vary little throughout the year with average daily maxima ranging from 84 7 F 29 3 C in January to 89 9 F 32 2 C in September Average daily minima are about 18 F or 6 C lower Rainfall averages around 40 to 45 inches 1 000 to 1 100 millimetres per year with the month of September being the wettest The west of the island receives significantly more rainfall than the east Prevailing winds are easterly Vieques is prone to tropical storms and at risk from hurricanes from June to November In 1989 Hurricane Hugo caused considerable damage to the island 45 and in 2017 Hurricane Maria also caused major damage 46 Climate data for Vieques Island Puerto Rico 1955 1976 normals extremes 1955 1976 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year Record high F C 90 32 90 32 92 33 95 35 93 34 94 34 93 34 94 34 95 35 94 34 94 34 90 32 95 35 Mean daily maximum F C 84 7 29 3 85 2 29 6 86 4 30 2 87 5 30 8 88 4 31 3 89 4 31 9 89 6 32 0 89 7 32 1 89 9 32 2 89 3 31 8 87 9 31 1 85 7 29 8 87 8 31 0 Mean daily minimum F C 66 9 19 4 66 6 19 2 67 0 19 4 68 1 20 1 70 4 21 3 71 7 22 1 71 6 22 0 71 7 22 1 71 5 21 9 70 9 21 6 69 5 20 8 67 8 19 9 69 5 20 8 Record low F C 55 13 52 11 54 12 56 13 59 15 59 15 60 16 63 17 63 17 60 16 61 16 57 14 52 11 Average precipitation inches mm 2 74 70 1 29 33 1 31 33 2 30 58 4 40 112 3 22 82 3 16 80 5 02 128 5 25 133 5 00 127 4 98 126 3 39 86 42 06 1 068 Source Western Regional Climate Center 47 Demographics editHistorical population CensusPop Note 19005 938 191010 42575 6 192011 65111 8 193010 582 9 2 194010 362 2 1 19509 228 10 9 19607 210 21 9 19707 7677 7 19807 662 1 4 19908 60212 3 20009 1065 9 20109 3012 1 20208 249 11 3 U S Decennial Census 48 1899 shown as 1900 49 1910 1930 50 1930 1950 51 1960 2000 52 2010 33 2020 53 2020 edit According to the 2020 Census Vieques is the third least populous municipality after Maricao and Culebra with a population of 8 249 55 8 0 of the population is of non Hispanic origin making it the second least Hispanic municipality in Puerto Rico after Culebra This represents an increase from 2010 when only 5 7 of the population was non Hispanic 56 2010 edit The 2010 US census 57 showed the total population of Vieques was 9 301 94 3 of the population are Hispanic or Latino of any race Natives of Vieques are known as Viequenses Self defined race 2010 58 Race Population of population White 5 456 48 7 Black 2 617 38 1 American Indian and Alaska Native 62 0 7 Asian 6 0 1 Native HawaiianPacific Islander 0 0 Some other race 688 7 4 Two or more races 309 3 4 Language edit Both Spanish and English are recognized as official languages Spanish is the primary language of most inhabitants Economy editThe sugar industry once the mainstay of the island s economy declined during the early 20th century and finally collapsed in the 1940s when the US Navy took over much of the land on which the sugar cane plantations stood After an initial naval construction phase opportunities to make a living on the island were increased to include not only fishing or subsistence farming but also Naval jobs Crops grown on the island include avocados bananas coconuts grains papayas and sweet potatoes A number of permanent local jobs were provided by the US Navy and their economy benefited Starting in the 1970s General Electric had employed a few hundred workers at a manufacturing plant but that plant subsequently closed Unemployment was widespread with consequent social problems The 2000 US census reported a median household income in 1999 dollars of 9 331 compared to 41 994 for the US as a whole and 35 8 of the population of 16 years and over in the labor force compared to 63 9 for the US as a whole 57 Following the 2003 departure of the US Navy the frail economy of the island was left in shambles and efforts had to be made to redevelop the island s agricultural economy clean up contaminated areas of the former bombing ranges and to develop Vieques as a tourist destination The Navy cleanup is now the island s largest employer and has contributed over 20 million to the local economy over the last five years through salaries housing vehicles taxes and services The Navy has provided specialized training to several local