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Ponce, Puerto Rico

Ponce (US: /ˈpɔːns, ˈpn-/, UK: /ˈpɒns/, Spanish: [ˈponθe] (listen), locally [ˈponse]) is both[25] a city and a municipality on the southern coast of Puerto Rico. The city is the seat of the municipal government.

Ponce
Municipio Autónomo de Ponce
Autonomous Municipality of Ponce
From top, left to right: City skyline with the Cordillera Central in the background; Ponce Cathedral and Parque de Bombas, both in the downtown Ponce Historic Zone, and Paseo Tablado La Guancha, on the shores of the Caribbean Sea
Nicknames: 
"La Perla del Sur",
"Ciudad Señorial",
"Ciudad de los Leones",
"Ciudad de las Quenepas"
Motto: 
Ponce es Ponce[1][2]
Anthem: "La Perla del Sur"[3][4]
Map of Puerto Rico highlighting Ponce Municipality
Coordinates: 18°0′39.132″N 66°36′50.1474″W / 18.01087000°N 66.613929833°W / 18.01087000; -66.613929833Coordinates: 18°0′39.132″N 66°36′50.1474″W / 18.01087000°N 66.613929833°W / 18.01087000; -66.613929833[5]
Commonwealth Puerto Rico
Settled1500BC (Non-Europeans)[6][7][8]
Re-settled1582 (Europeans)[9][10][11]
Sitio1646 (Dispersed settlement)[12][13][14]
Partido1670 (Hamlet)[15][16][a]
FoundedAugust 12, 1692 (Village)[17][18][19][20]
  VillaJuly 29, 1848
  CiudadAugust 13, 1877[21]
Named forJuan Ponce de Leon y Loayza
Barrios
Government
 • TypeMayor–council
 • MayorLuis Irizarry Pabón (PPD)
 • CouncilAsamblea Municipal de Ponce
Area
 • City and Municipality193.6 sq mi (501 km2)
 • Land114.8 sq mi (297 km2)
 • Water78.8 sq mi (204 km2)
Elevation52 ft (16 m)
Population
 • City and Municipality137,491
 • Rank4th in Puerto Rico
 • Density710/sq mi (270/km2)
 • Metro
224,142 (MSA)
 • CSA
365,233
DemonymPonceños
Time zoneUTC−4 (AST)
ZIP Codes
00715, 00716, 00717, 00728, 00730, 00731, 00732, 00733, 00734, 00780
Area code787/939
Major routes

GNIS feature ID1611718[22]
Websitehttp://visitponce.com/
  = Date of the Villa and Ciudad charters

Ponce, Puerto Rico's most populated city outside the San Juan metropolitan area, was founded on August 12, 1692[note 1][26][20][27][17] and is named for Juan Ponce de León y Loayza,[28] the great-grandson of Spanish conquistador Juan Ponce de León.[note 2] Ponce is often referred to as La Perla del Sur (The Pearl of the South), La Ciudad Señorial[b] (The Manorial City[c]), and La Ciudad de las Quenepas (Genip City). The city serves as the governmental seat of the autonomous municipality as well as the regional hub for various Government of Puerto Rico entities, such as the Judiciary of Puerto Rico. It is also the regional center for various other Government of Puerto Rico and US Federal Government agencies. Ponce is a principal city of both the Ponce Metropolitan Statistical Area and the Ponce-Yauco-Coamo Combined Statistical Area.

The Municipality of Ponce, officially the Autonomous Municipality of Ponce, is located in the southern coastal plain region of the island, south of Adjuntas, Utuado, and Jayuya; east of Peñuelas; west of Juana Díaz; and bordered on the south by the Caribbean Sea. The municipality has 31 barrios, including 19 outside the city's urban area and 12 in the urban area of the city. The historic Ponce Pueblo district, located in the downtown area of the city, is shared by several of the downtown barrios, and is located approximately three miles (4.8 km) inland from the shores of the Caribbean. The municipality of Ponce is the second largest in Puerto Rico by land area, and it was the first in Puerto Rico to obtain its autonomy, becoming the Autonomous Municipality of Ponce in 1992.

History

 
Ponce's town center, circa 1900

Early settlers

The region of what is now Ponce belonged to the Taíno Guaynia region, which stretched along the southern coast of Puerto Rico.[29] Agüeybaná, a cacique who led the region, was among those who greeted Spanish conquistador Juan Ponce de León when he came to the island in 1508. Archaeological findings have identified four sites within the municipality of Ponce with archaeological significance: Canas, Tibes, Caracoles, and El Bronce.[30]

During the first years of the colonization, Spanish families started settling around the Jacaguas River, in the south of the island.[31] For security reasons,[32] these families moved to the banks of the Rio Portugués, then called Baramaya.[33][34] Starting around 1646 the whole area from the Rio Portugués to the Bay of Guayanilla was called Ponce.[35][36] In 1670, a small chapel was raised in the middle of the small settlement and dedicated in honor of Our Lady of Guadalupe.[37] Among its earliest settlers were Juan Ponce de León y Loayza, and the Portuguese Don Pedro Rodríguez de Guzmán, from nearby San Germán.[38]

On September 17, 1692, the King of Spain Carlos II issued a Cédula Real (Royal Permit) converting the chapel into a parish, and in so doing officially recognizing the small settlement as a hamlet.[39] It is believed that Juan Ponce de León y Loayza, Juan Ponce de León's great-grandson, was instrumental in obtaining the royal permit to formalize the founding of the hamlet.[40] Captains Enrique Salazar and Miguel del Toro were also instrumental.[41] The city is named after Juan Ponce de León y Loayza,[42][43] the great-grandson of Spanish conquistador Juan Ponce de León.[44]

In the early 18th century Don Antonio Abad Rodriguez Berrios built a small chapel under the name of San Antonio Abad. The area would later receive the name of San Antón, a historically important part of modern Ponce.[45] In 1712 the village was chartered as El Poblado de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe de Ponce (The Village of Our Lady of Guadalupe of Ponce).[46]

19th-century immigrants

In the early 19th century, Ponce continued to be one of dozens of hamlets that dotted the Island. Its inhabitants survived by subsistence agriculture, cattle raising, and maritime contraband with foreigners. Mayor José Benítez categorized the jurisdiction into cotos, hatos, criaderos, monterías, and terrenos realengos.[47] Cotos were lands awarded to residents as reward for their services to the king. They were developed into estancias or lands apt to be cultivated for agricultural use. Hatos were lands not granted to anyone in particular, but available for communal use where cattle could roam at will. Monterías were hilly areas located next to hatos were cattle could be reigned in or gathered together with the help of trained dogs. Criaderos were lands were cows could be herded for milk production. Goats, sheep, pigs, asses, and mares were also herded in criaderos. Terrenos realengos were lands that belonged to the state (to the king).[48][49]

However, in the 1820s, three events dramatically changed the size of the town. The first of these events was the arrival of a significant number of white Francophones, fleeing the Haitian Revolution of 1791–1804.[50] The effect of this mass migration was not felt significantly until the 1820s. These French Creole entrepreneurs were attracted to the area because of its large flatlands, and they came with enough capital, slaves, and commercial connections to stimulate Ponce's sugarcane production and sales.[51]

Secondly, landlords and merchants migrated from various Latin American countries. They had migrated for better conditions, as they were leaving economic decline following the revolutions and disruption of societies as nations gained independence from Spain in the 1810s-1820s.[50]

Third, the Spanish Royal Decree of Graces of 1815 attracted numerous European immigrants to Puerto Rico. It encouraged any citizen of a country politically friendly to Spain to settle in Puerto Rico as long as they converted to the Catholic faith and agreed to work in the agricultural business. With such mass migrations, not only the size of the town was changed, but the character of its population was changed as well. Europeans, including many Protestants, immigrated from a variety of nations.[52] On July 29, 1848, and as a result of this explosive growth, the Ponce hamlet was declared a villa (village) by Queen Isabella II,[53][54] and in 1877 the village obtained its city charter.[55][56]

 
Many mid-18th-century immigrants made fortunes in Ponce, like the owner of this restored coffee plantation (Hacienda Buena Vista) founded in 1833; today it is a point of interest in the municipality

Some of these immigrants made considerable fortunes in coffee, corn and sugarcane harvesting, rum production,[57] banking and finance, the importing of industrial machinery, iron foundries and other enterprises. At the time of the American invasion of the Island in 1898, Ponce was a thriving city,[58] boasting the Island's main financial center,[59] the Island's first communications link to another country,[60] the best capitalized financial institutions, and even its own currency.[61] It had consular offices for England, Germany, the Netherlands, and other nations.[62]

Following trends set in Europe and elsewhere, in 1877, Don Miguel Rosich conceived an exposition for Ponce. This was approved in 1880, and the Ponce Fair was held in the city in 1882. It showed several industrial and agricultural advancements.

"It is important to establish a relationship between the European exhibitions that I have mentioned and the Ponce Fair, as the Fair was meant as a showcase of the advancements of the day: Agriculture, Trade, Industry, and the Arts. Just as with the 1878 World's Fair in Paris, the electric grid of the city of Ponce was inaugurated on the first day of the Ponce Fair. In this occasion the Plaza Las Delicias and various other buildings, including the Mercantile Union Building, the Ponce Casino, and some of Ponce's homes were illuminated with the incandescent light bulb for the first time".[63]

Ponce in the 20th century

U.S. invasion

 
The 1898 landing of U.S. troops at Playa de Ponce led to a period economic stagnation for Ponce, as the Americans chose to centralize the administration of the island in San Juan

At the time of the U.S. invasion and occupation of Puerto Rico in 1898 during the Spanish–American War, Ponce was the largest city in the island with a population of 22,000. Ponce had the best road in Puerto Rico, running from Ponce to San Juan, which had been built by the Spaniards for military purposes.[64] The taking of Ponce by American troops "was a critical turning point in the Puerto Rican campaign. For the first time the Americans held a major port to funnel large numbers of men and quantities of war material into the island." Ponce also had underwater telegraph cable connections with Jamaica and the West Indies, putting the U.S. forces on the island in direct communication with Washington, D.C. for the first time since the beginning of the campaign.[65] Just prior to the United States occupation of the island, Ponce was a flourishing and dynamic city with a significant number of public facilities, a large number of industries and commercial firms, and a great number of exquisite residences that reflected the high standing of its bourgeoisie.[66]

On July 27, American troops, aboard the Cincinnati, Dixie, Wasp, and Gloucester, disembarked at Playa de Ponce.[67] General Nelson Miles arrived the next day with reinforcements from Guánica and took possession of the city. There were some minor skirmishes in the city, but no major battle was fought. Three men were killed and 13 wounded on the Spanish side, while the Americans suffered four wounded. The American flag was raised in the town center that same day and most of the Spanish troops retreated into the surrounding mountains. The U.S. Army then established its headquarters in Ponce.[68]

Period of stagnation

After the U.S. invasion, the Americans chose to centralize the administration of the island in San Juan,[69] the capital, neglecting the south and thus starting a period of socio-economic stagnation for Ponce.[70] This was worsened by several factors:

  • Hurricane San Ciriaco in 1899 had left the region in misery[71][72]
  • The opening of sugar mills in Salinas[73] and Guánica[74] drew commercial and agricultural activity away from Ponce[75]
  • The decadence in coffee plantations in the 1920s[76][77][78]
  • The loss of the Spanish and Cuban markets[79] "The Spanish American War had paralyzed the trade of the Island of Puerto Rico and when Spain surrendered the sovereignty she closed her [Spain's] ports to Puerto Rican products, while the American occupation of Cuba destroyed the only other important market. As a result, the trade in coffee and tobacco was ruined, and nothing was provided by the Americans to take their place."[80]

At least one author has also blamed the stagnation on "the strife between the U.S. and the local Nationalist Party."[81]

The 20th century financial stagnation prompted residents to initiate measures to attract economic activity back into the city. Also, a solid manufacturing industry surged that still remains. Examples of this are the Ponce Cement, Puerto Rico Iron Works, Vassallo Industries, and Destilería Serrallés. El Dia was also founded in Ponce in 1911.

Ponce massacre

 
Police fire upon unarmed Nationalists killing 21 in what came to be known as the Ponce massacre of 1937

On March 21, 1937, a peaceful march was organized by the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party to celebrate the 64th anniversary of the abolition of slavery and protest the incarceration of their leader, Dr. Pedro Albizu Campos, in a federal prison on charges of sedition.[82]

The march turned into a bloody event when the Insular Police, a force somewhat resembling the National Guard of the typical U.S. state and which answered to U.S.-appointed governor Blanton Winship, opened fire on unarmed and defenseless members of the Cadets of the Republic and bystanders.[82][83]

When the shooting stopped, nineteen civilians had been killed or mortally wounded.[84] Over two hundred others were badly wounded.[85] Many were shot in their backs while running away, including a seven-year-old girl named Georgina Maldonado who was "killed through the back while running to a nearby church."[86][87]

The US commissioned an independent investigation headed by Arthur Garfield Hays, general counsel of the American Civil Liberties Union, together with prominent citizens of Puerto Rico. The members concluded in their report that the event was a massacre, with the police acting as a mob. They harshly criticized Winship's actions as governor and said he had numerous abuses of civil rights.[88] The event has since been known as the Ponce massacre.[88] It was the largest massacre in Puerto Rican history.[89] As a result of this report and other charges against Winship, he was dismissed from his position in 1937 and replaced as governor.[88]

The history of this event can be viewed at the Ponce Massacre Museum on Marina Street. An open-air park in the city, the Pedro Albizu Campos Park, is dedicated to the memory of the president of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party. As a result of this event, Ponce has been identified as "the birthplace of Puerto Rican national identity."[90] Ponce history in general is expressed at the Ponce History Museum, on the block bordered by Isabel, Mayor, Cristina, and Salud streets in the historic downtown area.

Hub for political and economic activity

Ponce has continued to be a hub of political activity on the island, and is the founding site of several major political parties. It has also been the birthplace of several important political figures of the island, including Luis A. Ferré and Rafael Hernández Colón, both former governors of Puerto Rico, as well as the childhood town of governor Roberto Sanchez Vilella.

Statistics taken from the 2010 census show that 82.0% of Ponceños are white and 9.0% are African-American, with Taínos, Asians, people of mixed race and others making up the rest.[91] At 82.0% vs. 76.2% for the island as a whole, Ponce has the highest concentration of white population of any municipality in Puerto Rico.[92] However, the US Census Bureau changed the definitions of its racial makeup categories for the 2020 Census[93] resulting in 19.0% of Ponceños being classified as white and 13.3% as Black/Afro Puerto Rican', 0.3% as Asian, and people of mixed race making up the rest.

1970s economic decline

The 1970s brought significant commercial, industrial and banking changes to Ponce that dramatically altered its financial stability and outlook of the city, the municipality and, to an extent, the entire southern Puerto Rico region. After Luis A. Ferre concluded his term as governor of Puerto Rico on January 1, 1973, he closed the Puerto Rico Iron Works foundry on Avenida Hostos, and transferred the offices of Ponce's island-wide El Dia newspaper that he owned, as well as the headquarters of his Empresas Ferré, to San Juan. In 1976, CORCO—southern Puerto Rico's main source of economic vitality—shut down its industrial operations in Guayanilla leaving thousands of area residents without work; its impact on indirect sources of employment was even greater. Also, the sugar cane industry, also suffered a major downturn. Sugar cane had until 1976 been grown and refined at Ponce's Central Mercedita, but in that year agricultural production of sugar cane was halted in the lands of the municipality of Ponce and adjacent towns. Also, the headquarters of Banco de Ponce and Banco Crédito y Ahorro Ponceño were moved to San Juan. Unemployment of Ponce jumped to 25% as a result of these changes.[94]

The Mameyes landslide

 
The 1985 Mameyes landslide in Barrio Portugués Urbano killed 129 people in the worst landslide disaster in North America to that date

On October 7, 1985, Ponce was the scene of a major tragedy, when at least 129 people lost their lives to a mudslide in a sector of Barrio Portugués Urbano[95] called Mameyes. International help was needed to rescue people and recover corpses. The United States and many other countries, including Mexico, France, and Venezuela, sent economic, human, and machinery relief. The commonwealth government, subsequently, relocated hundreds of people to a new community built on stable ground.[96] In 2005, the National Science and Technology Council's Subcommittee on Disaster Reduction of the United States reported that the Mameyes landslide held the record for having inflicted "the greatest loss of life by a single landslide" up to that year.[97]

Recent history

The municipality of Ponce became the first in Puerto Rico to obtain its autonomy[98] on October 27, 1992, under a new law (The Autonomous Municipalities Act of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico[99]) enacted by the Puerto Rican legislature. Ponce's mayor for 15 years, Rafael Cordero Santiago ("Churumba"), credited for leading the municipal government to that accomplishment, died in office on the morning of January 17, 2004, after suffering three consecutive strokes. Vice-mayor Delis Castillo Rivera de Santiago finished his term. Cordero was succeeded by Francisco Zayas Seijo. In the 2008 general elections María "Mayita" Meléndez was elected mayor of the city of Ponce and served three terms.[100] The current (2021) mayor is Luis Irizarry Pabón who became the first mayoral candidate in the modern history of Ponce to win with more than 60% of votes cast.[101]

The city is also the governmental seat of the Autonomous Municipality of Ponce, and the regional hub for various commonwealth entities. For example, it serves as the southern hub for the Judiciary of Puerto Rico.[102][103][104] It is also the regional center for various other commonwealth and federal government agencies.[105]

Ponce has improved its economy in the last years. In recent years, Ponce has solidified its position as the second most important city of Puerto Rico based on its economic progress and increasing population.[106] Today, the city of Ponce is the second largest in Puerto Rico outside of the San Juan metropolitan area.[107] Its nicknames include: La Perla del Sur (The Pearl of the South)[108] and La Ciudad Señorial (The Noble or Lordly City).[109] The city is also known as La Ciudad de las Quenepas (Genip City),[110][111] from the abundant amount of this fruit that grows within its borders. The complete history of Ponce can be appreciated at the Museo de la Historia de Ponce, which opened in the city in 1992. It depicts the history of the city from its early settlement days until the end of the 20th century.[112]

On September 20, 2017 Hurricane Maria struck the island of Puerto Rico. In Ponce, $1,000 million in damages were the initial estimates. An estimated 3,500 homes were completely or partially destroyed.[113] The hurricane triggered numerous landslides in Ponce.[114][115]

Geography

 
The municipality of Ponce includes many acres of lush forests like this one. The city of Ponce can be seen in the far background.

The Municipality of Ponce sits on the Southern Coastal Plain region of the Puerto Rico, on the shores of the Caribbean Sea. It is bordered by the municipalities of Adjuntas, Utuado, Jayuya, Peñuelas, and Juana Díaz.[116] Ponce is a large municipality, with only Arecibo larger in land area in Puerto Rico.[117] In terms of physical features, the municipality occupies a roughly rectangular area in south-central portion of the Island of approximately 10 miles (16 km) wide (east-to-west) by 13 miles (21 km) long (north-to-south).[118] It has a surface area of 116.0 square miles (300 km2).[119] The main physiographic features of the municipality of Ponce are: (1) the mountainous interior containing the headwaters of the main river systems, (2) an upper plain, (3) a range of predominantly east-west trending limestone hills, (4) a coastal plain, and (5) a coastal flat.[120] The northern two-thirds of the municipality consists of the mountainous interior, with the southern third divided between hills, coastal plains, and the coastal flat.[121]

Ponce's municipal territory reaches the central mountain range to the north and the Caribbean Sea to the south. Geographically speaking, the southern area of the territory is part of the Ponce-Patillas alluvial plain subsector and the southern coastal plain, which were created by the consolidation of the valleys of the southern side of the central mountain range and the Cayey mountain range. The central area of the municipality is part of the semi-arid southern hills. These two regions are classified as being the driest on the island. The northern part of the municipality is considered to be within the rainy western mountains.[122] Barrio Anón is home to Cerro Maravilla, a peak that at 4,085 feet (1,245 m) is Puerto Rico's fourth highest peak.[123]

Nineteen barrios[124] comprise the rural areas of the municipality, and the topology of their lands varies from flatlands to hills to steep mountain slopes. The hilly barrios of the municipality (moving clockwise around the outskirts of the city) are these seven: Quebrada Limón, Marueño, Magueyes, Tibes, Portugués Rural, Machuelo Arriba, and Cerrillos. The barrios of Canas, Coto Laurel, Capitanejo, Sabanetas, Vayas, and Bucaná also surround the outskirts of the city but these are mostly flat. The remaining six other barrios are further away from the city and their topology is rugged mountain terrain. These are (clockwise): Guaraguao, San Patricio, Monte Llano, Maragüez, Anón, and Real. The ruggedness of these barrios is because through these areas of the municipality runs the Central Mountain Range of the Island.[125] The remaining barrios are part of the urban zone of the city.[126][127] There are six barrios in the core urban zone of the municipality named Primero, Segundo, Tercero, Cuarto, Quinto, and Sexto. They are delimetered by streets, rivers, or major highways. For example, Barrio Tercero is bounded in the north by Isabel Street, in the east by the Rio Portugués, in the south by Comercio Street, and the west by Plaza Las Delicias.[128] Barrio Tercero includes much of what is called the historic district.

There is a seismic detector that the University of Puerto Rico, Mayagüez Campus, has placed in Barrio Cerrillos.[129]

Land features

 
Cruceta del Vigía marks the spot where during the 17th through 19th centuries a guard watched for merchant as well as enemy ships approaching the Ponce harbor 3 mi (5 km) away.

Elevations include Cerro de Punta at 4,390 feet (1,338 m), the highest in Puerto Rico, located in Barrio Anón in the territory of the municipality of Ponce.[130][131] Mount Jayuya, at 4,314 feet (1,315 m) is located on the boundary between Barrio Anón and Barrio Saliente in Jayuya. Cerro Maravilla, at nearly 3,970 feet (1,210 m) above sea level, is located to the east of Barrio Anón. There are many other mountains at lower elevations in the municipality, such as the Montes Llanos ridge and Mount Diablo, at 2,231 feet (680 m) and Mount Marueño, at 2,100 feet (640 m), and Pinto Peak, among others. Part of the Toro Negro Forest is located in Barrio Anón. Coastal promontories include Cuchara, Peñoncillo, Carnero, and Cabullón points.[132] Fifty-six percent of the municipality consists of slopes 10 degrees or greater.[133]

Water features

The 14 rivers comprising the hydrographic system of Ponce are Matilde, Inabón, Bucaná, Jacaguas, Portugués, Cañas, Pastillo, Cerrillos, Chiquito, Bayagan, Blanco, Prieto, Anón and San Patricio[134] The Jacaguas River runs for a brief stretch on the southeast area of the municipality. The Inabón River springs from Anón ward and runs through the municipality for some 18 mi (29.0 km); the tributaries of the Inabón are the Anón and Guayo rivers and the Emajagua Brook. The Bucaná River springs from Machuelo Arriba ward and runs for 18.5 mi (29.8 km) into the Caribbean Sea. The tributaries of the Bucaná are the San Patricio, Bayagán, and Prieto Rivers and Ausubo brook. The Portugués River springs from the ward of that name in Adjuntas, and runs for 17.3 mi (27.8 km) into the Caribbean sea at Ponce Playa ward. The Matilde River, also known as the Pastillo River, runs for 12 mi (19 km); its tributaries are the Cañas River and the Limón and del Agua brooks. Lakes in Ponce include Bronce and Ponceña as well as lakes bearing numbers: Uno, Dos, Tres, and Cinco; and the Salinas Lagoon, which is considered a restricted lagoon.[135] Other water bodies are the springs at Quintana and the La Guancha and El Tuque beaches.[136] There is also a beach at Caja de Muertos Island. Lake Cerrillos is located within the limits of the municipality,[137] as will be the future lake resulting from the Portugués Dam. The Cerrillos State Forest is also located in the municipality of Ponce.

Coastal geographic features in Ponce include Bahía de Ponce, Caleta de Cabullones (Cabullones Cove), and five cays: Jueyes, Ratones,[138] Cardona, Gatas, and Isla del Frio.[139] Caja de Muertos Island and Morrillito islet are located at the boundary between Ponce and Juana Díaz. There is a mangrove covering an area of approximately 100 acres (40 ha) at Cabullón promontory and Isla del Frio. The Salinas Lagoon, part of Reserva Natural Punta Cucharas, has a mangrove that expands about 37 acres (15 ha). The lagoon itself consists of 698 cuerdas (678 acres; 274 ha).[140] The Rita cave is located in Barrio Cerrillos.[141]

Climate

Ponce features a tropical savanna climate (Koppen Aw/As).[142] Ponce has summer highs averaging 92 °F (33 °C)[143] and winter highs, 87 °F (31 °C).[144] It has lows averaging 67 °F (19 °C) in the winter[144] and 74 °F (23 °C) in the summer.[145] It has a record high of 100 °F (38 °C), which occurred on 21 August 2003,[146] and a record low of 51 °F (11 °C) which occurred on 28 February 2004, tying the record low of 51 °F (11 °C) from 25 January 1993.[147] The mean annual temperature in the municipality is 79 °F (26 °C).[148]

Climate data for Ponce, Puerto Rico (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1898–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 98
(37)
95
(35)
96
(36)
96
(36)
96
(36)
99
(37)
100
(38)
100
(38)
99
(37)
98
(37)
100
(38)
98
(37)
100
(38)
Average high °F (°C) 87.8
(31.0)
87.7
(30.9)
87.6
(30.9)
88.8
(31.6)
89.5
(31.9)
91.2
(32.9)
91.5
(33.1)
91.8
(33.2)
91.4
(33.0)
90.8
(32.7)
89.8
(32.1)
88.4
(31.3)
89.7
(32.1)
Daily mean °F (°C) 75.1
(23.9)
74.9
(23.8)
75.0
(23.9)
76.7
(24.8)
78.3
(25.7)
80.2
(26.8)
80.3
(26.8)
80.5
(26.9)
80.0
(26.7)
79.4
(26.3)
77.9
(25.5)
75.9
(24.4)
77.8
(25.4)
Average low °F (°C) 62.5
(16.9)
62.1
(16.7)
62.5
(16.9)
64.6
(18.1)
67.0
(19.4)
69.2
(20.7)
69.1
(20.6)
69.3
(20.7)
68.7
(20.4)
67.9
(19.9)
66.0
(18.9)
63.5
(17.5)
66.0
(18.9)
Record low °F (°C) 49
(9)
51
(11)
50
(10)
53
(12)
55
(13)
60
(16)
58
(14)
60
(16)
58
(14)
61
(16)
56
(13)
52
(11)
49
(9)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 0.73
(19)
1.21
(31)
1.87
(47)
2.26
(57)
4.18
(106)
2.16
(55)
2.84
(72)
4.56
(116)
6.94
(176)
5.38
(137)
3.94
(100)
1.45
(37)
37.52
(953)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 6.0 6.5 7.0 8.7 10.1 7.8 8.2 10.3 12.1 12.7 10.1 7.4 106.9
Source: NOAA[149][150]

Cityscape

Architecture

 
The Museum of Puerto Rican Architecture, the only architecture museum in the Island, is housed in this 100-year-old residence on Reina Street

During the 19th century, the city was witness to a flourishing architectural development, including the birth of a new architectural style later dubbed Ponce Creole. Architects like Francisco Valls, Manuel Víctor Domenech, Eduardo Salich, Blas Silva Boucher, Agustín Camilo González, Alfredo Wiechers, Francisco Porrata Doria and Francisco Gardón Vega used a mixture of Art Nouveau and neoclassic styles to give the city a unique look. This can be seen in the various structures located in the center of the city like the Teatro La Perla. To showcase its rich architectural heritage, the city has opened the Museum of Puerto Rican Architecture at the Wiechers-Villaronga residence.[151][152]

Many of the city's features (from house façades to chamfered street corners) are modeled on Barcelona's architecture, given the city's strong Catalan heritage. In 2020, the National Trust for Historic Preservation named the Ponce Historic Zone as one of America's most endangered historic places.[153]

Barrios

 

With 31 barrios, Ponce is Puerto Rico's municipality with the largest number of barrios.[154][155][156][157] Ponce's barrios consist of 12 located in the urban area of the city plus 19 outside the urban zone.[158][159] Of these nineteen, seven were considered suburban in 1999. The suburban barrios were: Canas, Magueyes, Portugués, Machuelo Arriba, Sabanetas, Coto Laurel, and Cerrillos.[160] A 2000 report by the U.S. Census Bureau provides detailed demographics statistics for each of Ponce's barrios.[161]

The 2000 Census showed that Montes Llanos is the least populated barrio in the municipality. Thanks to its larger area, barrio Canas was by far the most populated ward of the municipality.[162] At 68 persons per square mile, San Patricio was the least populated, while Cuarto was the most densely populated at 18,819 persons per square mile.

Ponce has nine barrios that border neighboring municipalities. These are Canas, Quebrada Limón, Marueño, Guaraguao, San Patricio, Anón, Real, Coto Laurel, and Capitanejo. Canas and Capitanejo are also coastal barrios, and together with three others (Playa, Bucaná, and Vayas) make up the municipality's five coastal barrios.

There are also five barrios within the city limits (Canas Urbano, Machuelo Abajo, Magueyes Urbano, Portugués Urbano, and San Antón) that in addition to the original six city core barrios — named Primero, Segundo, Tercero, Cuarto, Quinto, and Sexto — make up the 11 urban zone barrios of the municipality. The historic zone of the city is within these original six core city barrios. These eleven barrios composed what is known as the urban zone of the municipality.

The remaining eight barrios (Magueyes, Tibes, Montes Llanos, Maragüez, Portugués, Machuelo Arriba, Cerrillos, Sabanetas) are located in the interior of the municipality. These last eight are outside the city limits and are neither coastal nor bordering barrios.[163]

A summary of all the barrios of the municipality, their population, population density, and land and water areas as given by the U.S. Census Bureau is as follows:[164][165][166]

No. Barrio Population
(Census 2000)
Density
(/sq mi)
Total Area
(sq mi)
Land Area
(sq mi)
Water Area
(sq mi)
1 Anón 1669 129.9 12.85 12.85 0.00
2 Bucaná 3963 2957.5 2.16 1.34 0.81
3 Canas 34065 2349.3 22.82 14.50 8.32
4 Canas Urbano 21482 9299.6 2.31 2.31 0.00
5 Capitanejo 1401 355.4 4.82 3.95 0.88
6 Cerrillos 4284 1377.5 3.31 3.11 0.20
7 Coto Laurel 5285 1492.9 3.60 3.54 0.06
8 Cuarto 3011 18818.8 0.17 0.16 0.00
9 Guaraguao 1017 247.4 4.11 4.11 0.00
10 Machuelo Abajo 13302 7515.3 1.86 1.77 0.90
11 Machuelo Arriba 13727 2124.9 6.61 6.46 0.15
12 Magueyes 6134 1345.2 4.56 4.56 0.00
13 Magueyes Urbano 1332 1074.2 1.24 1.24 0.00
14 Maragüez 754 142.0 6.42 5.31 1.11
15 Marueño 1474 350.1 4.21 4.21 0.00
16 Montes Llanos 462 214.9 2.15 2.15 0.00
17 Playa 16926 3864.4 14.98 4.38 10.60
18 Portugués 4882 1386.9 3.56 3.52 0.04
19 Portugués Urbano 5886 5163.2 1.14 1.14 0.00
20 Primero 3550 14200.0 0.25 0.25 0.00
21 Quebrada Limón 804 301.1 2.67 2.67 0.00
22 Quinto 724 6581.8 0.11 0.11 0.00
23 Real 3139 595.6 5.28 5.27 0.01
24 Sabanetas 6420 2351.6 2.79 2.73 0.06
25 San Antón 11271 10063.4 1.17 1.12 0.04
26 San Patricio 465 67.8 6.86 6.86 0.00
27 Segundo 11321 17416.9 0.65 0.65 0.00
28 Sexto 4745 18250.0 0.27 0.26 0.01
29 Tercero 773 9662.5 0.08 0.08 0.00
30 Tibes 866 123.5 7.01 7.01 0.00
31 Vayas 1338 187.9 10.47 7.12 3.35
  Ponce 186475 1625.5 193.6 114.7 78.9

Tourism

 
The Museo Castillo Serrallés receives 100,000 visitors a year
 
The cruise ship Serenade of the Seas arriving at the Port of Ponce during dawn in early 2020

Due to its historical importance throughout the years, Ponce features many points of interest for visiting tourists.[167] The downtown area contains the bulk of Ponce's tourist attractions.[168] Tourism has seen significant growth in recent years. In 2007, over 6,000 tourists visited the city via cruise ships.[169] Passenger movement at the Mercedita Airport in FY 2008 was 278,911, a 1,228% increase over fiscal year 2003 and the highest of all the regional airports for that 5-year period.[170] Though not all of these were tourists, it represents a volume larger than the population of the city itself.

To support a growing tourist industry, around the 1970s, and starting with the Ponce Holiday Inn, several hotels have been built. Newer lodging additions include the Ponce Hilton Golf & Casino Resort, home to the new Costa Caribe Golf & Country Club, featuring a 27-hole PGA championship golf course. The Hotel Meliá has operated in the city continuously since the early 20th century. It has also been studied that the Intercontinental Hotel, which opened in February 1960 and closed in 1975, could be refurbished and re-opened atop the hill near Cruceta del Vigía as the "Magna Vista Resort".[171] The Ponce Ramada also opened in 2009, and other hotel projects in the works include the Four Points by Sheraton, and Marriott Courtyard, among others.[172] In 2013, the downtown Ponce Ramada Hotel added a casino to its 70-room structure.[173][174] Ponce is part of the Government of Puerto Rico's Porta Caribe tourist region.

External audio
  You may a see a video on Ponce's tourist attractions HERE

Ponce en Marcha

 
Skyline of the city of Ponce in 2020, looking east. The city's tallest tower, the 23-story Condominio El Mirador, is next to the extreme right, with the two towers of Hospital Damas to its right.

In recent years an intensive $440 million[175][176] revitalization project called "Ponce en Marcha"[177] ("Ponce on the Move") has increased the city's historic area from 260 to 1,046 buildings.[178] The Ponce en Marcha[d] project was conceived in 1985 by then governor Rafael Hernández Colón during his second term in La Fortaleza and Ponce mayor Jose Dapena Thompson.[179][180] The plan was approved by the Ponce Municipal Legislature on January 14, 2003. It was signed by Governor Sila Calderon via Executive Order on December 28, 2003, and went into effect on January 12, 2004. The plan incorporates a one billion dollars in spending during the period of 2004 through 2012.[181] A significant number of buildings in Ponce are listed in the National Register of Historic Places.[182] The nonprofit Project for Public Places[183] listed the historic downtown Ponce city center as one of the 60 of the World's Great Places, for its "graciously preserved showcase of Caribbean culture".[184] The revitalized historic area of the city goes by various names, including "Ponce Centro" (Ponce Center),[185] "Historic Ponce",[186] and "Historic District."[187] The name "Ponce en Marcha" comes from the revitalization plan of Zona Atocha in Madrid called Atocha en Marcha.[188]

Landmarks

 
The Lions Fountain in Plaza Las Delicias

The city has been christened as Museum City for its many quality museums.[189][190] All museums in Ponce are under municipal government administration. On 15 September 2004, the last four museums not under local control were transferred from the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture to the Ponce Municipal Government by act of the Puerto Rico Legislature.[191] However, these four museums (Casa Armstrong Poventud, Casa Wiechers-Villaronga, Museo de la Música Puertorriqueña, and Casa de la Masacre) continue to be controlled by the ICP.[192][193] Downtown Ponce in particular features several museums and landmarks.[194]

Plaza Las Delicias, the town's main square, features a prominent fountain (namely, the "Lions Fountain"), the Ponce Cathedral, and Parque de Bombas, an old fire house, now a museum, that stands as an iconic symbol of the city and a tribute to the bravery of its firefighters. This plaza is also a usual gathering place for "ponceños". Other buildings around Ponce's main plaza include the Casa Alcaldía (Ponce City Hall), the oldest colonial building in the city, dating to the 1840s, and the Armstrong-Poventud Residence, an example of the neoclassical architectural heritage of the island.

Just north of downtown Ponce lies the Castillo Serrallés and the Cruceta del Vigía, a 100-foot (30 m) observation tower which overlooks the city. The Serralles castle is reported to receive nearly 100,000 visitors every year.[195] The hill on which the Cruceta is located was originally used by scouts to scan for incoming mercantile ships as well as invading ones. The invasion of American troops in 1898 was first spotted from there.

Ponce is home to Puerto Rico's oldest cemetery; in fact, it is the oldest cemetery in the Antilles. In the city outskirts, the Tibes Indigenous Ceremonial Center was discovered in 1975 after hurricane rains uncovered pottery.[196] The center is the site of the oldest cemetery uncovered up to date in the Antilles. With some 200 skeletons unearthed from the year 300 AD, it is considered the largest and the most important archaeological finding in the West Indies.[197][198] Two other cemeteries in Ponce worth noting are the Panteón Nacional Román Baldorioty de Castro and the Cementerio Catolico San Vicente de Paul, both of which are listed in the National Register of Historic Places. The Cementerio Catolico San Vicente de Paul has the most eye-catching burial constructions of any cemetery for the wealthiest families, both local and foreign-born, of southern Puerto Rico.[199]

 
La Guancha Boardwalk as seen from the Boardwalk's observation tower

Also in the city outskirts is Hacienda Buena Vista, an estate built in 1833 originally to grow fruits. It was converted into a coffee plantation and gristmill in 1845. It remained in operation until 1937, then fell into disrepair, but was restored by the government's Fideicomiso de Conservación de Puerto Rico. All the machinery works (the metal parts) are original, operated by water channeled from the 360m Vives waterfall; there is a hydraulic turbine which makes the corn mill work.

Paseo Tablado La Guancha is located in the town's sea shore. It features kiosks with food and beverages, an open-space stage for activities, and a marina called Club Náutico de Ponce. From the observation tower on the boardwalk, Cardona Island Light can be seen. A 45-minute boat ride is also available to Isla de Caja de Muertos (Coffin Island), a small island with several beaches and an 1887 lighthouse.