islanders Tourism edit nbsp Bahia del Corcho Cork Bay or Playa Caracas Caracas Beach also called Red Beach a name given to the beach by the U S Navy and used mostly by English speakers For sixty years the majority of Vieques was closed off by the US Navy and the island remained almost entirely undeveloped for tourism This lack of development is now marketed as a key attraction Vieques is promoted under an ecotourism banner as a sleepy unspoiled island of rural bucolic charm and pristine deserted beaches and is rapidly becoming a popular destination Since the Navy s departure tensions on the island have been low although land speculation by foreign developers and fears of overdevelopment have caused some resentment among local residents and there are occasional reports of lingering anti American sentiment 59 The lands previously owned by the Navy have been turned over to the U S National Fish and Wildlife Service and the authorities of Puerto Rico and Vieques for management The immediate bombing range area on the eastern tip of the island suffers from severe contamination but the remaining areas are mostly open to the public including many beautiful beaches that were inaccessible to civilians while the military was conducting training maneuvers Snorkeling is excellent especially at Blue Beach Bahia de la Chiva Aside from archeological sites such as La Hueca and deserted beaches a unique feature of Vieques is the presence of two pristine bioluminescent bays including Mosquito Bay Vieques is also famous for its paso fino horses which are owned by locals and left to roam free over parts of the island 59 60 In 2011 TripAdvisor listed Vieques among the Top 25 Beaches in the World writing If you prefer your beaches without the accompanying commercial developments Isla de Vieques is your tanning turf with more than 40 beaches and not one traffic light 61 As of summer 2020 travel to the island was restricted due to the COVID 19 outbreak 62 Landmarks and places of interest edit nbsp Very old Ceiba tree in Vieques Island Puerto Rico Fortin Conde de Mirasol Count Mirasol Fort a fort built by the Spanish in the mid 19th century now a museum Playa Esperanza Esperanza Beach The tomb of Le Guillou the town founder in Isabel Segunda La Casa Alcaldia City Hall Faro Punta Mulas built in 1896 Faro de Puerto Ferro Sun Bay Beach 63 The Bioluminescent Bay The 300 year old ceiba tree Rompeolas Mosquito Pier renamed Puerto de la Libertad David Sanes Rodriguez in 2003 Puerto Ferro Archaeological Site Black Sand Beach Playa Negra Hacienda Playa Grande Old Sugarcane Plantation Building Underground U S Navy Bunkers 64 Wreckage of the World War II Navy Destroyer USS Killen DD 593 Culture editFestivals and events edit nbsp Fiestas Patronales Isabel Segunda 2008 Vieques celebrates its patron saint festival in July The Fiestas Patronales de Nuestra Senora del Carmen is a religious and cultural celebration that generally features parades games artisans amusement rides regional food and live entertainment 40 65 Other festivals and events celebrated in Vieques include Three Kings Festival or Epiphany Festival January 6 Festival Cultural Viequense Vieques Cultural Festival June Festival de la Arepa August SeptemberSymbols editThe municipio has an official flag and coat of arms 66 Flag edit The Vieques flag approved in 1975 contains a representation of the municipal coat of arms and maintains its same symbolism It consists of seven horizontal straight stripes of equal width four white and three blue alternated In its center is a green rhombus where a simplified design of the castle appears in yellow The naval crown seen on the coat of arms is omitted from the flag 67 Coat of arms edit On a barry shield with silver and blue waves is a green rhombus with a gold castle and on top is a golden crown with silver sails The silver and blue waves symbolize the sea around Vieques In the green rhombus is a historic Vieques fort represented by the traditional Spanish heraldic castle 67 Transportation editVieques is served by Antonio Rivera Rodriguez Airport which currently accommodates only small propeller driven aircraft Services to the island run from San Juan s Luis