As of 2008, the city had also engaged in the development of a convention center with a capacity for 3,000 people. It is also to include two major hotels, apartment buildings and recreational facilities.[200] Puerto Rico Route 143 (PR-143), known as the Panoramic Route, runs edging near the municipality's northern border.[201]

Culture

The city is home to a long list of cultural assets including libraries, museums, galleries, and parks, hundreds of buildings of historical value including schools, residences, bridges, and estates, and frequent activities such as festivals and carnivals. The municipality invests close to half a million dollars in promoting its cultural assets.[202] It established its first library in 1894[203] and, as of 2007 had a new central library[204] with seven other branches scattered throughout the municipality.[205]

 
The childhood home in Ponce of Antonio Paoli, one of Puerto Rico's greatest musical performers ever

A number of cultural events take place during the year, most prominently:[206][207]

The city values its cultural traditions as evidenced by the revitalization project Ponce en Marcha. It is deeply rooted in its traditional cultural, artistic, and musical heritage. The love for art and architecture, for example, can be appreciated at its museums of art, music, and architecture.

"Over the last century or so, the north [i.e., San Juan] willingly accepted the influence of western culture with its tendency toward large sprawling metropolises, and the displacement of old values and attitudes. Ponce, on the other hand, has been content to retain its old traditions and culture. Ponce is not concerned about losing its long standing position as the second largest city in population after San Juan. On the contrary, she prefers to maintain her current size, and stick to its old traditions and culture."[213][214]

Some argue that the Ponceño culture is different from the rest of the Island:

"Ponceños have always been a breed apart from other Puerto Ricans. Their insularity and haughtiness are legendary, and some Puerto Ricans claim that even the dialect in Ponce is slightly different from that spoken in the rest of the Island. They are also racially different: you'll see more people of African descent in Ponce than anywhere else in the Island except Loiza."[215]

Others claim that Ponceños exhibit considerable more civic pride than do residents of other locales.[216] Luis Muñoz Rivera, the most important statesman in the Island at the close of the 19th century, referred to Ponce as "the most Puerto Rican city of Puerto Rico."[217][e]

Music

 
Children performing at the annual Feria de Artesanías de Ponce. The Ponce City Hall is visible in the background.

Artistic development also flourished during this period. The surging of popular rhythms like Bomba and Plena took place in the south region of the island, mainly in Ponce. Barrio San Antón is known as one of the birthplaces of the rhythm. Every July, Ponce celebrates an annual festival of Bomba and Plena, which includes various musicians and parades.

Immigrants from Spain, Italy, France, Germany, and England came to Ponce to develop an international city that still maintains rich Taíno and African heritage. The African personality, belief, and music add flavor and colorful rhythm to Ponce's culture. Part of this are the influences of the Bomba and Plena rhythms. These are a combination and Caribbean and African music.[218]

Ponce has also been the birthplace of several singers and musicians. From opera singers like Antonio Paoli, who lived in the early 20th century, to contemporary singers like Ednita Nazario. Also, Salsa singers like Héctor Lavoe, Cheo Feliciano, and Ismael Quintana also come from the city.

Dating back to 1858, Ponce's Carnival is the oldest in Puerto Rico, and acquired an international flavor for its 150th anniversary.[219] It is one of the oldest carnivals celebrated in the Western Hemisphere. It features various parades with masked characters representative of good and evil.

The Museum of Puerto Rican Music, located at the Serrallés-Nevárez family residence in downtown Ponce, illustrates music history on the Island, most of which had its origin and development in Ponce.[220]

No discussion of music in Ponce would be complete without rendering honor to the great performances of King of Tenors Antonio Paoli and danza master Juan Morel Campos, both from Ponce. Today, there is a statue of Juan Morel Campos that adorns the Plaza Las Delicias city square, and the home where Paoli was born and raised functions as the Puerto Rico Center for Folkloric Research, a research center for Puerto Rican culture.

A municipal band presents concerts every Sunday evening, and a Youth Symphony Orchestra also performs.[221]

Arts

 
The Museo de Arte de Ponce, the largest art museum in the Caribbean,[222] is a mecca for the arts in the Island

Ponce's love for the arts dates back to at least 1864 when the Teatro La Perla was built. Ponce is also the birthplace of artists like Miguel Pou, Horacio Castaing, and several others in the fields of painting, sculpture, and others. The City is one of only seven cities in the Western Hemisphere (the others being Mexico City, Havana, Valparaíso, Buenos Aires, Mar del Plata, and Rosario) in the Ruta Europea del Modernisme,[223] an international non-profit association for the promotion and protection of Art Nouveau heritage in the world.[224]

Today, Ponce has more museums (nine) than any other municipality in the Island.[225] Ponce is home to the Museo de Arte de Ponce (MAP), founded in 1959 by fellow ponceño Luis A. Ferré. The museum was operated by Ferré until his death at the age of 99, and it is now under the direction of the Luis A. Ferré Foundation. Designed by Edward Durell Stone, architect of Radio City Music Hall[226] and the Museum of Modern Art in New York, MAP is the only museum of international stature on the Island, the only one that was accredited by the American Alliance of Museums (AAM),[227] and the only one that has received a design prize of honor from the American Institute of Architects (AIA).[228] It houses the most extensive art collection in the Caribbean.

Sports

 
Juan Pachín Vicéns Auditorium, home to various sporting events in Ponce

Most of Ponce's professional teams are called the Leones de Ponce (Ponce Lions, or Ponce Lionesses as the case may be) regardless of the sport. The Leones de Ponce basketball team is one of the leading teams of the island, winning 12 championships during their tenure.[229] The team's venue is the Juan Pachín Vicéns Auditorium. The Leones de Ponce (men's) baseball and the Leonas de Ponce (women's) baseball teams have also been fairly successful.[230] The baseball teams' venue is the Francisco Montaner Stadium.[231] The stadium is located next to the Juan Pachín Vicéns Auditorium.[232]

In 1993 the city hosted the Central American and Caribbean Games, from November 19-30.[233]

The city also hosts two international annual sporting events. In the month of May, it hosts the Ponce Grand Prix, a track and field event in which over 100 athletes participate. During the Memorial Day Weekend in the month of September, the city hosts Cruce a Nado Internacional, a swimming competition with over a dozen countries represented. Also, the Ponce Marathon takes place every December, sometimes as part of the Las Mañanitas event on December 12.

The Francisco "Pancho" Coimbre Sports Museum, named after the baseball player of the same name, was dedicated to the honor of Puerto Rico's great sports men and women.[234] It is located on the grounds of the Charles H. Terry Athletic Park on Lolita Tizol Street, just north of the entrance to Historic Ponce at Puente de los Leones (Lions' Bridge) and the Ponce Tricentennial Park. In 2012 the city commenced construction of the multi-sport complex Ciudad Deportiva Millito Navarro. No date has been announced for its completion yet, but its skateboarding section opened in March 2013.

The main annual sports events are as follows:

Recreation

 
La Guancha Beach at La Guancha, one of 40 salt-water beaches in Ponce

The municipality is home to several parks and beaches, including both passive and active parks. Among the most popular passive parks are the Julio Enrique Monagas Family Park on Ponce By-pass Road (PR-2) at the location where the Rio Portugués feeds into Bucaná. The Parque Urbano Dora Colon Clavell, another passive park is in the downtown area. Active parks include the Charles H. Terry Athletic Field, and several municipal tennis courts, including one at Poly Deportivos with 9 hard courts, and one at La Rambla with six hard courts.[235] There are also many public basketball courts scattered throughout the various barrios of the municipality.

The municipality has 40 beaches including 28 on the mainland and 12 in Caja de Muertos.[236] Among these, about a dozen of them are most notable, including El Tuque Beach in the El Tuque sector on highway PR-2, west of the city, La Guancha Beach at the La Guancha sector south of the city, and four beaches in Caja de Muertos: Pelicano, Playa Larga, Carrucho, and Coast Guard beach.[237] A ferry must be boarded at La Guancha for transportation to the Caja de Muertos beaches.

Religion

During and after colonization, the Roman Catholic Church became the established religion of the colony. Gradually African slaves were converted to Christianity, but many incorporated their own traditions and symbols, maintaining African traditions as well. Ponce Cathedral, listed in the National Register of Historic Places, was built in 1839.[238][239] The Royal Decree of Graces of 1815 allowed for non-Catholics to immigrate legally to Puerto Rico, but it required those who wanted to settle on the island to make a vow of alliance to the Catholic Church. Ponce was the first city in Puerto Rico where Protestant churches were built.[240]

 
Islamic Center at Ponce: numerous religious faiths are practiced in the city

With the U.S. invasion, there was a significant change in the religious landscape in the City and in Puerto Rico. "The Protestant missionaries followed the footprints of the United States soldiers, right after the Treaty of Paris was ratified and Puerto Rico was ceded to the American government."[241] By March 1899, eight months after the occupation, executives from the Methodists, Episcopalians, Baptists, Presbyterians, and others, had arranged for an evangelical division whereby Ponce would have Evangelical, Baptist, and Methodist "campaigns". With the passing of the Foraker Act in 1900, which established total separation between Church and State, the absolute power of the Catholic Church eroded quickly.[241]

Various Protestant churches were soon established and built in Ponce; today many are recognized as historic sites. Among them are the McCabe Memorial Church (Methodist) (1908),[242] and the Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church (Methodist) (1907).[243]

The bell of the Episcopalian Holy Trinity Church in Barrio Cuarto, rang again[244] when the Americans arrived on 25 July 1898. Built in 1873, the church was allowed to function by the Spanish Crown under the conditions that its bell would not be rung, its front doors would always remain closed, and its services would be offered in English only.[245]

Today, Ponce is home to a mix of religious faiths: both Protestants and Catholics, as well as Muslims, have places of worship in Ponce. Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians, Episcopalians, Pentecostals, Adventists, Evangelicals, Disciples of Christ, and Congregationalists are among the Protestant faiths with a following in Ponce. Catholicism is the faith of the majority of ponceños. In 2009, the Catholic Church had 18 parishes in the municipality, two bishops and 131 priests.[246] In his Memoirs, Albert E. Lee summed up Ponce's attitude towards religion:

Ponce was not only tolerant, it was indifferent in religious matters. Protestants and Catholics, and even atheists, lived together socially on the friendliest terms. Religion was strictly a personal affair in Ponce while in San Juan at times gave the impression that it was ready to practice the auto-de-fe [sic]."[247]

Economy

 
Before its merger with Banco Popular in 1991, Banco de Ponce (above) had the most extensive international network of branches of any Puerto Rican bank[248]

Traditionally the city's economy had depended almost entirely on the sugarcane industry.[249] Since around the 1950s, however, the town's economy has diversified and today its economy revolves around a mixed-industry manufacturing sector, retail, and tourism.[250][251] The building of a mega port, anticipated to be completed in 2012,[252] is expected to add significantly to the area's economy. Agriculture, retail, and services are also significant players in the local economy. It is considered an agricultural, trade, and distribution center, with manufacturing that includes electronics, communications equipment, food processing, pharmaceutical drugs, concrete plants, scientific instruments and rum distilling as well as an established gourmet coffee agricultural industry.[253] The city, though, suffers from an unemployment rate that hovers around the 15 percent mark.[254]

Manufacturing

The municipality is considered one of the most developed municipalities in Puerto Rico.[255] Its manufacturing sectors include electronic and electrical equipment, communications equipment, food processing, pharmaceutical drugs, concrete plants, and scientific instruments.[253] It also produces leather products, needlework, and fish flour to a lesser extent. Ponce is home to the Serralles rum distillery, which manufactures Don Q, and to Industrias Vassallo, a leader in PVC manufacturing. Other important local manufacturers are Ponce Cement, Cristalia Premium Water, Rovira Biscuits Corporation, and Café Rico. Ponce was once the headquarters for Puerto Rico Iron Works, Ponce Salt Industries, and Ponce Candy Industries.

Agriculture

 
Atocha Promenade is part of El Ponce Tradicional, the old historic district

In the agricultural sector, the most important products are coffee, followed by plantains, bananas, oranges, and grapefruits. A mix of public and private services, as well as finance, retail sales, and construction round up Ponce's economic rhythm.[256] Cafe Rico, which metamorphosed from coffee-grower Cafeteros de Puerto Rico, has its headquarters in Ponce.

Retail

For many years commercial retail activity in Ponce centered around what is now Paseo Atocha. This has shifted in recent years, and most retail activity today occurs in one of Ponce's various malls, in particular Plaza del Caribe. Centro del Sur Mall is also a significant retail area, as is Ponce Mall.[257]

Mega port

Ponce is home to Puerto Rico's chief Caribbean port, the Port of Ponce.[258] The port is expanding to transform it into a mega port, called the Port of the Americas that will operate as an international transshipment port. When fully operational, it is expected to support 100,000 jobs.[259]

Demographics

Racial distribution
Race - Ponce, Puerto Rico - 2020 Census[91]
Race Population % of Total
White 26,148 19.0%
Black/Afro Puerto Rican 18,325 13.3%
American Indian/Alaska Native 4,129 3.0%
Asian 365 0.3%
Two or more races/Some other race 88,524 64.4%

Ponce has consistently ranked as one of the most populous cities in Puerto Rico. Ponce's population, according to the 2010 census, stands at 166,327, with a population density of 1,449.3 persons per square mile (278.4/km²), ranking third in terms of population among Puerto Rican municipalities.

Government

 
The Ponce Municipal Hall, built in the 1840s, is the oldest colonial building in the city.

The municipal government has its seat in the city of Ponce.[261][262] Since its foundation in 1692, the city of Ponce has been led by a mayor. Its first mayor was Don Pedro Sánchez de Matos. The 2008 election of María Meléndez Altieri (PNP), brought Ponce the first woman to be elected to the mayoral office in the city's history. She was re-elected in 2012 and again in 2016, and serve as mayor until 2021. In the 2020 election Luis Irizarri Pabón (PPD) was elected as mayor and is currently serving as mayor.[263] Ponce's best known mayor of recent years is perhaps Rafael "Churumba" Cordero Santiago (PPD), who held office from 1989 until his sudden death on the morning of 17 January 2004, after suffering three successive brain strokes.

The city also has a municipal legislature that handles local legislative matters. Ponce has had a municipal council since 1812.[264][f][265] The municipal legislature is composed of 16 civilians elected during the general elections, along with the mayor, state representatives and senators. The delegations are, until the 2020 general election, distributed as follows: 13 legislators of the Popular Democratic Party, two legislators of the New Progressive Party, and one legislator from the Movimento Victoria Ciudadana.

The Ponce City Hall has one of the most unusual histories of any city hall throughout the world. "Originally built in the 1840s as a public assembly hall, Ponce's City Hall was a jail until the end of the 19th century. Current galleries were former cells, and executions were held in the courtyard. Four U.S. presidents spoke from the balcony - Theodore Roosevelt, Herbert Hoover, Franklin Roosevelt and George Bush." It is listed in the National Register of Historic Places.[266]

In 2005, the municipality's budget was US$152 million.[267] In 2010-2011 it was $158 million.[268] In 2016-2017 the proposed budget was $140 million.[269] From a business perspective, the Ponce municipal government is generally praised for its efficiency and speediness, thanks to its adoption of the Autonomous Municipality Law of 1991.[270]

The municipality of Ponce is the seat of the Puerto Rico Senatorial district V, which is represented by two senators. During the 2020 Puerto Rico Senate election, Marially González and Ramón Ruiz, both from the Popular Democratic Party, were elected as District Senators and are currently serving.[271]

Symbols

The municipio has an official flag and coat of arms.[272]

Coat of arms

The coat of arms of the municipality is based on the design of the official mayoral seal that was adopted in 1844 under the administration of mayor Salvador de Vives.[273]

 
Coat of arms of Ponce.

The coat of arms of Ponce consists of an escutcheon (shield) in the Spanish tradition. This shield has a field with a party per bend division. The division runs from top left to bottom right. The field is red and black, bordered with a fine golden line. In the center of the shield is the figure of an erect lion standing on a bridge. The top of the bridge is a golden, the middle is red bricks, and the base foundation is gray rocks. Under the bridge there are gray wavy lines. Over the shield rests a five-tower golden stone wall with openings in the form of red windows. To the left of the shield is a coffee tree branch with its fruit, and to the right of the shield is a sugarcane stalk. The symbols of the shield are as follows: The field represents the flag of the municipality of Ponce, divided diagonally in the traditional city colors: red and black. The lion over the bridge alludes to the last name of the conqueror and first governor of Puerto Rico, Juan Ponce de Leon. The waves under the bridge allude to the Rio Portugues, on the banks of which the city was born. The coronet in the form of a five-tower mural crown above the shield allude to the Spanish crown, through which the settlement obtained its city charter. The coffee tree branch and the sugarcane stalk represent the main agricultural basis of the economy of the young municipality.[273]

Flag

 
The 1692 Flag of the Municipality of Ponce, adopted in 1967, commemorates its founding
 
The 1877 Flag of the city of Ponce, adopted in 1977, commemorates the year of its city charter

Ponce has two official flags, one for the municipality and one for the city proper. The municipal flag, "the 1692 flag", was adopted in 1967 via a municipal ordinance. This flag, designed by Mario Ramirez, was selected from among a number of public proposals. It consisted of a rectangular cloth divided by a diagonal line into two equal isosceles triangles. The line ran from the top right-hand corner to the bottom left-hand corner. The top triangle was black; the bottom right triangle was red. On the top triangle was the figure of a lion over a bridge. On the bottom triangle was the word "Ponce" with the number "1692", the date when the municipality was founded. Ponce Municipal Assembly Order No. 5, Section 5, of Municipal Assembly Year 1966-1967 established that the last Sunday in April is "Día de la Bandera de Ponce" (Ponce Flag Day).[274]

Ten years later, in 1977, a new municipal ordinance introduced a flag, "the 1877 city flag" to commemorate the one 100th anniversary of the declaration of the city charter. This (1977) flag consisted of a rectangular cloth divided by a diagonal line, creating two equal isosceles triangles, starting from the top left hand corner and ending on the lower right hand corner. The top triangle is red; the bottom triangle is black. In the center of the flag sits the shield of the municipality. Under this shield is the number "1877", the year of the founding of the city, and above the shield is the word "PONCE". Some flags have the "1877" date on the left border of the bottom triangle and the name of the city on the right border of the triangle, as illustrated in the insert on the left.[275]

Municipal services

Fire protection

 
Parque de Bombas - Long the iconic symbol of the city, was the first fire station in Puerto Rico

The city's fire department has a history of firsts, including being the first organized fire department in the Island. As the largest city in the island at the time, and de facto economic and social center of Puerto Rico, this in effect also created the first Puerto Rico Fire Department. The Ponce Fire Department also built the first fire station in the Island,[276][277] which still stands to this day, and is now open as the Parque de Bombas museum. Also, in 1951, Ponce's Fire Chief Raúl Gándara-Cartagena, wrote a book on the firemen's service, which became a firemen's manual in several Latin American countries.[278] In recognition of the service rendered by its fire fighters, the City of Ponce built them homes resulting in the creation of the 25 de Enero Street near the city's historic district.

Major fires

The city has withstood some nearly catastrophic fires.

A major fire took place on February 27, 1820,[279][280] that "almost destroyed the early Ponce settlement". It destroyed 106 "of the best homes in town."[281] In 1823, then Governor of Puerto Rico, Miguel de la Torre mandated that "every male from 16 to 60 years old must be a firefighter".[282] Those firefighters had to supply their own fire fighting equipment (essentially picks, buckets, and shovels). Unfortunately, once De la Torre left office, this first fire fighting institution started to decay.[282]

Another major fire occurred in La Playa in March 1845,[281] that destroyed "most of the Ponce vicinity." It significantly damaged the Spanish Customs House in Ponce, this being one of the few buildings left standing after the fire.[283] The fire burned down the major buildings of the "Marina de Ponce".[281] After this fire, then governor of Puerto Rico Conde de Mirasol (born Rafael de Aristegui y Velez),[284] created a new fire fighting organization staffed by volunteers.[282] In 1862, the Ponce Firefighters Corps was reorganized under the administration of Ponce mayor Luis de Quixano y Font, and Tomás Cladellas was named fire chief.[282] In 1879 the Ponce Fire Corps reorganized again, with a new fire chief, the local architect Juan Bertoli.

On September 25, 1880 another fire, took place destroying most of the older civil records (births, baptisms, marriages, etc.) of the Ponce parish.[285] In 1883, the Ponce firefighter corps reorganized once more, this time in a more definitive fashion when Máximo Meana was mayor of Ponce. During this time the Ponce Fire Corps was made up of 400 firefighters. Its leadership consisted of Julio Steinacher, fire chief, Juan Seix, second fire chief, Oscar Schuch Olivero, Chief of Brigade, and Fernando M. Toro, Supervisor of the Gymnastics Academy. Concurrent with this, the firefighter corps music band was organized. In September 1883, Juan Morel Campos formally organized the Ponce Fire Corps Municipal Band which exists to this day.[282]

 
Distinctive red-and-black striped cottages at Calle 25 de Enero

The fourth Ponce fire of large proportions occurred on January 25, 1899.[286] The fire was fought by a group of firefighters among whom was Pedro Sabater and the civilian Rafael Rivera Esbrí, who would later become mayor of the city. The fire started at the U.S. munitions depot on the lot currently occupied by the Ponce High School building and grounds. The heroes in that fire, believed to have saved the city from certain annihilation, are remembered to this day with monuments on their tombs as well as in a monument in the city square Plaza Las Delicias.[282] As a further gesture of gratitude, a neighborhood of distinctive Victorian-style cottages were constructed to house the firefighters and their families. These houses, painted in the red and black colors of the city, are located along a street named Calle 25 de Enero (25 de Enero street); they are still owned and occupied by the descendants of these firefighters and are a scenic attraction in Ponce's historic center.

Police

The Ponce Municipal Police consists of a force of some 500 officers.[287] This force is complemented by the Puerto Rico Police force. The Ponce Municipal Police has its headquarters at the southwest corner of the intersection of PR-163 (Las Americas Avenue) and PR-2R (Carretera Pámpanos). In addition it has three precincts as follows: Cantera, La Guancha, and Coto Laurel, plus specialized units at Port of the Americas (maritime unit), Mariani (transit unit), Belgica (motorcycle unit), and Parque Dora Clavell (tourism unit).

The Puerto Rico Police had its Ponce area regional headquarters from 1970 until 2011 on Hostos Avenue.[288] In 2011 it moved its command center to a new and larger facility further west on Urbanizacion Los Caobos in Barrio Bucana. It commands five precincts in the city: Villa, Playa, Morel Campos, La Rambla, and El Tuque. The Ponce municipal coverage of the Puerto Rico Police force is as follows:

  • The Villa precinct covers barrios Primero, Segundo, Tercero, Cuarto, Quinto, and Sexto, and Portugués Urbano. This precinct includes the historic Ponce district.
  • The Playa precinct (# 258[289]) covers the barrios of Playa, Capitanejo, Bucaná, and Vayas.
  • The La Rambla precinct covers barrios Anón, Real, Maragüez, Cerrillos, Coto Laurel, Sabanetas, San Patricio, Monte Llano, Machuelo Arriba, Machuelo Abajo, and Portugués.
  • The El Tuque precinct covers barrios Canas and Canas Urbano.
  • The Morel Campos precinct covers barrios Guaraguao, Marueño, Tibes, Magueyes, Magueyes Urbano, and Quebrada Limón.

Crime

In 2002, most of the homicides in Puerto Rico were occurring in San Juan and the greater metropolitan areas of Bayamón, Carolina and Caguas, but Ponce also had a high homicide rate. Also in 2002, Puerto Rico law enforcement officials drafted plans to increase the number of forensic investigators by 25%. The investigators, assigned to the Institute of Forensic Sciences in San Juan, covered homicides in about 65 percent of the island, but the Institute was considering assigning Ponce its own unit.[290] By mid-year 2005, there had been 25 more murder cases in Ponce than for all of 2004, a significant increase.[291]

The police acknowledged that most crime cases in Puerto Rico are linked to drug-trafficking and illegal weapons. In mid-July 2005, Gov. Aníbal Acevedo Vilá announced a series of measures aimed at lowering Ponce's high murder rate. Some of those measures included the permanent transfer of 100 agents to the area, the appointment of a ballistics expert from the Institute of Forensic Sciences and of two prosecutors for the Department of Justice in Ponce. Puerto Rico Police Superintendent Pedro Toledo admitted that more than 100 agents are actually needed in the Ponce region in 2005, but that "there would be no additional transfers at the moment to avoid affecting other police areas."[291]

Ponce is a convenient transition point for drug smugglers due to its location on the Caribbean Sea and its proximity to Colombia and Venezuela.[292] From there packages are then transported to the United States by various means including the United States Postal Service.[292] The city is included in the area's HIDTA region.[292]

As most of the crime in Ponce is connected to the drug-trade, police have an eye on illegal smuggling through the Port of Ponce[293] A 2008 government report stated that, "Drug smuggling in containerized cargo is a significant maritime threat to the HIDTA (High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area) region. The vast and increasing quantity of goods transshipped through the region every year provides drug traffickers with ample opportunity to smuggle illicit drugs into, through, and from the area.[292] In July 2005, local police scored some points in their fight against drug-trafficking.[294]

By 2007, Ponce had experienced a 61% decline in the rate of violent crimes (Type I).[295] In 2010, there was a further reduction of 12 percent in violent crimes over 2009 statistics.[296] In August 2013, the Ponce Area Police Region, which includes Ponce and seven other adjacent municipalities, registered 27 fewer Type I crimes that it had by the same period in 2012.[297]

For the Ponce MSA, which includes the city of Ponce, its nineteen surrounding municipal barrios, the municipality of Juana Diaz, and the municipality of Villalba, crime data was tabulated in 2002 (Total MSA Population: 364,849). No data is available for the city or for the municipality of Ponce alone. The following statistics are registered:

Category Number Rate per 100,000
Violent crime^ 929 254.6
Property crime^^ 5,938 1,627.5
Murder and NNMS^^^ 83 22.7
Forcible rape 25 6.9
Robbery 525 143.9
Aggravated assault 296 81.1
Burglary 1,588 435.2
Larceny-theft 3,803 1,042.3
Motor vehicle theft 547 149.9

Notes:
^ Violent crimes include: murder, forcible rape, robbery, and aggravated assault.
^^ Property crimes include: burglary, larceny-theft, and motor vehicle theft.
^^^ NNMS, non-negligent manslaughter
Source: FBI[298]

FBI satellite office

There is an FBI satellite office located in Ponce.[299]

Education

 
Front entrance of the Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico, one of over 10 centers of higher learning in the city

Grade schools and high schools

Ponce's first school for boys was established in 1820.[300] Today there are over a hundred public and private schools.[301] As with the rest of Puerto Rico, public education in Ponce is handled by the Puerto Rico Department of Education. However, the local government is taking on a greater role in public education. On June 13, 2010, the mayor of Ponce announced the creation of a Municipal Education System and a School Board with the objective of obtaining accreditation for what would be the first free bilingual school in the city.[289]

Colleges and universities

There are also several colleges and universities located in the city, offering higher education, including professional degrees in architecture, medicine, law, and pharmacy. Some of these are:

There are also several other technical institutions like the Instituto de Banca y Comercio, Trinity College,[303] and the Ponce Paramedical College.

Nova Southeastern University, based in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, has a School of Pharmacy campus in Ponce.[304]

Health care

The city is served by several clinics and hospitals. There are four comprehensive care hospitals: Hospital Dr. Pila, Hospital San Cristobal, Hospital San Lucas,[305] and Hospital de Damas. In addition, Hospital Oncológico Andrés Grillasca specializes in the treatment of cancer,[306] and Hospital Siquiátrico specializes in mental disorders.[307] There is also a U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs Outpatient Clinic that provides health services to U.S. veterans.[308] The U.S. Veterans Administration will build a new hospital in the city to satisfy regional needs.[309] In 2009, Hospital Damas was listed in the U.S. News & World Report as one of the best hospitals under the U.S. flag.[310] Ponce has the highest concentration of medical infrastructure per inhabitant of any municipality in Puerto Rico.

Transportation

Due to its commercial and industrial significance, Ponce has consistently been a hub of transportation to the rest of the island.

Puerto Rico Highway 52 provides access to Salinas, Caguas, and San Juan. PR-2 grants access to southwestern and western municipalities as a full-access freeway. The PR-10 highway, which is still under construction as a faster alternative to PR-123, provides access to the interior of the island as well as points north of the island, such as Arecibo. PR-1 provides access to various points east and southeast of Puerto Rico, while PR-14 provides access to Coamo and other points in the central mountain region. PR-132 grants country-side access to the town of Peñuelas. PR-123 is the old road to Adjuntas and, while treacherous, it does provide an appreciation for countryside living in some of the municipality's barrios, such as Magueyes and Guaraguao.[311][312]

 
Ponce's Mercedita Airport used to be an air strip for a sugarcane mill in the early twentieth century

The city is served by a network of local highways and freeways. Running entirely within the municipal limits are PR-12, PR-9, PR-133, and PR-163 and a few others. Freeway PR-12 runs northbound starting at the Port of Ponce to connect with PR-14 on the northeastern part of the city. PR-9, also known as the Circuito de Circumnavegación de Ponce (Ponce's Circumferential Highway), is a highway still partly under construction. It runs mostly north of the city and connects PR-52 to PR-10 in an east-to-west fashion; when completed it will run as a beltway around most of the eastern and northern sections of the city.[313] PR-133 (Calle Comercio) connects PR-2 in west Ponce to PR-132. It is an extension of PR-1 from its PR-2 terminus into the city center. PR-163 crosses the City east-to-west connecting PR-52 and PR-14.[314][315][316][317] The municipality has 115 bridges.[318]

Ponce's public transportation system consists of taxicabs and share taxi service providing public cars and vans known as públicos[319] and a bus-based mass transit system.[320] There are five taxi companies in the city.[321] Most públicos depart from the terminal hub located in downtown Ponce, the Terminal de Carros Públicos Carlos Garay.[322][323] During the 1990s and 2000s, there was also a trolley system reminiscent of the one the city used in the 19th century and which traveled through the downtown streets, and which was used mostly by tourists.[324] Today it is used mostly during special events. There is also a small train that can bring tourists from the historic downtown area to the Paseo Tablado La Guancha on the southern shore,[325] As with the trolley, today the train is used mostly during special events. A ferry provides service to Isla de Caja de Muertos.[326] The new intra-city mass transit system, SITRAS, was scheduled to start operating in November 2011,[327] and, after a 3-month delay, the $4 million SITRAS system, was launched with 11 buses and three routes in February 2012.[320] A fourth route was to be added for the El Tuque sector according to a June 30, 2012 news report.[328]

Mercedita Airport sits 3 miles (4.8 km) east of downtown Ponce and handles both intra-island and international flights. The airport, used to be a private airfield belonging to Destilería Serralles rum distillery before it became a commercial airport serving the Ponce area in the 1940s. There is daily commercial non-stop air service to points in the United States.[329]

Since 1804, Ponce already boasted its own port facilities for large cargo ships.[330] The Port of Ponce is Puerto Rico's chief Caribbean port.[331] It is known as the Port of the Americas and is under expansion to convert it into a major international shipping hub.[332] It receives both cargo as well as passenger cruise ships.[333][334] A short-haul freight railroad also operates within the Port facilities.[335]

Notable Ponceños

International relations

The Dominican Republic maintains a consular office in the city.[336]

Twin towns – sister cities

Ponce is twinned with:

Commemorative dates

The following dates hold special significance for Ponceños and are motive for annual celebrations and/or memorials:

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Some publications/reporters have erroneously stated Ponce's date of founding as December 12, 1692 (see, for example, Jose Fernandez-Colon, The Associated Press, at "Noticias Online" on January 24, 2009, at Accessed 23 March 2019.) Another incorrect date sometimes found is September 12, 1692 (See, for example, Jorge L. Perez (El Nuevo Dia) and Jorge Figueroa (Ponce Municipal Historian), at Historic Buildings and Structures in Ponce, Puerto Rico., at the text accompanying Drawing #20, titled "Tumba de los Bomberos". Puerto Rico Historic Buildings Drawings Society. 2019. Accessed 4 February 2019. See also Mapa de Municipios y Barrios: Ponce, Memoria Numero 27. 30 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine Gobierno del Estado Libre Asociado de Puerto Rico. Junta de Planificación. Santurce, Puerto Rico. 1953. p. 6.). Miguel A Sanchez-Celada also points to the September 12, 1692 date based on the record that on that date the Spanish Crown officially recognized, via Royal Decree, the hamlet as a town (See Miguel A Sanchez-Celada. Evolución urbana de Ponce (Puerto_Rico) según la cartografía Histórica. Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (UNED), Madrid, Spain. 2018. (DOI:http:..dx.doi.org/10.5944/etfvi.11.2018.20421) In, Espacio, Tiempo y Forma", Revista de la Facultad de Geografia e Historia, UNED. Serie VI. Geografía 11. 2018, pp. 219-245. ISSN 1130-2968. E-ISSN 2340-146x.) In this article the date reported is that given by the authorities closest to the founding date, and with their respective references.
  2. ^ Some historians state that the municipality was named after Juan Ponce de León himself. (Crediting Juan Ponce de León himself see, for example, Eduardo Neuman Gandia's Verdadera y Auténtica Historia de la Ciudad de Ponce. (San Juan, Puerto Rico: Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña. 1913.) Page 34, and Jose Luis Diaz de Villegas, https://books.google.com/books?id=ovzJlU1f-iAC&pg=PA46, and Sandra Torres Guzmán's Una hacienda atada a la historia citadina, https://www.periodicolaperla.com/una-hacienda-atada-a-la-historia-citadina/ 25 September 2019 at the Wayback Machine.) Others state it was named after Juan Ponce de Leon y Loayza, the great-grandson of Juan Ponce de Leon. (Crediting the great-grandson see, for example, Encyclopedia Puerto Rico, . Archived from the original on 29 May 2012. Retrieved 25 July 2012.; J.A. Corretjer, http://www.yerbabruja.com/pueblos/ponce.html; Frommer, https://books.google.com/books?id=Wy_BSu4a2EYC&pg=PA185; and Harry S. Pariser, https://books.google.com/books?id=KawuqbFxLS0C&pg=PT239.) A few authorities state it may have been named after the Ponce de León family in general, covering father, son, grandson, and great-grandson (See, for example, Francisco Lluch Mora's "Orígenes y Fundación de Ponce, y otras noticias relativas a su desarrollo urbano, demográfico y cultural (siglos XVI-XIX)", Segunda Edición, Editorial Plaza Mayor, 2006, page 27.). Still others state it was founded by Juan Ponce de León y Loayza but named by him in the memory of his great-grandfather, the Spanish Conquistador Juan Ponce de León.

Footnotes

  1. ^ During the 1600s and 1700s, the rural areas of a municipal jurisdiction, today (2019) called "barrio" in Puerto Rico, were then called "partido", a term used to refer to all the territory that depended from the Municipal Government of a city or town (See, Lorenzo A. Balasquide, Compendio Intrahistórico de Peñuelas, San Juan, Puerto Rico: Editorial Cordillera, Inc., 1972, p. 51, footnote #23; Aida R. Caro Costas, El Cabildo or Regimen Municipal Puertorriqueño en el Siglo XVIII: La Gestión Municipal Puertorriqueña, Tomo II, San Juan, Puerto Rico: Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña, 1974, p. 38). In 1670, that Municipal Government was San Germán.
  2. ^ Coined "Ciudad Señorial" by Manuel Fernández Juncos in 1864 upon the inauguration of Teatro La Perla. (Ref: Neysa Rodriguez Deynes, Rafael J. Torres Torres, and Carlos Aneiro Perez. "Teatro La Perla", in Brevario Sobre la Historia de Ponce y Sus Principales Lugares de Interés. Gobierno Municipal de Ponce (Ponce, Puerto Rico). Model Offset Printing. 1991. page 125.)
  3. ^ Sometimes also translated "The Patrician City" (See, Ileana M. Rodríguez-Silva's "Silencing Race: Disentangling Blackness, Colonialism, and National Identities in Puerto Rico". New York: Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan. 2012. Page 94.) or "The Noble City" (See Ponce: General Information. Puerto Rico Encyclopedia. Retrieved 25 November 2009.), but translations into "The Majestic City" (See Fundación Puertorriqueña de las Humanidades. Ponce Ciudad Museo 2001. 2001. p. 149.), "The Lordly City" (See La Perla Theater in Ponce. Ivonne Acosta. Encyclopedia de Puerto Rico. 29 September 2008. Accessed 28 November 2018.), and "The Estately City", have also been encountered.
  4. ^ For an extensive discussion of the Plan Ponce en Marcha, see Carmelo Rosario Natal, "Ponce en Marcha y las Primeras Iniciativas", in "Ponce en Su Historia Moderna: 1945-2002," Gobierno Municipal de Ponce, First Edition, 2003, Pages 242-324.
  5. ^ It has, also, been called a "more profoundly Puerto Rican city than San Juan". See Enrique A. Laguerre's "Mito de la ponceñidad", El Mundo, 8 November 1980, page 9-A.
  6. ^ Ayuntamiento de Ponce was the second formed in Puerto Rico, after San Juan's. See Historia de los partidos reformista y conservador de Puerto-Rico. Francisco Mariano Quiñones. Tipografía Comercial Comercio 13, Marina. Mayaguez, Puerto Rico. 1889. Page 7.