Munoz Marin International Airport Isla Grande Airport 20 to 30 minute flights and from Ceiba Airport 5 minute flights and to Culebra Flights are also available between Vieques and Saint Croix Tortola Virgin Gorda and Saint Thomas Also a ferry runs from Ceiba several times a day The ferry service is administered by the Autoridad de Transporte Maritimo ATM in Puerto Rico 68 In 2019 governor Wanda Vazquez Garced said she would address the troubled inconsistent ferry service between the islands and Ceiba 69 There are 13 bridges in Vieques none of them distinguished 70 Public health editThis article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information July 2022 There have been claims linking Vieques higher cancer rate 71 to the long history of weapons testing on the island Nayda Figueroa an epidemiologist for Puerto Rico s Cancer Registry stated that research showed Vieques cancer rate from 1995 to 1999 was 31 percent higher than for the main island Michael Thun head of epidemiological research at the American Cancer Society cautioned that the variations in the rates could be attributed to chance given the small population on Vieques 72 A 2000 Nuclear Regulatory Commission report concluded that the public had not been exposed to depleted uranium contamination above normal background naturally occurring levels 73 Surveys of the wreckage of a target ship in a shallow bay at the bombing range however revealed its identity to be that of the USS Killen a target ship in nuclear tests in the Pacific in 1958 By 2002 it was evident that thousands of tons of steel that had originally been irradiated in the 1958 nuclear tests was missing from the wreckage in the bay That steel has been missing for over 35 years and is still unaccounted for by the US Navy Environmental Protection Agency and US Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry ATSDR Hundreds of steel drums of unknown origin were found among the wreckage Their identity and contents have not been adequately verified citation needed In response to concerns about potential contamination from toxic metals and other chemicals the ATSDR conducted a number of surveys in 1999 2002 to test Vieques soil water supply air fish and shellfish for harmful substances The general conclusion of the ATSDR survey was that no public health hazard existed as a result of the Navy s activities 73 However scientists have pointed out that fish samples were drawn from local markets which often import fish from other areas Also sample sizes from each location were too small to provide compelling evidence for the lack of a public health danger Wargo Green Intelligence The conclusions of the ATSDR report have more recently as of 2009 update been questioned and discredited A review is underway 74 75 76 Casa Pueblo a Puerto Rican environmental group reported a series of studies pertaining to the flora and fauna of Vieques that clearly demonstrates sequestration of high levels of toxic elements in plant and animal tissue samples Consequently the ecological food web of the Vieques Island has been adversely impacted 77 Notable natives and residents editJaime Rexach Benitez educator politician and humanist Nelson Dieppa professional boxer Juan Francisco Luis Governor of the U S Virgin Islands 1978 1987 German Rieckehoff Sampayo was president of the Puerto Rican Olympic committee Carlos Velez Rieckehoff local nationalist leader and political activist David Sanes Rodriguez civilian killed by the US Navy in a live fire bombing practice his death sparked protests that culminated in the US Navy leaving the island Gallery edit nbsp 300 year old Ceiba Tree in Isabel II nbsp Sun Bay Beach nbsp A view of Tobarrios Navio Beach from a nearby sea cave nbsp A view from the Malecon promenade in Esperanza tobarrios of Cayo de Afuera nbsp Playa Caracas Red Beach nbsp Navio Beach nbsp Festival Viequense 2007 nbsp Esperanza Beach nbsp Isabella II Vieques nbsp Fort Count of Mirasol nbsp Playa Grande Sugar Plantation nbsp Playa Negra a black sand beach nbsp Playa Negra and cliffs nbsp Wild horses on Playa Negra nbsp Esperanza nbsp Aerial view from EastSee also edit nbsp Puerto Rico portal nbsp Geography portal nbsp Environment portal List of Puerto Ricans History of Puerto Rico Did you know Puerto Rico United States Navy in Vieques Puerto Rico List of Vieques birds National Register of Historic Places listings in Vieques Kahoolawe Vieques National Wildlife Refuge Culebra Puerto Rico Hurricane MariaReferences edit Vieques Island Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Archived from the original on July 22 2016 Retrieved March 11 2019 PUERTO RICO 2020 Census The United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 25 2021 2000 Decennial Profiles Vieques Municipio Puerto Rico PDF U S Census Bureau May 2001 p 76 Archived PDF from the original on February 16 2008 Retrieved June 13 2011 via Welcome toPuertoRico org Canedy Dana May 2 2003 Navy Leaves a Battered Island and Puerto Ricans Cheer The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 10 2021 Puerto Rico cleanup by U S military will take more than a decade NBC Associated Press Retrieved July 10 2021 The 50 best beaches in the world The Guardian February 16 2016 Retrieved July 10 2021 Current Research American Antiquity 57 1 146 163 January 1992 doi 10 1017 S0002731600051222 S2CID 245677814 Cinquino Michael A Tronolone Carmine A Vandrei Charles amp Vescelius Gary S 1997 Historic Resources on the Vieques Naval Reservation and the Historical Development of Vieques Island Puerto Rico PDF Proceedings of the 17th Congress for Caribbean Archaeology 376 387 Archived PDF from the original on June 26 2019 Retrieved June 26 2019 via University of Florida Digital Collections Mullenneaux Lisa 2000 Ni Una Bomba Mas Vieques vs U S Navy New York Penington Press p 22 ISBN 978 0 97042 960 5 Keeling Stephen 2008 The Rough Guide to Puerto Rico Rough Guides p 162 ISBN 978 1 85828 354 8 Archived from the original on March 22 2015 Retrieved March 6 2016 a b Milestones Vieques Insider October 27 2016 Retrieved July 11 2021 Joseph Prentiss Sanger Henry Gannett Walter Francis Willcox 1900 Informe sobre el censo de Puerto Rico 1899 United States War Dept Porto Rico Census Office in Spanish Imprenta del gobierno p 164 Archived from the original on November 15 2012 Retrieved May 2 2020 Vieques Island Vieques Island Retrieved September 14 2021 Hulme Peter Winter 1987 Islands of Enchantment New Formations A Journal of Culture Theory amp Politics 3 Historia de Vieques Archived from the original on February 22 2015 Ayala Cesar Spring 2001 From Sugar Plantations to Military Bases the U S Navy s Expropriations in Vieques Puerto Rico 1940 45 PDF Centro Journal of the Center for Puerto Rican Studies 13 1 22 44 Archived from the original PDF on February 27 2009 Retrieved July 21 2019 via Department of Sociology UCLA a b Vieques tiene historia ufdc ufl edu Retrieved September 14 2021 Rioz Castro Vieques y la diaspora PDF a b Contaminacion en Vieques PDF Bosque Perez Ramon Morera Jose Javier Colon eds June 2006 Puerto Rico under Colonial Rule Political Persecution And The Quest For Human Rights New York SUNY Press p 216 ISBN 978 0 7914 6417 5 via Google Books On this date Five years ago Northwest Herald April 27 2006 p 2 via Newspapers com Jacobs Andrew April 29 2001 Tiny Island Turns Into a Symbol of Discontent The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved July 11 2021 Anderson James October 18 1999 Vieques vigil a quagmire U S pressed on whether to close Navy range Miami Herald Archived from the original on March 21 2016 Retrieved July 21 2019 via Latin American Studies org Newest Kennedy A Vieques Namesake South Florida Sun Sentinel July 28 2001 Archived from the original on January 30 2019 Weir Bill September 28 2017 Islanders cut off from world We ve lost everything CNN Archived from the original on October 29 2019 Retrieved July 21 2019 Mazzei Patricia April 7 2019 Hunger and an Abandoned Hospital Puerto Rico Waits as Washington Bickers The New York Times Archived from the original on July 25 2019 Retrieved July 21 2019 Uria Daniel January 21 2020 FEMA approves funds to rebuild hospital on Puerto Rican island UPI Archived from the original on March 3 2020 Retrieved March 3 2020 Acevedo Nicole January 31 2021 Family of teen who died in Vieques with no hospital since hurricane sues