References

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External links

  • Photos of Ponce:
    • Photos of Ponce at Getty Images
    • Photos of Ponce at Flickr
    • 1930s Panoramic view of the city of Ponce
  • Tourism
    • Historic Places in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, a National Park Service Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary
    • Management Plan for La Esperanza Nature Preserve in Ponce, Puerto Rico. 6 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine Matthew Bourque, Drew Digeser, Stephen Partridge, and Hussein Yatim. Worcester Polytechnic Institute. Worcester, Massachusetts. 2 May 2012. Retrieved 4 August 2013.
  • Autonomous Municipalities Laws:
  • Ponce History
    • 29 December 2000 'Ponce en Marcha' Final Decision by the Puerto Rico Supreme Court (2000 DTS 194, MUNICIPIO DE PONCE V. AUTORIDAD DE CARRETERAS 2000TSPR194; Case Number: CC-98-241 Cons. CC-98-231, 250, 257, 258 and 259)
    • 29 December 2000 'Ponce en Marcha' Dissent Opinion from Associate P.R. Sup. Court Justice Honorable Efraín Rivera Pérez (page 1)
    • 29 December 2000 'Ponce en Marcha' Dissent Opinion from Associate P.R. Sup. Court Justice Honorable Efraín Rivera Pérez (page 2)
  • Census:
    • Ponce and its barrios, United States Census Bureau
  • Others:

    ponce, puerto, rico, ponce, ɔː, spanish, ˈponθe, listen, locally, ˈponse, both, city, municipality, southern, coast, puerto, rico, city, seat, municipal, government, ponce, municipio, autónomo, poncecity, municipalityautonomous, municipality, poncefrom, left, . Ponce US ˈ p ɔː n s eɪ ˈ p oʊ n UK ˈ p ɒ n s eɪ Spanish ˈpon8e listen locally ˈponse is both 25 a city and a municipality on the southern coast of Puerto Rico The city is the seat of the municipal government Ponce Municipio Autonomo de PonceCity and MunicipalityAutonomous Municipality of PonceFrom top left to right City skyline with the Cordillera Central in the background Ponce Cathedral and Parque de Bombas both in the downtown Ponce Historic Zone and Paseo Tablado La Guancha on the shores of the Caribbean SeaFlagCoat of armsNicknames La Perla del Sur Ciudad Senorial Ciudad de los Leones Ciudad de las Quenepas Motto Ponce es Ponce 1 2 Anthem La Perla del Sur 3 4 Map of Puerto Rico highlighting Ponce MunicipalityCoordinates 18 0 39 132 N 66 36 50 1474 W 18 01087000 N 66 613929833 W 18 01087000 66 613929833 Coordinates 18 0 39 132 N 66 36 50 1474 W 18 01087000 N 66 613929833 W 18 01087000 66 613929833 5 Commonwealth Puerto RicoSettled1500BC Non Europeans 6 7 8 Re settled1582 Europeans 9 10 11 Sitio1646 Dispersed settlement 12 13 14 Partido1670 Hamlet 15 16 a FoundedAugust 12 1692 Village 17 18 19 20 VillaJuly 29 1848 CiudadAugust 13 1877 21 Named forJuan Ponce de Leon y LoayzaBarrios31 barrios AnonBucanaCanasCanas UrbanoCapitanejoCerrillosCoto LaurelCuartoGuaraguaoMachuelo AbajoMachuelo ArribaMagueyesMagueyes UrbanoMaraguezMaruenoMontes LlanosPlayaPortugues RuralPortugues UrbanoPrimeroQuebrada LimonQuintoRealSabanetasSan AntonSan PatricioSegundoSextoTerceroTibesVayasGovernment TypeMayor council MayorLuis Irizarry Pabon PPD CouncilAsamblea Municipal de PonceArea City and Municipality193 6 sq mi 501 km2 Land114 8 sq mi 297 km2 Water78 8 sq mi 204 km2 Elevation 22 52 ft 16 m Population 2020 23 City and Municipality137 491 Rank4th in Puerto Rico Density710 sq mi 270 km2 Metro224 142 MSA CSA365 233DemonymPoncenosTime zoneUTC 4 AST ZIP Codes00715 00716 00717 00728 00730 00731 00732 00733 00734 00780Area code787 939Major routesGNIS feature ID1611718 22 Websitehttp visitponce com Date of the Villa and Ciudad chartersPonce Puerto Rico s most populated city outside the San Juan metropolitan area was founded on August 12 1692 note 1 26 20 27 17 and is named for Juan Ponce de Leon y Loayza 28 the great grandson of Spanish conquistador Juan Ponce de Leon note 2 Ponce is often referred to as La Perla del Sur The Pearl of the South La Ciudad Senorial b The Manorial City c and La Ciudad de las Quenepas Genip City The city serves as the governmental seat of the autonomous municipality as well as the regional hub for various Government of Puerto Rico entities such as the Judiciary of Puerto Rico It is also the regional center for various other Government of Puerto Rico and US Federal Government agencies Ponce is a principal city of both the Ponce Metropolitan Statistical Area and the Ponce Yauco Coamo Combined Statistical Area The Municipality of Ponce officially the Autonomous Municipality of Ponce is located in the southern coastal plain region of the island south of Adjuntas Utuado and Jayuya east of Penuelas west of Juana Diaz and bordered on the south by the Caribbean Sea The municipality has 31 barrios including 19 outside the city s urban area and 12 in the urban area of the city The historic Ponce Pueblo district located in the downtown area of the city is shared by several of the downtown barrios and is located approximately three miles 4 8 km inland from the shores of the Caribbean The municipality of Ponce is the second largest in Puerto Rico by land area and it was the first in Puerto Rico to obtain its autonomy becoming the Autonomous Municipality of Ponce in 1992 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early settlers 1 2 19th century immigrants 1 3 Ponce in the 20th century 1 3 1 U S invasion 1 3 2 Period of stagnation 1 3 3 Ponce massacre 1 3 4 Hub for political and economic activity 1 3 5 1970s economic decline 1 3 6 The Mameyes landslide 1 4 Recent history 2 Geography 2 1 Land features 2 2 Water features 2 3 Climate 3 Cityscape 3 1 Architecture 3 2 Barrios 4 Tourism 4 1 Ponce en Marcha 4 2 Landmarks 5 Culture 5 1 Music 5 2 Arts 5 3 Sports 5 4 Recreation 5 5 Religion 6 Economy 6 1 Manufacturing 6 2 Agriculture 6 3 Retail 6 4 Mega port 7 Demographics 8 Government 9 Symbols 9 1 Coat of arms 9 2 Flag 10 Municipal services 10 1 Fire protection 10 1 1 Major fires 10 2 Police 10 2 1 Crime 10 2 2 FBI satellite office 11 Education 11 1 Grade schools and high schools 11 2 Colleges and universities 12 Health care 13 Transportation 14 Notable Poncenos 15 International relations 15 1 Twin towns sister cities 16 Commemorative dates 17 See also 18 Notes 19 Footnotes 20 References 21 External linksHistory Edit Ponce s town center circa 1900 See also Timeline of Ponce Puerto Rico history Further information National Register of Historic Places listings in southern Puerto Rico Ponce Early settlers Edit The region of what is now Ponce belonged to the Taino Guaynia region which stretched along the southern coast of Puerto Rico 29 Agueybana a cacique who led the region was among those who greeted Spanish conquistador Juan Ponce de Leon when he came to the island in 1508 Archaeological findings have identified four sites within the municipality of Ponce with archaeological significance Canas Tibes Caracoles and El Bronce 30 During the first years of the colonization Spanish families started settling around the Jacaguas River in the south of the island 31 For security reasons 32 these families moved to the banks of the Rio Portugues then called Baramaya 33 34 Starting around 1646 the whole area from the Rio Portugues to the Bay of Guayanilla was called Ponce 35 36 In 1670 a small chapel was raised in the middle of the small settlement and dedicated in honor of Our Lady of Guadalupe 37 Among its earliest settlers were Juan Ponce de Leon y Loayza and the Portuguese Don Pedro Rodriguez de Guzman from nearby San German 38 On September 17 1692 the King of Spain Carlos II issued a Cedula Real Royal Permit converting the chapel into a parish and in so doing officially recognizing the small settlement as a hamlet 39 It is believed that Juan Ponce de Leon y Loayza Juan Ponce de Leon s great grandson was instrumental in obtaining the royal permit to formalize the founding of the hamlet 40 Captains Enrique Salazar and Miguel del Toro were also instrumental 41 The city is named after Juan Ponce de Leon y Loayza 42 43 the great grandson of Spanish conquistador Juan Ponce de Leon 44 In the early 18th century Don Antonio Abad Rodriguez Berrios built a small chapel under the name of San Antonio Abad The area would later receive the name of San Anton a historically important part of modern Ponce 45 In 1712 the village was chartered as El Poblado de Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe de Ponce The Village of Our Lady of Guadalupe of Ponce 46 19th century immigrants Edit In the early 19th century Ponce continued to be one of dozens of hamlets that dotted the Island Its inhabitants survived by subsistence agriculture cattle raising and maritime contraband with foreigners Mayor Jose Benitez categorized the jurisdiction into cotos hatos criaderos monterias and terrenos realengos 47 Cotos were lands awarded to residents as reward for their services to the king They were developed into estancias or lands apt to be cultivated for agricultural use Hatos were lands not granted to anyone in particular but available for communal use where cattle could roam at will Monterias were hilly areas located next to hatos were cattle could be reigned in or gathered together with the help of trained dogs Criaderos were lands were cows could be herded for milk production Goats sheep pigs asses and mares were also herded in criaderos Terrenos realengos were lands that belonged to the state to the king 48 49 However in the 1820s three events dramatically changed the size of the town The first of these events was the arrival of a significant number of white Francophones fleeing the Haitian Revolution of 1791 1804 50 The effect of this mass migration was not felt significantly until the 1820s These French Creole entrepreneurs were attracted to the area because of its large flatlands and they came with enough capital slaves and commercial connections to stimulate Ponce s sugarcane production and sales 51 Secondly landlords and merchants migrated from various Latin American countries They had migrated for better conditions as they were leaving economic decline following the revolutions and disruption of societies as nations gained independence from Spain in the 1810s 1820s 50 Third the Spanish Royal Decree of Graces of 1815 attracted numerous European immigrants to Puerto Rico It encouraged any citizen of a country politically friendly to Spain to settle in Puerto Rico as long as they converted to the Catholic faith and agreed to work in the agricultural business With such mass migrations not only the size of the town was changed but the character of its population was changed as well Europeans including many Protestants immigrated from a variety of nations 52 On July 29 1848 and as a result of this explosive growth the Ponce hamlet was declared a villa village by Queen Isabella II 53 54 and in 1877 the village obtained its city charter 55 56 Many mid 18th century immigrants made fortunes in Ponce like the owner of this restored coffee plantation Hacienda Buena Vista founded in 1833 today it is a point of interest in the municipality Some of these immigrants made considerable fortunes in coffee corn and sugarcane harvesting rum production 57 banking and finance the importing of industrial machinery iron foundries and other enterprises At the time of the American invasion of the Island in 1898 Ponce was a thriving city 58 boasting the Island s main financial center 59 the Island s first communications link to another country 60 the best capitalized financial institutions and even its own currency 61 It had consular offices for England Germany the Netherlands and other nations 62 Following trends set in Europe and elsewhere in 1877 Don Miguel Rosich conceived an exposition for Ponce This was approved in 1880 and the Ponce Fair was held in the city in 1882 It showed several industrial and agricultural advancements It is important to establish a relationship between the European exhibitions that I have mentioned and the Ponce Fair as the Fair was meant as a showcase of the advancements of the day Agriculture Trade Industry and the Arts Just as with the 1878 World s Fair in Paris the electric grid of the city of Ponce was inaugurated on the first day of the Ponce Fair In this occasion the Plaza Las Delicias and various other buildings including the Mercantile Union Building the Ponce Casino and some of Ponce s homes were illuminated with the incandescent light bulb for the first time 63 Ponce in the 20th century Edit U S invasion Edit Main article Puerto Rican Campaign The 1898 landing of U S troops at Playa de Ponce led to a period economic stagnation for Ponce as the Americans chose to centralize the administration of the island in San Juan At the time of the U S invasion and occupation of Puerto Rico in 1898 during the Spanish American War Ponce was the largest city in the island with a population of 22 000 Ponce had the best road in Puerto Rico running from Ponce to San Juan which had been built by the Spaniards for military purposes 64 The taking of Ponce by American troops was a critical turning point in the Puerto Rican campaign For the first time the Americans held a major port to funnel large numbers of men and quantities of war material into the island Ponce also had underwater telegraph cable connections with Jamaica and the West Indies putting the U S forces on the island in direct communication with Washington D C for the first time since the beginning of the campaign 65 Just prior to the United States occupation of the island Ponce was a flourishing and dynamic city with a significant number of public facilities a large number of industries and commercial firms and a great number of exquisite residences that reflected the high standing of its bourgeoisie 66 On July 27 American troops aboard the Cincinnati Dixie Wasp and Gloucester disembarked at Playa de Ponce 67 General Nelson Miles arrived the next day with reinforcements from Guanica and took possession of the city There were some minor skirmishes in the city but no major battle was fought Three men were killed and 13 wounded on the Spanish side while the Americans suffered four wounded The American flag was raised in the town center that same day and most of the Spanish troops retreated into the surrounding mountains The U S Army then established its headquarters in Ponce 68 Period of stagnation Edit After the U S invasion the Americans chose to centralize the administration of the island in San Juan 69 the capital neglecting the south and thus starting a period of socio economic stagnation for Ponce 70 This was worsened by several factors Hurricane San Ciriaco in 1899 had left the region in misery 71 72 The opening of sugar mills in Salinas 73 and Guanica 74 drew commercial and agricultural activity away from Ponce 75 The decadence in coffee plantations in the 1920s 76 77 78 The loss of the Spanish and Cuban markets 79 The Spanish American War had paralyzed the trade of the Island of Puerto Rico and when Spain surrendered the sovereignty she closed her Spain s ports to Puerto Rican products while the American occupation of Cuba destroyed the only other important market As a result the trade in coffee and tobacco was ruined and nothing was provided by the Americans to take their place 80 At least one author has also blamed the stagnation on the strife between the U S and the local Nationalist Party 81 The 20th century financial stagnation prompted residents to initiate measures to attract economic activity back into the city Also a solid manufacturing industry surged that still remains Examples of this are the Ponce Cement Puerto Rico Iron Works Vassallo Industries and Destileria Serralles El Dia was also founded in Ponce in 1911 Ponce massacre Edit Police fire upon unarmed Nationalists killing 21 in what came to be known as the Ponce massacre of 1937 Main article Ponce massacre On March 21 1937 a peaceful march was organized by the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party to celebrate the 64th anniversary of the abolition of slavery and protest the incarceration of their leader Dr Pedro Albizu Campos in a federal prison on charges of sedition 82 The march turned into a bloody event when the Insular Police a force somewhat resembling the National Guard of the typical U S state and which answered to U S appointed governor Blanton Winship opened fire on unarmed and defenseless members of the Cadets of the Republic and bystanders 82 83 When the shooting stopped nineteen civilians had been killed or mortally wounded 84 Over two hundred others were badly wounded 85 Many were shot in their backs while running away including a seven year old girl named Georgina Maldonado who was killed through the back while running to a nearby church 86 87 The US commissioned an independent investigation headed by Arthur Garfield Hays general counsel of the American Civil Liberties Union together with prominent citizens of Puerto Rico The members concluded in their report that the event was a massacre with the police acting as a mob They harshly criticized Winship s actions as governor and said he had numerous abuses of civil rights 88 The event has since been known as the Ponce massacre 88 It was the largest massacre in Puerto Rican history 89 As a result of this report and other charges against Winship he was dismissed from his position in 1937 and replaced as governor 88 The history of this event can be viewed at the Ponce Massacre Museum on Marina Street An open air park in the city the Pedro Albizu Campos Park is dedicated to the memory of the president of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party As a result of this event Ponce has been identified as the birthplace of Puerto Rican national identity 90 Ponce history in general is expressed at the Ponce History Museum on the block bordered by Isabel Mayor Cristina and Salud streets in the historic downtown area Hub for political and economic activity Edit Ponce has continued to be a hub of political activity on the island and is the founding site of several major political parties It has also been the birthplace of several important political figures of the island including Luis A Ferre and Rafael Hernandez Colon both former governors of Puerto Rico as well as the childhood town of governor Roberto Sanchez Vilella Statistics taken from the 2010 census show that 82 0 of Poncenos are white and 9 0 are African American with Tainos Asians people of mixed race and others making up the rest 91 At 82 0 vs 76 2 for the island as a whole Ponce has the highest concentration of white population of any municipality in Puerto Rico 92 However the US Census Bureau changed the definitions of its racial makeup categories for the 2020 Census 93 resulting in 19 0 of Poncenos being classified as white and 13 3 as Black Afro Puerto Rican 0 3 as Asian and people of mixed race making up the rest 1970s economic decline Edit The 1970s brought significant commercial industrial and banking changes to Ponce that dramatically altered its financial stability and outlook of the city the municipality and to an extent the entire southern Puerto Rico region After Luis A Ferre concluded his term as governor of Puerto Rico on January 1 1973 he closed the Puerto Rico Iron Works foundry on Avenida Hostos and transferred the offices of Ponce s island wide El Dia newspaper that he owned as well as the headquarters of his Empresas Ferre to San Juan In 1976 CORCO southern Puerto Rico s main source of economic vitality shut down its industrial operations in Guayanilla leaving thousands of area residents without work its impact on indirect sources of employment was even greater Also the sugar cane industry also suffered a major downturn Sugar cane had until 1976 been grown and refined at Ponce s Central Mercedita but in that year agricultural production of sugar cane was halted in the lands of the municipality of Ponce and adjacent towns Also the headquarters of Banco de Ponce and Banco Credito y Ahorro Ponceno were moved to San Juan Unemployment of Ponce jumped to 25 as a result of these changes 94 The Mameyes landslide Edit The 1985 Mameyes landslide in Barrio Portugues Urbano killed 129 people in the worst landslide disaster in North America to that date Main article 1985 Puerto Rico floods On October 7 1985 Ponce was the scene of a major tragedy when at least 129 people lost their lives to a mudslide in a sector of Barrio Portugues Urbano 95 called Mameyes International help was needed to rescue people and recover corpses The United States and many other countries including Mexico France and Venezuela sent economic human and machinery relief The commonwealth government subsequently relocated hundreds of people to a new community built on stable ground 96 In 2005 the National Science and Technology Council s Subcommittee on Disaster Reduction of the United States reported that the Mameyes landslide held the record for having inflicted the greatest loss of life by a single landslide up to that year 97 Recent history Edit The municipality of Ponce became the first in Puerto Rico to obtain its autonomy 98 on October 27 1992 under a new law The Autonomous Municipalities Act of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico 99 enacted by the Puerto Rican legislature Ponce s mayor for 15 years Rafael Cordero Santiago Churumba credited for leading the municipal government to that accomplishment died in office on the morning of January 17 2004 after suffering three consecutive strokes Vice mayor Delis Castillo Rivera de Santiago finished his term Cordero was succeeded by Francisco Zayas Seijo In the 2008 general elections Maria Mayita Melendez was elected mayor of the city of Ponce and served three terms 100 The current 2021 mayor is Luis Irizarry Pabon who became the first mayoral candidate in the modern history of Ponce to win with more than 60 of votes cast 101 The city is also the governmental seat of the Autonomous Municipality of Ponce and the regional hub for various commonwealth entities For example it serves as the southern hub for the Judiciary of Puerto Rico 102 103 104 It is also the regional center for various other commonwealth and federal government agencies 105 Ponce has improved its economy in the last years In recent years Ponce has solidified its position as the second most important city of Puerto Rico based on its economic progress and increasing population 106 Today the city of Ponce is the second largest in Puerto Rico outside of the San Juan metropolitan area 107 Its nicknames include La Perla del Sur The Pearl of the South 108 and La Ciudad Senorial The Noble or Lordly City 109 The city is also known as La Ciudad de las Quenepas Genip City 110 111 from the abundant amount of this fruit that grows within its borders The complete history of Ponce can be appreciated at the Museo de la Historia de Ponce which opened in the city in 1992 It depicts the history of the city from its early settlement days until the end of the 20th century 112 On September 20 2017 Hurricane Maria struck the island of Puerto Rico In Ponce 1 000 million in damages were the initial estimates An estimated 3 500 homes were completely or partially destroyed 113 The hurricane triggered numerous landslides in Ponce 114 115 Geography Edit The municipality of Ponce includes many acres of lush forests like this one The city of Ponce can be seen in the far background The Municipality of Ponce sits on the Southern Coastal Plain region of the Puerto Rico on the shores of the Caribbean Sea It is bordered by the municipalities of Adjuntas Utuado Jayuya Penuelas and Juana Diaz 116 Ponce is a large municipality with only Arecibo larger in land area in Puerto Rico 117 In terms of physical features the municipality occupies a roughly rectangular area in south central portion of the Island of approximately 10 miles 16 km wide east to west by 13 miles 21 km long north to south 118 It has a surface area of 116 0 square miles 300 km2 119 The main physiographic features of the municipality of Ponce are 1 the mountainous interior containing the headwaters of the main river systems 2 an upper plain 3 a range of predominantly east west trending limestone hills 4 a coastal plain and 5 a coastal flat 120 The northern two thirds of the municipality consists of the mountainous interior with the southern third divided between hills coastal plains and the coastal flat 121 Ponce s municipal territory reaches the central mountain range to the north and the Caribbean Sea to the south Geographically speaking the southern area of the territory is part of the Ponce Patillas alluvial plain subsector and the southern coastal plain which were created by the consolidation of the valleys of the southern side of the central mountain range and the Cayey mountain range The central area of the municipality is part of the semi arid southern hills These two regions are classified as being the driest on the island The northern part of the municipality is considered to be within the rainy western mountains 122 Barrio Anon is home to Cerro Maravilla a peak that at 4 085 feet 1 245 m is Puerto Rico s fourth highest peak 123 Nineteen barrios 124 comprise the rural areas of the municipality and the topology of their lands varies from flatlands to hills to steep mountain slopes The hilly barrios of the municipality moving clockwise around the outskirts of the city are these seven Quebrada Limon Marueno Magueyes Tibes Portugues Rural Machuelo Arriba and Cerrillos The barrios of Canas Coto Laurel Capitanejo Sabanetas Vayas and Bucana also surround the outskirts of the city but these are mostly flat The remaining six other barrios are further away from the city and their topology is rugged mountain terrain These are clockwise Guaraguao San Patricio Monte Llano Maraguez Anon and Real The ruggedness of these barrios is because through these areas of the municipality runs the Central Mountain Range of the Island 125 The remaining barrios are part of the urban zone of the city 126 127 There are six barrios in the core urban zone of the municipality named Primero Segundo Tercero Cuarto Quinto and Sexto They are delimetered by streets rivers or major highways For example Barrio Tercero is bounded in the north by Isabel Street in the east by the Rio Portugues in the south by Comercio Street and the west by Plaza Las Delicias 128 Barrio Tercero includes much of what is called the historic district There is a seismic detector that the University of Puerto Rico Mayaguez Campus has placed in Barrio Cerrillos 129 Land features Edit Cruceta del Vigia marks the spot where during the 17th through 19th centuries a guard watched for merchant as well as enemy ships approaching the Ponce harbor 3 mi 5 km away See also List of mountains in Ponce Puerto Rico and List of islands of Ponce Puerto Rico Elevations include Cerro de Punta at 4 390 feet 1 338 m the highest in Puerto Rico located in Barrio Anon in the territory of the municipality of Ponce 130 131 Mount Jayuya at 4 314 feet 1 315 m is located on the boundary between Barrio Anon and Barrio Saliente in Jayuya Cerro Maravilla at nearly 3 970 feet 1 210 m above sea level is located to the east of Barrio Anon There are many other mountains at lower elevations in the municipality such as the Montes Llanos ridge and Mount Diablo at 2 231 feet 680 m and Mount Marueno at 2 100 feet 640 m and Pinto Peak among others Part of the Toro Negro Forest is located in Barrio Anon Coastal promontories include Cuchara Penoncillo Carnero and Cabullon points 132 Fifty six percent of the municipality consists of slopes 10 degrees or greater 133 Water features Edit See also List of rivers of Ponce The 14 rivers comprising the hydrographic system of Ponce are Matilde Inabon Bucana Jacaguas Portugues Canas Pastillo Cerrillos Chiquito Bayagan Blanco Prieto Anon and San Patricio 134 The Jacaguas River runs for a brief stretch on the southeast area of the municipality The Inabon River springs from Anon ward and runs through the municipality for some 18 mi 29 0 km the tributaries of the Inabon are the Anon and Guayo rivers and the Emajagua Brook The Bucana River springs from Machuelo Arriba ward and runs for 18 5 mi 29 8 km into the Caribbean Sea The tributaries of the Bucana are the San Patricio Bayagan and Prieto Rivers and Ausubo brook The Portugues River springs from the ward of that name in Adjuntas and runs for 17 3 mi 27 8 km into the Caribbean sea at Ponce Playa ward The Matilde River also known as the Pastillo River runs for 12 mi 19 km its tributaries are the Canas River and the Limon and del Agua brooks Lakes in Ponce include Bronce and Poncena as well as lakes bearing numbers Uno Dos Tres and Cinco and the Salinas Lagoon which is considered a restricted lagoon 135 Other water bodies are the springs at Quintana and the La Guancha and El Tuque beaches 136 There is also a beach at Caja de Muertos Island Lake Cerrillos is located within the limits of the municipality 137 as will be the future lake resulting from the Portugues Dam The Cerrillos State Forest is also located in the municipality of Ponce Coastal geographic features in Ponce include Bahia de Ponce Caleta de Cabullones Cabullones Cove and five cays Jueyes Ratones 138 Cardona Gatas and Isla del Frio 139 Caja de Muertos Island and Morrillito islet are located at the boundary between Ponce and Juana Diaz There is a mangrove covering an area of approximately 100 acres 40 ha at Cabullon promontory and Isla del Frio The Salinas Lagoon part of Reserva Natural Punta Cucharas has a mangrove that expands about 37 acres 15 ha The lagoon itself consists of 698 cuerdas 678 acres 274 ha 140 The Rita cave is located in Barrio Cerrillos 141 Climate Edit Ponce features a tropical savanna climate Koppen Aw As 142 Ponce has summer highs averaging 92 F 33 C 143 and winter highs 87 F 31 C 144 It has lows averaging 67 F 19 C in the winter 144 and 74 F 23 C in the summer 145 It has a record high of 100 F 38 C which occurred on 21 August 2003 146 and a record low of 51 F 11 C which occurred on 28 February 2004 tying the record low of 51 F 11 C from 25 January 1993 147 The mean annual temperature in the municipality is 79 F 26 C 148 Climate data for Ponce Puerto Rico 1991 2020 normals extremes 1898 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 98 37 95 35 96 36 96 36 96 36 99 37 100 38 100 38 99 37 98 37 100 38 98 37 100 38 Average high F C 87 8 31 0 87 7 30 9 87 6 30 9 88 8 31 6 89 5 31 9 91 2 32 9 91 5 33 1 91 8 33 2 91 4 33 0 90 8 32 7 89 8 32 1 88 4 31 3 89 7 32 1 Daily mean F C 75 1 23 9 74 9 23 8 75 0 23 9 76 7 24 