Puerto Rico officials NBC News Retrieved January 31 2021 Journal Maricarmen Rivera Sanchez The Weekly Gov t Vieques to Have New Hospital by Mid 2024 The Weekly Journal Retrieved August 25 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link BNamericas Puerto Rico puts out to tender new hospital BNamericas com Retrieved August 25 2022 Elecciones Generales 2012 Escrutinio General Ceepur Archived from the original on January 15 2013 Law Gwillim May 2015 Administrative Subdivisions of Countries A Comprehensive World Reference 1900 through 1998 McFarland p 300 ISBN 978 1 4766 0447 3 Retrieved December 25 2018 via Google Books a b Puerto Rico 2010 population and housing unit counts pdf PDF U S Dept of Commerce Economics and Statistics Administration U S Census Bureau 2010 Archived PDF from the original on February 20 2017 Retrieved December 26 2018 Total Population Florida barrio Vieques Municipio Puerto Rico American Factfinder Archived from the original on February 12 2020 Retrieved August 28 2010 US Census Barrio Pueblo definition factfinder com US Census Archived from the original on May 13 2017 Retrieved January 5 2019 Agencia Oficina del Coordinador General para el Financiamiento Socioeconomico y la Autogestion Proposed 2016 Budget Puerto Rico Budgets in Spanish Archived from the original on June 28 2019 Retrieved June 28 2019 Rivera Quintero Marcia 2014 El vuelo de la esperanza Proyecto de las Comunidades Especiales Puerto Rico 1997 2004 first ed San Juan Puerto Rico Fundacion Sila M Calderon ISBN 978 0 9820806 1 0 Leyes del 2001 Lex Juris Puerto Rico in Spanish Archived from the original on September 14 2018 Retrieved June 24 2020 Rivera Quintero Marcia 2014 El vuelo de la esperanza Proyecto de las Comunidades Especiales Puerto Rico 1997 2004 Primera edicion ed San Juan Puerto Rico Fundacion Sila M Calderon p 273 ISBN 978 0 9820806 1 0 a b Vieques Municipality enciclopediapr org Fundacion Puertorriquena de las Humanidades FPH Retrieved July 21 2019 McCaffrey Katherine T 2009 Environmental Struggle After the Cold War New Forms of Resistance to the U S Military in Vieques Puerto Rico In Lutz Catherine ed Bases of Empire The Global Struggle Against U S Military Posts New York University Press ISBN 978 0 81475 243 2 Brightest bioluminescent bay Guinness World Records 2006 Usup Gires Azanza Rhodora V 1998 Physiology and dynamics of the tropical dinoflagellate Pyrodinium bahamense In Anderson Donald M Cembella Allan D Hallegraeff Gustaaf M eds The Physiological Ecology of Harmful Algal Blooms NATO ASI Series G Ecological sciences no 41 Berlin Springer Verlag pp 81 94 ISBN 978 3 54064 117 9 Phlips E J Badylak S Bledsoe E Cichra M 2006 Factors affecting the distribution of Pyrodinium bahamense var bahamense in coastal waters of Florida Marine Ecology Progress Series 322 99 115 Bibcode 2006MEPS 322 99P doi 10 3354 meps322099 High Energy Storms Shape Puerto Rico U S Geological Survey May 16 1996 Archived from the original on October 17 2011 Retrieved June 13 2011 Puerto Rican Island Still In Crisis Mode 3 Months After Maria National Public Radio December 22 2017 Archived from the original on December 29 2017 Retrieved December 29 2017 VIEQUES ISLAND PUERTO RICO Western Regional Climate Center Retrieved May 21 2020 U S Decennial Census United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on April 26 2015 Retrieved September 21 2017 Report of the Census of Porto Rico 1899 War Department Office Director Census of Porto Rico Archived from the original on July 16 2017 Retrieved September 21 2017 Table 3 Population of Municipalities 1930 1920 and 1910 PDF United States Census Bureau Archived PDF from the original on August 17 2017 Retrieved September 21 2017 Table 4 Area and Population of Municipalities Urban and Rural 1930 to 1950 PDF United States Census Bureau Archived PDF from the original on August 30 2015 Retrieved September 21 2014 Table 2 Population and Housing Units 1960 to 2000 PDF United States Census Bureau Archived PDF from the original on July 24 2017 Retrieved September 21 2017 PUERTO RICO 2020 Census The United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 25 2021 Population and Housing Unit Estimates