8 78 3 25 7 80 2 26 8 80 3 26 8 80 5 26 9 80 0 26 7 79 4 26 3 77 9 25 5 75 9 24 4 77 8 25 4 Average low F C 62 5 16 9 62 1 16 7 62 5 16 9 64 6 18 1 67 0 19 4 69 2 20 7 69 1 20 6 69 3 20 7 68 7 20 4 67 9 19 9 66 0 18 9 63 5 17 5 66 0 18 9 Record low F C 49 9 51 11 50 10 53 12 55 13 60 16 58 14 60 16 58 14 61 16 56 13 52 11 49 9 Average precipitation inches mm 0 73 19 1 21 31 1 87 47 2 26 57 4 18 106 2 16 55 2 84 72 4 56 116 6 94 176 5 38 137 3 94 100 1 45 37 37 52 953 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 6 0 6 5 7 0 8 7 10 1 7 8 8 2 10 3 12 1 12 7 10 1 7 4 106 9Source NOAA 149 150 Cityscape EditArchitecture Edit The Museum of Puerto Rican Architecture the only architecture museum in the Island is housed in this 100 year old residence on Reina Street During the 19th century the city was witness to a flourishing architectural development including the birth of a new architectural style later dubbed Ponce Creole Architects like Francisco Valls Manuel Victor Domenech Eduardo Salich Blas Silva Boucher Agustin Camilo Gonzalez Alfredo Wiechers Francisco Porrata Doria and Francisco Gardon Vega used a mixture of Art Nouveau and neoclassic styles to give the city a unique look This can be seen in the various structures located in the center of the city like the Teatro La Perla To showcase its rich architectural heritage the city has opened the Museum of Puerto Rican Architecture at the Wiechers Villaronga residence 151 152 Many of the city s features from house facades to chamfered street corners are modeled on Barcelona s architecture given the city s strong Catalan heritage In 2020 the National Trust for Historic Preservation named the Ponce Historic Zone as one of America s most endangered historic places 153 Barrios Edit See also List of barrios of Ponce Puerto Rico With 31 barrios Ponce is Puerto Rico s municipality with the largest number of barrios 154 155 156 157 Ponce s barrios consist of 12 located in the urban area of the city plus 19 outside the urban zone 158 159 Of these nineteen seven were considered suburban in 1999 The suburban barrios were Canas Magueyes Portugues Machuelo Arriba Sabanetas Coto Laurel and Cerrillos 160 A 2000 report by the U S Census Bureau provides detailed demographics statistics for each of Ponce s barrios 161 The 2000 Census showed that Montes Llanos is the least populated barrio in the municipality Thanks to its larger area barrio Canas was by far the most populated ward of the municipality 162 At 68 persons per square mile San Patricio was the least populated while Cuarto was the most densely populated at 18 819 persons per square mile Ponce has nine barrios that border neighboring municipalities These are Canas Quebrada Limon Marueno Guaraguao San Patricio Anon Real Coto Laurel and Capitanejo Canas and Capitanejo are also coastal barrios and together with three others Playa Bucana and Vayas make up the municipality s five coastal barrios There are also five barrios within the city limits Canas Urbano Machuelo Abajo Magueyes Urbano Portugues Urbano and San Anton that in addition to the original six city core barrios named Primero Segundo Tercero Cuarto Quinto and Sexto make up the 11 urban zone barrios of the municipality The historic zone of the city is within these original six core city barrios These eleven barrios composed what is known as the urban zone of the municipality The remaining eight barrios Magueyes Tibes Montes Llanos Maraguez Portugues Machuelo Arriba Cerrillos Sabanetas are located in the interior of the municipality These last eight are outside the city limits and are neither coastal nor bordering barrios 163 A summary of all the barrios of the municipality their population population density and land and water areas as given by the U S Census Bureau is as follows 164 165 166 No Barrio Population Census 2000 Density sq mi Total Area sq mi Land Area sq mi Water Area sq mi 1 Anon 1669 129 9 12 85 12 85 0 002 Bucana 3963 2957 5 2 16 1 34 0 813 Canas 34065 2349 3 22 82 14 50 8 324 Canas Urbano 21482 9299 6 2 31 2 31 0 005 Capitanejo 1401 355 4 4 82 3 95 0 886 Cerrillos 4284 1377 5 3 31 3 11 0 207 Coto Laurel 5285 1492 9 3 60 3 54 0 068 Cuarto 3011 18818 8 0 17 0 16 0 009 Guaraguao 1017 247 4 4 11 4 11 0 0010 Machuelo Abajo 13302 7515 3 1 86 1 77 0 9011 Machuelo Arriba 13727 2124 9 6 61 6 46 0 1512 Magueyes 6134 1345 2 4 56 4 56 0 0013 Magueyes Urbano 1332 1074 2 1 24 1 24 0 0014 Maraguez 754 142 0 6 42 5 31 1 1115 Marueno 1474 350 1 4 21 4 21 0 0016 Montes Llanos 462 214 9 2 15 2 15 0 0017 Playa 16926 3864 4 14 98 4 38 10 6018 Portugues 4882 1386 9 3 56 3 52 0 0419 Portugues Urbano 5886 5163 2 1 14 1 14 0 0020 Primero 3550 14200 0 0 25 0 25 0 0021 Quebrada Limon 804 301 1 2 67 2 67 0 0022 Quinto 724 6581 8 0 11 0 11 0 0023 Real 3139 595 6 5 28 5 27 0 0124 Sabanetas 6420 2351 6 2 79 2 73 0 0625 San Anton 11271 10063 4 1 17 1 12 0 0426 San Patricio 465 67 8 6 86 6 86 0 0027 Segundo 11321 17416 9 0 65 0 65 0 0028 Sexto 4745 18250 0 0 27 0 26 0 0129 Tercero 773 9662 5 0 08 0 08 0 0030 Tibes 866 123 5 7 01 7 01 0 0031 Vayas 1338 187 9 10 47 7 12 3 35 Ponce 186475 1625 5 193 6 114 7 78 9Tourism Edit The Museo Castillo Serralles receives 100 000 visitors a year The cruise ship Serenade of the Seas arriving at the Port of Ponce during dawn in early 2020 See also List of tourist attractions in Ponce Puerto Rico and Nightlife in Ponce Puerto Rico Due to its historical importance throughout the years Ponce features many points of interest for visiting tourists 167 The downtown area contains the bulk of Ponce s tourist attractions 168 Tourism has seen significant growth in recent years In 2007 over 6 000 tourists visited the city via cruise ships 169 Passenger movement at the Mercedita Airport in FY 2008 was 278 911 a 1 228 increase over fiscal year 2003 and the highest of all the regional airports for that 5 year period 170 Though not all of these were tourists it represents a volume larger than the population of the city itself To support a growing tourist industry around the 1970s and starting with the Ponce Holiday Inn several hotels have been built Newer lodging additions include the Ponce Hilton Golf amp Casino Resort home to the new Costa Caribe Golf amp Country Club featuring a 27 hole PGA championship golf course The Hotel Melia has operated in the city continuously since the early 20th century It has also been studied that the Intercontinental Hotel which opened in February 1960 and closed in 1975 could be refurbished and re opened atop the hill near Cruceta del Vigia as the Magna Vista Resort 171 The Ponce Ramada also opened in 2009 and other hotel projects in the works include the Four Points by Sheraton and Marriott Courtyard among others 172 In 2013 the downtown Ponce Ramada Hotel added a casino to its 70 room structure 173 174 Ponce is part of the Government of Puerto Rico s Porta Caribe tourist region External audio You may a see a video on Ponce s tourist attractions HEREPonce en Marcha Edit Skyline of the city of Ponce in 2020 looking east The city s tallest tower the 23 story Condominio El Mirador is next to the extreme right with the two towers of Hospital Damas to its right In recent years an intensive 440 million 175 176 revitalization project called Ponce en Marcha 177 Ponce on the Move has increased the city s historic area from 260 to 1 046 buildings 178 The Ponce en Marcha d project was conceived in 1985 by then governor Rafael Hernandez Colon during his second term in La Fortaleza and Ponce mayor Jose Dapena Thompson 179 180 The plan was approved by the Ponce Municipal Legislature on January 14 2003 It was signed by Governor Sila Calderon via Executive Order on December 28 2003 and went into effect on January 12 2004 The plan incorporates a one billion dollars in spending during the period of 2004 through 2012 181 A significant number of buildings in Ponce are listed in the National Register of Historic Places 182 The nonprofit Project for Public Places 183 listed the historic downtown Ponce city center as one of the 60 of the World s Great Places for its graciously preserved showcase of Caribbean culture 184 The revitalized historic area of the city goes by various names including Ponce Centro Ponce Center 185 Historic Ponce 186 and Historic District 187 The name Ponce en Marcha comes from the revitalization plan of Zona Atocha in Madrid called Atocha en Marcha 188 Landmarks Edit The Lions Fountain in Plaza Las Delicias The city has been christened as Museum City for its many quality museums 189 190 All museums in Ponce are under municipal government administration On 15 September 2004 the last four museums not under local control were transferred from the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture to the Ponce Municipal Government by act of the Puerto Rico Legislature 191 However these four museums Casa Armstrong Poventud Casa Wiechers Villaronga Museo de la Musica Puertorriquena and Casa de la Masacre continue to be controlled by the ICP 192 193 Downtown Ponce in particular features several museums and landmarks 194 Plaza Las Delicias the town s main square features a prominent fountain namely the Lions Fountain the Ponce Cathedral and Parque de Bombas an old fire house now a museum that stands as an iconic symbol of the city and a tribute to the bravery of its firefighters This plaza is also a usual gathering place for poncenos Other buildings around Ponce s main plaza include the Casa Alcaldia Ponce City Hall the oldest colonial building in the city dating to the 1840s and the Armstrong Poventud Residence an example of the neoclassical architectural heritage of the island Just north of downtown Ponce lies the Castillo Serralles and the Cruceta del Vigia a 100 foot 30 m observation tower which overlooks the city The Serralles castle is reported to receive nearly 100 000 visitors every year 195 The hill on which the Cruceta is located was originally used by scouts to scan for incoming mercantile ships as well as invading ones The invasion of American troops in 1898 was first spotted from there Ponce is home to Puerto Rico s oldest cemetery in fact it is the oldest cemetery in the Antilles In the city outskirts the Tibes Indigenous Ceremonial Center was discovered in 1975 after hurricane rains uncovered pottery 196 The center is the site of the oldest cemetery uncovered up to date in the Antilles With some 200 skeletons unearthed from the year 300 AD it is considered the largest and the most important archaeological finding in the West Indies 197 198 Two other cemeteries in Ponce worth noting are the Panteon Nacional Roman Baldorioty de Castro and the Cementerio Catolico San Vicente de Paul both of which are listed in the National Register of Historic Places The Cementerio Catolico San Vicente de Paul has the most eye catching burial constructions of any cemetery for the wealthiest families both local and foreign born of southern Puerto Rico 199 La Guancha Boardwalk as seen from the Boardwalk s observation tower Also in the city outskirts is Hacienda Buena Vista an estate built in 1833 originally to grow fruits It was converted into a coffee plantation and gristmill in 1845 It remained in operation until 1937 then fell into disrepair but was restored by the government s Fideicomiso de Conservacion de Puerto Rico All the machinery works the metal parts are original operated by water channeled from the 360m Vives waterfall there is a hydraulic turbine which makes the corn mill work Paseo Tablado La Guancha is located in the town s sea shore It features kiosks with food and beverages an open space stage for activities and a marina called Club Nautico de Ponce From the observation tower on the boardwalk Cardona Island Light can be seen A 45 minute boat ride is also available to Isla de Caja de Muertos Coffin Island a small island with several beaches and an 1887 lighthouse As of 2008 update the city had also engaged in the development of a convention center with a capacity for 3 000 people It is also to include two major hotels apartment buildings and recreational facilities 200 Puerto Rico Route 143 PR 143 known as the Panoramic Route runs edging near the municipality s northern border 201 Culture EditMain articles List of museums in Ponce Puerto Rico List of libraries in Ponce Puerto Rico and List of events in Ponce Puerto Rico The city is home to a long list of cultural assets including libraries museums galleries and parks hundreds of buildings of historical value including schools residences bridges and estates and frequent activities such as festivals and carnivals The municipality invests close to half a million dollars in promoting its cultural assets 202 It established its first library in 1894 203 and as of 2007 update had a new central library 204 with seven other branches scattered throughout the municipality 205 The childhood home in Ponce of Antonio Paoli one of Puerto Rico s greatest musical performers ever A number of cultural events take place during the year most prominently 206 207 February Ponce Carnival March Feria de Artesanias de Ponce Ponce Crafts Fair 208 In 2019 the 45th Feria de Artesanias de Ponce was held 209 April Ponce Jazz Festival May Fiesta Nacional de la Danza Barrio Playa Festival July Barrio San Anton s Bomba Festival August Festival Nacional de la Quenepa National Genip Festival often the third week 210 211 September Dia Mundial de Ponce November Discovering Our Indian Roots December Patron Saint s Day Festival Fiestas Patronales 212 Las Mananitas 212 Children s Christmas ConcertThe city values its cultural traditions as evidenced by the revitalization project Ponce en Marcha It is deeply rooted in its traditional cultural artistic and musical heritage The love for art and architecture for example can be appreciated at its museums of art music and architecture Over the last century or so the north i e San Juan willingly accepted the influence of western culture with its tendency toward large sprawling metropolises and the displacement of old values and attitudes Ponce on the other hand has been content to retain its old traditions and culture Ponce is not concerned about losing its long standing position as the second largest city in population after San Juan On the contrary she prefers to maintain her current size and stick to its old traditions and culture 213 214 Some argue that the Ponceno culture is different from the rest of the Island Poncenos have always been a breed apart from other Puerto Ricans Their insularity and haughtiness are legendary and some Puerto Ricans claim that even the dialect in Ponce is slightly different from that spoken in the rest of the Island They are also racially different you ll see more people of African descent in Ponce than anywhere else in the Island except Loiza 215 Others claim that Poncenos exhibit considerable more civic pride than do residents of other locales 216 Luis Munoz Rivera the most important statesman in the Island at the close of the 19th century referred to Ponce as the most Puerto Rican city of Puerto Rico 217 e Music Edit Children performing at the annual Feria de Artesanias de Ponce The Ponce City Hall is visible in the background Artistic development also flourished during this period The surging of popular rhythms like Bomba and Plena took place in the south region of the island mainly in Ponce Barrio San Anton is known as one of the birthplaces of the rhythm Every July Ponce celebrates an annual festival of Bomba and Plena which includes various musicians and parades Immigrants from Spain Italy France Germany and England came to Ponce to develop an international city that still maintains rich Taino and African heritage The African personality belief and music add flavor and colorful rhythm to Ponce s culture Part of this are the influences of the Bomba and Plena rhythms These are a combination and Caribbean and African music 218 Ponce has also been the birthplace of several singers and musicians From opera singers like Antonio Paoli who lived in the early 20th century to contemporary singers like Ednita Nazario Also Salsa singers like Hector Lavoe Cheo Feliciano and Ismael Quintana also come from the city Dating back to 1858 Ponce s Carnival is the oldest in Puerto Rico and acquired an international flavor for its 150th anniversary 219 It is one of the oldest carnivals celebrated in the Western Hemisphere It features various parades with masked characters representative of good and evil The Museum of Puerto Rican Music located at the Serralles Nevarez family residence in downtown Ponce illustrates music history on the Island most of which had its origin and development in Ponce 220 No discussion of music in Ponce would be complete without rendering honor to the great performances of King of Tenors Antonio Paoli and danza master Juan Morel Campos both from Ponce Today there is a statue of Juan Morel Campos that adorns the Plaza Las Delicias city square and the home where Paoli was born and raised functions as the Puerto Rico Center for Folkloric Research a research center for Puerto Rican culture A municipal band presents concerts every Sunday evening and a Youth Symphony Orchestra also performs 221 Arts Edit The Museo de Arte de Ponce the largest art museum in the Caribbean 222 is a mecca for the arts in the Island See also List of theaters in Ponce Puerto Rico Ponce s love for the arts dates back to at least 1864 when the Teatro La Perla was built Ponce is also the birthplace of artists like Miguel Pou Horacio Castaing and several others in the fields of painting sculpture and others The City is one of only seven cities in the Western Hemisphere the others being Mexico City Havana Valparaiso Buenos Aires Mar del Plata and Rosario in the Ruta Europea del Modernisme 223 an international non profit association for the promotion and protection of Art Nouveau heritage in the world 224 Today Ponce has more museums nine than any other municipality in the Island 225 Ponce is home to the Museo de Arte de Ponce MAP founded in 1959 by fellow ponceno Luis A Ferre The museum was operated by Ferre until his death at the age of 99 and it is now under the direction of the Luis A Ferre Foundation Designed by Edward Durell Stone architect of Radio City Music Hall 226 and the Museum of Modern Art in New York MAP is the only museum of international stature on the Island the only one that was accredited by the American Alliance of Museums AAM 227 and the only one that has received a design prize of honor from the American Institute of Architects AIA 228 It houses the most extensive art collection in the Caribbean Sports Edit Juan Pachin Vicens Auditorium home to various sporting events in Ponce Main articles Ponce Grand Prix and Cruce a Nado Internacional Most of Ponce s professional teams are called the Leones de Ponce Ponce Lions or Ponce Lionesses as the case may be regardless of the sport The Leones de Ponce basketball team is one of the leading teams of the island winning 12 championships during their tenure 229 The team s venue is the Juan Pachin Vicens Auditorium The Leones de Ponce men s baseball and the Leonas de Ponce women s baseball teams have also been fairly successful 230 The baseball teams venue is the Francisco Montaner Stadium 231 The stadium is located next to the Juan Pachin Vicens Auditorium 232 In 1993 the city hosted the Central American and Caribbean Games from November 19 30 233 The city also hosts two international annual sporting events In the month of May it hosts the Ponce Grand Prix a track and field event in which over 100 athletes participate During the Memorial Day Weekend in the month of September the city hosts Cruce a Nado Internacional a swimming competition with over a dozen countries represented Also the Ponce Marathon takes place every December sometimes as part of the Las Mananitas event on December 12 The Francisco Pancho Coimbre Sports Museum named after the baseball player of the same name was dedicated to the honor of Puerto Rico s great sports men and women 234 It is located on the grounds of the Charles H Terry Athletic Park on Lolita Tizol Street just north of the entrance to Historic Ponce at Puente de los Leones Lions Bridge and the Ponce Tricentennial Park In 2012 the city commenced construction of the multi sport complex Ciudad Deportiva Millito Navarro No date has been announced for its completion yet but its skateboarding section opened in March 2013 The main annual sports events are as follows April Las Justas intercollegiate sports competition May Ponce Grand Prix international track and field competition August Cruce a Nado Internacional international swimming competition December Maraton La Guadalupe 26 mile national marathonRecreation Edit Main article List of parks in Ponce Puerto Rico See also List of beaches in Ponce Puerto Rico La Guancha Beach at La Guancha one of 40 salt water beaches in Ponce The municipality is home to several parks and beaches including both passive and active parks Among the most popular passive parks are the Julio Enrique Monagas Family Park on Ponce By pass Road PR 2 at the location where the Rio Portugues feeds into Bucana The Parque Urbano Dora Colon Clavell another passive park is in the downtown area Active parks include the Charles H Terry Athletic Field and several municipal tennis courts including one at Poly Deportivos with 9 hard courts and one at La Rambla with six hard courts 235 There are also many public basketball courts scattered throughout the various barrios of the municipality The municipality has 40 beaches including 28 on the mainland and 12 in Caja de Muertos 236 Among these about a dozen of them are most notable including El Tuque Beach in the El Tuque sector on highway PR 2 west of the city La Guancha Beach at the La Guancha sector south of the city and four beaches in Caja de Muertos Pelicano Playa Larga Carrucho and Coast Guard beach 237 A ferry must be boarded at La Guancha for transportation to the Caja de Muertos beaches Religion Edit During and after colonization the Roman Catholic Church became the established religion of the colony Gradually African slaves were converted to Christianity but many incorporated their own traditions and symbols maintaining African traditions as well Ponce Cathedral listed in the National Register of Historic Places was built in 1839 238 239 The Royal Decree of Graces of 1815 allowed for non Catholics to immigrate legally to Puerto Rico but it required those who wanted to settle on the island to make a vow of alliance to the Catholic Church Ponce was the first city in Puerto Rico where Protestant churches were built 240 Islamic Center at Ponce numerous religious faiths are practiced in the city The 1907 Methodist Church in Ponce With the U S invasion there was a significant change in the religious landscape in the City and in Puerto Rico The Protestant missionaries followed the footprints of the United States soldiers right after the Treaty of Paris was ratified and Puerto Rico was ceded to the American government 241 By March 1899 eight months after the occupation executives from the Methodists Episcopalians Baptists Presbyterians and others had arranged for an evangelical division whereby Ponce would have Evangelical Baptist and Methodist campaigns With the passing of the Foraker Act in 1900 which established total separation between Church and State the absolute power of the Catholic Church eroded quickly 241 Various Protestant churches were soon established and built in Ponce today many are recognized as historic sites Among them are the McCabe Memorial Church Methodist 1908 242 and the Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church Methodist 1907 243 The bell of the Episcopalian Holy Trinity Church in Barrio Cuarto rang again 244 when the Americans arrived on 25 July 1898 Built in 1873 the church was allowed to function by the Spanish Crown under the conditions that its bell would not be rung its front doors would always remain closed and its services would be offered in English only 245 Today Ponce is home to a mix of religious faiths both Protestants and Catholics as well as Muslims have places of worship in Ponce Baptists Methodists Presbyterians Episcopalians Pentecostals Adventists Evangelicals Disciples of Christ and Congregationalists are among the Protestant faiths with a following in Ponce Catholicism is the faith of the majority of poncenos In 2009 the Catholic Church had 18 parishes in the municipality two bishops and 131 priests 246 In his Memoirs Albert E Lee summed up Ponce s attitude towards religion Ponce was not only tolerant it was indifferent in religious matters Protestants and Catholics and even atheists lived together socially on the friendliest terms Religion was strictly a personal affair in Ponce while in San Juan at times gave the impression that it was ready to practice the auto de fe sic 247 Economy Edit Before its merger with Banco Popular in 1991 Banco de Ponce above had the most extensive international network of branches of any Puerto Rican bank 248 Traditionally the city s economy had depended almost entirely on the sugarcane industry 249 Since around the 1950s however the town s economy has diversified and today its economy revolves around a mixed industry manufacturing sector retail and tourism 250 251 The building of a mega port anticipated to be completed in 2012 252 is expected to add significantly to the area s economy Agriculture retail and services are also significant players in the local economy It is considered an agricultural trade and distribution center with manufacturing that includes electronics communications equipment food processing pharmaceutical drugs concrete plants scientific instruments and rum distilling as well as an established gourmet coffee agricultural industry 253 The city though suffers from an unemployment rate that hovers around the 15 percent mark 254 Manufacturing Edit The municipality is considered one of the most developed municipalities in Puerto Rico 255 Its manufacturing sectors include electronic and electrical equipment communications equipment food processing pharmaceutical drugs concrete plants and scientific instruments 253 It also produces leather products needlework and fish flour to a lesser extent Ponce is home to the Serralles rum distillery which manufactures Don Q and to Industrias Vassallo a leader in PVC manufacturing Other important local manufacturers are Ponce Cement Cristalia Premium Water Rovira Biscuits Corporation and Cafe Rico Ponce was once the headquarters for Puerto Rico Iron Works Ponce Salt Industries and Ponce Candy Industries Agriculture Edit Atocha Promenade is part of El Ponce Tradicional the old historic district In the agricultural sector the most important products are coffee followed by plantains bananas oranges and grapefruits A mix of public and private services as well as finance retail sales and construction round up Ponce s economic rhythm 256 Cafe Rico which metamorphosed from coffee grower Cafeteros de Puerto Rico has its headquarters in Ponce Retail Edit For many years commercial retail activity in Ponce centered around what is now Paseo Atocha This has shifted in recent years and most retail activity today occurs in one of Ponce s various malls in particular Plaza del Caribe Centro del Sur Mall is also a significant retail area as is Ponce Mall 257 Mega port Edit Ponce is home to Puerto Rico s chief Caribbean port the Port of Ponce 258 The port is expanding to transform it into a mega port called the Port of the Americas that will operate as an international transshipment port When fully operational it is expected to support 100 000 jobs 259 Demographics EditSee also Demographics of Puerto Rico Population During Spanish Colonial TimesYearPop 17653 314 17765 674 71 2 18007 234 27 5 18249 878 36 5 182814 927 51 1 183616 970 13 7 184621 799 28 5 185720 205 7 3 186028 156 39 4 187633 514 19 0 188742 388 26 5 189749 000 15 6 Sources Govt of Ponce 260 and FreepagesPopulation During U S Colonial TimesYearPop 190055 477 191063 444 14 4 192071 426 12 6 193087 604 22 7 1940105 116 20 0 1950126 810 20 6 1960145 586 14 8 1970158 891 9 1 1980189 046 19 0 1990187 749 0 7 2000186 475 0 7 2010166 327 10 8 2020137 491 17 3 Source U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved July 13 2006 Racial distribution Race Ponce Puerto Rico 2020 Census 91 Race Population of TotalWhite 26 148 19 0 Black Afro Puerto Rican 18 325 13 3 American Indian Alaska Native 4 129 3 0 Asian 365 0 3 Two or more races Some other race 88 524 64 4 Ponce has consistently ranked as one of the most populous cities in Puerto Rico Ponce s population according to the 2010 census stands at 166 327 with a population density of 1 449 3 persons per square mile 278 4 km ranking third in terms of population among Puerto Rican municipalities Government EditSee also List of mayors of Ponce Puerto Rico The Ponce Municipal Hall built in the 1840s is the oldest colonial building in the city The municipal government has its seat in the city of Ponce 261 262 Since its foundation in 1692 the city of Ponce has been led by a mayor Its first mayor was Don Pedro Sanchez de Matos The 2008 election of Maria Melendez Altieri PNP brought Ponce the