United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on January 8 2017 Retrieved September 21 2017 Census of Population and Housing 2000 United States Summary File 4 Puerto Rico ICPSR Data Holdings April 28 2004 doi 10 3886 icpsr13563 v1 Retrieved August 26 2021 PUERTO RICO 2020 Census The United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 25 2021 a b Population of Vieques Municipio Puerto Rico American FactFinder Archived from the original on November 9 2007 Retrieved April 17 2007 Race and Hispanic or Latino Origin American FactFinder Archived from the original on March 30 2019 Retrieved July 21 2019 a b Harold Brent January 7 2007 Unpretentious Vieques an island in transition Boston Globe Archived from the original on January 7 2014 Retrieved January 7 2014 The Not So Wild Horses of Vieques Uncommon Caribbean June 1 2017 Retrieved April 10 2021 25 Best Beaches in the World Travelers Choice Abarrios Trip Advisor Archived from the original on March 2 2019 Retrieved March 2 2019 Alcalde de Vieques reitera oposicion a apertura del turismo Archived from the original on July 1 2020 Retrieved July 17 2020 Sun Bay recibe Bandera Azul DRD Puerto Rico in Spanish Programa de Parques Nacionales de Puerto Rico Archived from the original on February 13 2019 Retrieved February 13 2019 Vieques Military Bunkers Atlas Obscura Archived from the original on May 10 2019 Retrieved June 15 2019 Puerto Rico Festivales Eventos y Actividades en Puerto Rico Puerto Rico Hoteles y Paradores in Spanish Archived from the original on February 26 2020 Retrieved July 17 2020 Ley Num 70 de 2006 Ley para disponer la oficialidad de la bandera y el escudo de los setenta y ocho 78 municipios LexJuris de Puerto Rico in Spanish Retrieved June 15 2021 a b VIEQUES LexJuris Leyes y Jurisprudencia de Puerto Rico in Spanish February 19 2020 Archived from the original on February 19 2020 Retrieved September 22 2020 Passenger amp Cargo Ferry Guide Vieques amp Fajardo Puerto Rico Vieques com Archived from the original on October 22 2013 Retrieved October 16 2013 Grave la flota que sirve a las islas municipio El Nuevo Dia in Spanish August 25 2019 Archived from the original on October 28 2019 Retrieved October 28 2019 Vieques Bridges National Bridge Inventory Data US Dept of Transportation Archived from the original on February 20 2019 Retrieved February 19 2019 Villerrael Sandra Ivelisse May 11 2003 Rullan Studies on Cancer in Vieques Reflect Increase Puerto Rico Herald Vol 7 no 20 Archived from the original on March 14 2012 Retrieved June 13 2011 Novak Shannon May 7 2004 Vieques Cancer Rate an Issue Miami Herald Archived from the original on March 11 2007 Retrieved April 17 2007 a b Soil Pathway Evaluation Isla de Vieques Bombing Range Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry Archived from the original on October 12 2006 Retrieved April 17 2007 Navarro Mireya August 6 2009 New Battle on Vieques Over Navy s Cleanup of Munitions The New York Times Archived from the original on July 21 2019 Retrieved July 21 2019 Navarro Mireya November 13 2009 Navy s Vieques Training May Be Tied to Health Risks The New York Times Archived from the original on July 21 2019 Retrieved July 21 2019 Navarro Mireya November 29 2009 Reversal Haunts Federal Health Agency The New York Times Archived from the original on July 21 2019 Retrieved July 21 2019 Casa Pueblo report Summary of Findings Archived from the original on September 27 2007 Retrieved April 17 2007 External links editVieques Puerto Rico on Facebook Topographic map of Vieques in the Library of Congress archives Vieques Puerto Rico ATSDR Documents Dealing with the Isla de Vieques Bombing Range Welcome to Puerto Rico Vieques Archivo Historico de Vieques Collection hosted in the Digital Library of the Caribbean Diaspora Project DH Center at UPR RP Collection hosted in the Digital Library of the Caribbean Vieques Puerto Rico at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Travel guides from Wikivoyage nbsp Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vieques Puerto Rico amp oldid 1225559126, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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