first woman to be elected to the mayoral office in the city s history She was re elected in 2012 and again in 2016 and serve as mayor until 2021 In the 2020 election Luis Irizarri Pabon PPD was elected as mayor and is currently serving as mayor 263 Ponce s best known mayor of recent years is perhaps Rafael Churumba Cordero Santiago PPD who held office from 1989 until his sudden death on the morning of 17 January 2004 after suffering three successive brain strokes The city also has a municipal legislature that handles local legislative matters Ponce has had a municipal council since 1812 264 f 265 The municipal legislature is composed of 16 civilians elected during the general elections along with the mayor state representatives and senators The delegations are until the 2020 general election distributed as follows 13 legislators of the Popular Democratic Party two legislators of the New Progressive Party and one legislator from the Movimento Victoria Ciudadana The Ponce City Hall has one of the most unusual histories of any city hall throughout the world Originally built in the 1840s as a public assembly hall Ponce s City Hall was a jail until the end of the 19th century Current galleries were former cells and executions were held in the courtyard Four U S presidents spoke from the balcony Theodore Roosevelt Herbert Hoover Franklin Roosevelt and George Bush It is listed in the National Register of Historic Places 266 In 2005 the municipality s budget was US 152 million 267 In 2010 2011 it was 158 million 268 In 2016 2017 the proposed budget was 140 million 269 From a business perspective the Ponce municipal government is generally praised for its efficiency and speediness thanks to its adoption of the Autonomous Municipality Law of 1991 270 The municipality of Ponce is the seat of the Puerto Rico Senatorial district V which is represented by two senators During the 2020 Puerto Rico Senate election Marially Gonzalez and Ramon Ruiz both from the Popular Democratic Party were elected as District Senators and are currently serving 271 Symbols EditThe municipio has an official flag and coat of arms 272 Coat of arms Edit The coat of arms of the municipality is based on the design of the official mayoral seal that was adopted in 1844 under the administration of mayor Salvador de Vives 273 Coat of arms of Ponce The coat of arms of Ponce consists of an escutcheon shield in the Spanish tradition This shield has a field with a party per bend division The division runs from top left to bottom right The field is red and black bordered with a fine golden line In the center of the shield is the figure of an erect lion standing on a bridge The top of the bridge is a golden the middle is red bricks and the base foundation is gray rocks Under the bridge there are gray wavy lines Over the shield rests a five tower golden stone wall with openings in the form of red windows To the left of the shield is a coffee tree branch with its fruit and to the right of the shield is a sugarcane stalk The symbols of the shield are as follows The field represents the flag of the municipality of Ponce divided diagonally in the traditional city colors red and black The lion over the bridge alludes to the last name of the conqueror and first governor of Puerto Rico Juan Ponce de Leon The waves under the bridge allude to the Rio Portugues on the banks of which the city was born The coronet in the form of a five tower mural crown above the shield allude to the Spanish crown through which the settlement obtained its city charter The coffee tree branch and the sugarcane stalk represent the main agricultural basis of the economy of the young municipality 273 Flag Edit The 1692 Flag of the Municipality of Ponce adopted in 1967 commemorates its founding The 1877 Flag of the city of Ponce adopted in 1977 commemorates the year of its city charter Ponce has two official flags one for the municipality and one for the city proper The municipal flag the 1692 flag was adopted in 1967 via a municipal ordinance This flag designed by Mario Ramirez was selected from among a number of public proposals It consisted of a rectangular cloth divided by a diagonal line into two equal isosceles triangles The line ran from the top right hand corner to the bottom left hand corner The top triangle was black the bottom right triangle was red On the top triangle was the figure of a lion over a bridge On the bottom triangle was the word Ponce with the number 1692 the date when the municipality was founded Ponce Municipal Assembly Order No 5 Section 5 of Municipal Assembly Year 1966 1967 established that the last Sunday in April is Dia de la Bandera de Ponce Ponce Flag Day 274 Ten years later in 1977 a new municipal ordinance introduced a flag the 1877 city flag to commemorate the one 100th anniversary of the declaration of the city charter This 1977 flag consisted of a rectangular cloth divided by a diagonal line creating two equal isosceles triangles starting from the top left hand corner and ending on the lower right hand corner The top triangle is red the bottom triangle is black In the center of the flag sits the shield of the municipality Under this shield is the number 1877 the year of the founding of the city and above the shield is the word PONCE Some flags have the 1877 date on the left border of the bottom triangle and the name of the city on the right border of the triangle as illustrated in the insert on the left 275 Municipal services EditFire protection Edit Parque de Bombas Long the iconic symbol of the city was the first fire station in Puerto Rico The city s fire department has a history of firsts including being the first organized fire department in the Island As the largest city in the island at the time and de facto economic and social center of Puerto Rico this in effect also created the first Puerto Rico Fire Department The Ponce Fire Department also built the first fire station in the Island 276 277 which still stands to this day and is now open as the Parque de Bombas museum Also in 1951 Ponce s Fire Chief Raul Gandara Cartagena wrote a book on the firemen s service which became a firemen s manual in several Latin American countries 278 In recognition of the service rendered by its fire fighters the City of Ponce built them homes resulting in the creation of the 25 de Enero Street near the city s historic district Major fires Edit The city has withstood some nearly catastrophic fires A major fire took place on February 27 1820 279 280 that almost destroyed the early Ponce settlement It destroyed 106 of the best homes in town 281 In 1823 then Governor of Puerto Rico Miguel de la Torre mandated that every male from 16 to 60 years old must be a firefighter 282 Those firefighters had to supply their own fire fighting equipment essentially picks buckets and shovels Unfortunately once De la Torre left office this first fire fighting institution started to decay 282 Another major fire occurred in La Playa in March 1845 281 that destroyed most of the Ponce vicinity It significantly damaged the Spanish Customs House in Ponce this being one of the few buildings left standing after the fire 283 The fire burned down the major buildings of the Marina de Ponce 281 After this fire then governor of Puerto Rico Conde de Mirasol born Rafael de Aristegui y Velez 284 created a new fire fighting organization staffed by volunteers 282 In 1862 the Ponce Firefighters Corps was reorganized under the administration of Ponce mayor Luis de Quixano y Font and Tomas Cladellas was named fire chief 282 In 1879 the Ponce Fire Corps reorganized again with a new fire chief the local architect Juan Bertoli On September 25 1880 another fire took place destroying most of the older civil records births baptisms marriages etc of the Ponce parish 285 In 1883 the Ponce firefighter corps reorganized once more this time in a more definitive fashion when Maximo Meana was mayor of Ponce During this time the Ponce Fire Corps was made up of 400 firefighters Its leadership consisted of Julio Steinacher fire chief Juan Seix second fire chief Oscar Schuch Olivero Chief of Brigade and Fernando M Toro Supervisor of the Gymnastics Academy Concurrent with this the firefighter corps music band was organized In September 1883 Juan Morel Campos formally organized the Ponce Fire Corps Municipal Band which exists to this day 282 Distinctive red and black striped cottages at Calle 25 de Enero The fourth Ponce fire of large proportions occurred on January 25 1899 286 The fire was fought by a group of firefighters among whom was Pedro Sabater and the civilian Rafael Rivera Esbri who would later become mayor of the city The fire started at the U S munitions depot on the lot currently occupied by the Ponce High School building and grounds The heroes in that fire believed to have saved the city from certain annihilation are remembered to this day with monuments on their tombs as well as in a monument in the city square Plaza Las Delicias 282 As a further gesture of gratitude a neighborhood of distinctive Victorian style cottages were constructed to house the firefighters and their families These houses painted in the red and black colors of the city are located along a street named Calle 25 de Enero 25 de Enero street they are still owned and occupied by the descendants of these firefighters and are a scenic attraction in Ponce s historic center Police Edit The Ponce Municipal Police consists of a force of some 500 officers 287 This force is complemented by the Puerto Rico Police force The Ponce Municipal Police has its headquarters at the southwest corner of the intersection of PR 163 Las Americas Avenue and PR 2R Carretera Pampanos In addition it has three precincts as follows Cantera La Guancha and Coto Laurel plus specialized units at Port of the Americas maritime unit Mariani transit unit Belgica motorcycle unit and Parque Dora Clavell tourism unit The Puerto Rico Police had its Ponce area regional headquarters from 1970 until 2011 on Hostos Avenue 288 In 2011 it moved its command center to a new and larger facility further west on Urbanizacion Los Caobos in Barrio Bucana It commands five precincts in the city Villa Playa Morel Campos La Rambla and El Tuque The Ponce municipal coverage of the Puerto Rico Police force is as follows The Villa precinct covers barrios Primero Segundo Tercero Cuarto Quinto and Sexto and Portugues Urbano This precinct includes the historic Ponce district The Playa precinct 258 289 covers the barrios of Playa Capitanejo Bucana and Vayas The La Rambla precinct covers barrios Anon Real Maraguez Cerrillos Coto Laurel Sabanetas San Patricio Monte Llano Machuelo Arriba Machuelo Abajo and Portugues The El Tuque precinct covers barrios Canas and Canas Urbano The Morel Campos precinct covers barrios Guaraguao Marueno Tibes Magueyes Magueyes Urbano and Quebrada Limon Crime Edit In 2002 most of the homicides in Puerto Rico were occurring in San Juan and the greater metropolitan areas of Bayamon Carolina and Caguas but Ponce also had a high homicide rate Also in 2002 Puerto Rico law enforcement officials drafted plans to increase the number of forensic investigators by 25 The investigators assigned to the Institute of Forensic Sciences in San Juan covered homicides in about 65 percent of the island but the Institute was considering assigning Ponce its own unit 290 By mid year 2005 there had been 25 more murder cases in Ponce than for all of 2004 a significant increase 291 The police acknowledged that most crime cases in Puerto Rico are linked to drug trafficking and illegal weapons In mid July 2005 Gov Anibal Acevedo Vila announced a series of measures aimed at lowering Ponce s high murder rate Some of those measures included the permanent transfer of 100 agents to the area the appointment of a ballistics expert from the Institute of Forensic Sciences and of two prosecutors for the Department of Justice in Ponce Puerto Rico Police Superintendent Pedro Toledo admitted that more than 100 agents are actually needed in the Ponce region in 2005 but that there would be no additional transfers at the moment to avoid affecting other police areas 291 Ponce is a convenient transition point for drug smugglers due to its location on the Caribbean Sea and its proximity to Colombia and Venezuela 292 From there packages are then transported to the United States by various means including the United States Postal Service 292 The city is included in the area s HIDTA region 292 As most of the crime in Ponce is connected to the drug trade police have an eye on illegal smuggling through the Port of Ponce 293 A 2008 government report stated that Drug smuggling in containerized cargo is a significant maritime threat to the HIDTA High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area region The vast and increasing quantity of goods transshipped through the region every year provides drug traffickers with ample opportunity to smuggle illicit drugs into through and from the area 292 In July 2005 local police scored some points in their fight against drug trafficking 294 By 2007 Ponce had experienced a 61 decline in the rate of violent crimes Type I 295 In 2010 there was a further reduction of 12 percent in violent crimes over 2009 statistics 296 In August 2013 the Ponce Area Police Region which includes Ponce and seven other adjacent municipalities registered 27 fewer Type I crimes that it had by the same period in 2012 297 For the Ponce MSA which includes the city of Ponce its nineteen surrounding municipal barrios the municipality of Juana Diaz and the municipality of Villalba crime data was tabulated in 2002 Total MSA Population 364 849 No data is available for the city or for the municipality of Ponce alone The following statistics are registered Category Number Rate per 100 000Violent crime 929 254 6Property crime 5 938 1 627 5Murder and NNMS 83 22 7Forcible rape 25 6 9Robbery 525 143 9Aggravated assault 296 81 1Burglary 1 588 435 2Larceny theft 3 803 1 042 3Motor vehicle theft 547 149 9Notes Violent crimes include murder forcible rape robbery and aggravated assault Property crimes include burglary larceny theft and motor vehicle theft NNMS non negligent manslaughter Source FBI 298 FBI satellite office Edit There is an FBI satellite office located in Ponce 299 Education Edit Front entrance of the Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico one of over 10 centers of higher learning in the city Grade schools and high schools Edit Ponce s first school for boys was established in 1820 300 Today there are over a hundred public and private schools 301 As with the rest of Puerto Rico public education in Ponce is handled by the Puerto Rico Department of Education However the local government is taking on a greater role in public education On June 13 2010 the mayor of Ponce announced the creation of a Municipal Education System and a School Board with the objective of obtaining accreditation for what would be the first free bilingual school in the city 289 Colleges and universities Edit There are also several colleges and universities located in the city offering higher education including professional degrees in architecture medicine law and pharmacy Some of these are Caribbean University Ponce Colegio Universitario Tecnologico de Ponce 302 Interamerican University of Puerto Rico at Ponce Ponce School of Medicine Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico School of Law Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico School of Architecture Universidad Ana G Mendez Ponce University of Puerto Rico at PonceThere are also several other technical institutions like the Instituto de Banca y Comercio Trinity College 303 and the Ponce Paramedical College Nova Southeastern University based in Fort Lauderdale Florida has a School of Pharmacy campus in Ponce 304 Health care EditThe city is served by several clinics and hospitals There are four comprehensive care hospitals Hospital Dr Pila Hospital San Cristobal Hospital San Lucas 305 and Hospital de Damas In addition Hospital Oncologico Andres Grillasca specializes in the treatment of cancer 306 and Hospital Siquiatrico specializes in mental disorders 307 There is also a U S Department of Veterans Affairs Outpatient Clinic that provides health services to U S veterans 308 The U S Veterans Administration will build a new hospital in the city to satisfy regional needs 309 In 2009 Hospital Damas was listed in the U S News amp World Report as one of the best hospitals under the U S flag 310 Ponce has the highest concentration of medical infrastructure per inhabitant of any municipality in Puerto Rico Transportation EditSee also List of roads in Ponce Puerto Rico and List of streets in Ponce Puerto Rico Due to its commercial and industrial significance Ponce has consistently been a hub of transportation to the rest of the island Puerto Rico Highway 52 provides access to Salinas Caguas and San Juan PR 2 grants access to southwestern and western municipalities as a full access freeway The PR 10 highway which is still under construction as a faster alternative to PR 123 provides access to the interior of the island as well as points north of the island such as Arecibo PR 1 provides access to various points east and southeast of Puerto Rico while PR 14 provides access to Coamo and other points in the central mountain region PR 132 grants country side access to the town of Penuelas PR 123 is the old road to Adjuntas and while treacherous it does provide an appreciation for countryside living in some of the municipality s barrios such as Magueyes and Guaraguao 311 312 Ponce s Mercedita Airport used to be an air strip for a sugarcane mill in the early twentieth century The city is served by a network of local highways and freeways Running entirely within the municipal limits are PR 12 PR 9 PR 133 and PR 163 and a few others Freeway PR 12 runs northbound starting at the Port of Ponce to connect with PR 14 on the northeastern part of the city PR 9 also known as the Circuito de Circumnavegacion de Ponce Ponce s Circumferential Highway is a highway still partly under construction It runs mostly north of the city and connects PR 52 to PR 10 in an east to west fashion when completed it will run as a beltway around most of the eastern and northern sections of the city 313 PR 133 Calle Comercio connects PR 2 in west Ponce to PR 132 It is an extension of PR 1 from its PR 2 terminus into the city center PR 163 crosses the City east to west connecting PR 52 and PR 14 314 315 316 317 The municipality has 115 bridges 318 Ponce s public transportation system consists of taxicabs and share taxi service providing public cars and vans known as publicos 319 and a bus based mass transit system 320 There are five taxi companies in the city 321 Most publicos depart from the terminal hub located in downtown Ponce the Terminal de Carros Publicos Carlos Garay 322 323 During the 1990s and 2000s there was also a trolley system reminiscent of the one the city used in the 19th century and which traveled through the downtown streets and which was used mostly by tourists 324 Today it is used mostly during special events There is also a small train that can bring tourists from the historic downtown area to the Paseo Tablado La Guancha on the southern shore 325 As with the trolley today the train is used mostly during special events A ferry provides service to Isla de Caja de Muertos 326 The new intra city mass transit system SITRAS was scheduled to start operating in November 2011 327 and after a 3 month delay the 4 million SITRAS system was launched with 11 buses and three routes in February 2012 320 A fourth route was to be added for the El Tuque sector according to a June 30 2012 news report 328 Mercedita Airport sits 3 miles 4 8 km east of downtown Ponce and handles both intra island and international flights The airport used to be a private airfield belonging to Destileria Serralles rum distillery before it became a commercial airport serving the Ponce area in the 1940s There is daily commercial non stop air service to points in the United States 329 Since 1804 Ponce already boasted its own port facilities for large cargo ships 330 The Port of Ponce is Puerto Rico s chief Caribbean port 331 It is known as the Port of the Americas and is under expansion to convert it into a major international shipping hub 332 It receives both cargo as well as passenger cruise ships 333 334 A short haul freight railroad also operates within the Port facilities 335 Major roads in PonceWest East Roads Old Road to San Juan Roberto Sanchez Vilella Expressway Ponce Circumferential Highway Avenida Tito Castro Road to Penuelas Avenida Ednita Nazario Avenida Las Americas Puerto Rico Highway 515 Puerto Rico Highway 585 Road in El Tuque South North Roads Carretera Pampanos Highway to Arecibo Avenida Santiago de los Caballeros Luis A Ferre Expressway Old Road to Arecibo Road to Barrios Cerrillos and Maraguez Ruta Panoramica Road to Barrio Marueno Road to Barrio Quebrada Limon Road to Barrio Tibes Road to Barrio Portugues Road to Machuelo Arriba and Montes Llanos Road to Barrio Real and Barrio Anon Road to Cerro Maravilla Road to Barrio SabanetasRoads in boldface are limited access roads Notable Poncenos EditSee also List of people from Ponce Puerto RicoInternational relations EditThe Dominican Republic maintains a consular office in the city 336 Twin towns sister cities Edit Ponce is twinned with Zaragoza Spain 337 Commemorative dates EditThe following dates hold special significance for Poncenos and are motive for annual celebrations and or memorials January 25 El Polvorin fire 338 Often remembered with a service at the mausoleum of the Ponce firefighters at Cementerio Civil de Ponce 339 March 21 Ponce massacre 340 Often memorialized with a get together and service at the tomb of the victims at Cementerio Civil de Ponce 341 March 22 Abolition of slavery in Puerto Rico 342 Often remembered with a memorial service at the Monumento a la abolicion de la esclavitud 343 April 26 or last Sunday of April Dia de la Bandera Poncena 344 August 12 Dia de la Fundacion de Ponce Founding Date 18 345 346 Often celebrated on the first Sunday of September 347 October 7 Mameyes Landslide 348 349 350 Often remembered with a get together and memorial service at the site of the landslide in Barrio Portugues Urbano 351 December 12 Las Mananitas 352 Celebrated yearly with a pre dawn festival parade followed by a Catholic Mass and a popular town breakfast 353 See also Edit Puerto Rico portal Geography portalTimeline of the history of Ponce Puerto Rico List of Puerto Ricans History of Puerto Rico Did you know Puerto Rico Notes Edit Some publications reporters have erroneously stated Ponce s date of founding as December 12 1692 see for example Jose Fernandez Colon The Associated Press at Noticias Online on January 24 2009 at Noticias Puerto Rico Accessed 23 March 2019 Another incorrect date sometimes found is September 12 1692 See for example Jorge L Perez El Nuevo Dia and Jorge Figueroa Ponce Municipal Historian at Historic Buildings and Structures in Ponce Puerto Rico at the text accompanying Drawing 20 titled Tumba de los Bomberos Puerto Rico Historic Buildings Drawings Society 2019 Accessed 4 February 2019 See also Mapa de Municipios y Barrios Ponce Memoria Numero 27 Archived 30 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine Gobierno del Estado Libre Asociado de Puerto Rico Junta de Planificacion Santurce Puerto Rico 1953 p 6 Miguel A Sanchez Celada also points to the September 12 1692 date based on the record that on that date the Spanish Crown officially recognized via Royal Decree the hamlet as a town See Miguel A Sanchez Celada Evolucion urbana de Ponce Puerto Rico segun la cartografia Historica Universidad Nacional de Educacion a Distancia UNED Madrid Spain 2018 DOI http dx doi org 10 5944 etfvi 11 2018 20421 In Espacio Tiempo y Forma Revista de la Facultad de Geografia e Historia UNED Serie VI Geografia 11 2018 pp 219 245 ISSN 1130 2968 E ISSN 2340 146x In this article the date reported is that given by the authorities closest to the founding date and with their respective references Some historians state that the municipality was named after Juan Ponce de Leon himself Crediting Juan Ponce de Leon himself see for example Eduardo Neuman Gandia s Verdadera y Autentica Historia de la Ciudad de Ponce San Juan Puerto Rico Instituto de Cultura Puertorriquena 1913 Page 34 and Jose Luis Diaz de Villegas https books google com books id ovzJlU1f iAC amp pg PA46 and Sandra Torres Guzman s Una hacienda atada a la historia citadina https www periodicolaperla com una hacienda atada a la historia citadina Archived 25 September 2019 at the Wayback Machine Others state it was named after Juan Ponce de Leon y Loayza the great grandson of Juan Ponce de Leon Crediting the great grandson see for example Encyclopedia Puerto Rico Municipalities Ponce Archived from the original on 29 May 2012 Retrieved 25 July 2012 J A Corretjer http www yerbabruja com pueblos ponce html Frommer https books google com books id Wy BSu4a2EYC amp pg PA185 and Harry S Pariser https books google com books id KawuqbFxLS0C amp pg PT239 A few authorities state it may have been named after the Ponce de Leon family in general covering father son grandson and great grandson See for example Francisco Lluch Mora s Origenes y Fundacion de Ponce y otras noticias relativas a su desarrollo urbano demografico y cultural siglos XVI XIX Segunda Edicion Editorial Plaza Mayor 2006 page 27 Still others state it was founded by Juan Ponce de Leon y Loayza but named by him in the memory of his great grandfather the Spanish Conquistador Juan Ponce de Leon Footnotes Edit During the 1600s and 1700s the rural areas of a municipal jurisdiction today 2019 called barrio in Puerto Rico were then called partido a term used to refer to all the territory that depended from the Municipal Government of a city or town See Lorenzo A Balasquide Compendio Intrahistorico de Penuelas San Juan Puerto Rico Editorial Cordillera Inc 1972 p 51 footnote 23 Aida R Caro Costas El Cabildo or Regimen Municipal Puertorriqueno en el Siglo XVIII La Gestion Municipal Puertorriquena Tomo II San Juan Puerto Rico Instituto de Cultura Puertorriquena 1974 p 38 In 1670 that Municipal Government was San German Coined Ciudad Senorial by Manuel Fernandez Juncos in 1864 upon the inauguration of Teatro La Perla Ref Neysa Rodriguez Deynes Rafael J Torres Torres and Carlos Aneiro Perez Teatro La Perla in Brevario Sobre la Historia de Ponce y Sus Principales Lugares de Interes Gobierno Municipal de Ponce Ponce Puerto Rico Model Offset Printing 1991 page 125 Sometimes also translated The Patrician City See Ileana M Rodriguez Silva s Silencing Race Disentangling Blackness Colonialism and National Identities in Puerto Rico New York Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan 2012 Page 94 or The Noble City See Ponce General Information Puerto Rico Encyclopedia Retrieved 25 November 2009 but translations into The Majestic City See Fundacion Puertorriquena de las Humanidades Ponce Ciudad Museo 2001 2001 p 149 The Lordly City See La Perla Theater in Ponce Ivonne Acosta Encyclopedia de Puerto Rico 29 September 2008 Accessed 28 November 2018 and The Estately City have also been encountered For an extensive discussion of the Plan Ponce en Marcha see Carmelo Rosario Natal Ponce en Marcha y las Primeras Iniciativas in Ponce en Su Historia Moderna 1945 2002 Gobierno Municipal de Ponce First Edition 2003 Pages 242 324 It has also been called a more profoundly Puerto Rican city than San Juan See Enrique A Laguerre s Mito de la poncenidad El Mundo 8 November 1980 page 9 A Ayuntamiento de Ponce was the second formed in Puerto Rico after San Juan s See Historia de los partidos reformista y conservador de Puerto Rico Francisco Mariano Quinones Tipografia Comercial Comercio 13 Marina Mayaguez Puerto Rico 1889 Page 7 References Edit Fay Fowlie de Flores Ponce Perla del Sur Una Bibliografica Anotada Second Edition 1997 Ponce Puerto Rico Universidad de Puerto Rico en Ponce p 14 Item 69 LCCN 92 75480 Socorro Giron El misterio de Ponce El Mundo San Juan Puerto Rico 1 2 July 1974 s p Ponce Ciudad Senorial Himno de Ponce Perla del Sur Archived 20 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine Government of the Autonomous Municipality of Ponce Retrieved 25 June 2012 Ponce en mi corazon los secretos tras el himno de esta Perla del Sur Su autor el doctor Angel Luis Rodriguez Rosado uno de los primeros especialistas en Medicina Nuclear en Puerto Rico y mecenas del Arte es oriundo del pueblo de Naranjito Archived 13 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine Jose Enrique Ayoroa Santaliz La Perla del Sur Ponce Puerto Rico 30 September 2020 Accessed 30 September 2020 Printed edition Ponce en mi corazon los secretos tras el himno de esta Perla del Sur Su autor el doctor Angel Luis Rodriguez Rosado uno de los primeros especialistas en Medicina Nuclear en Puerto Rico y mecenas del Arte es oriundo del pueblo de Naranjito La Perla del Sur Year 37 Issue 1922 30 September to 7 October 2020 Page 11 US Gazetteer files 2010 2000 and 1990 United States Census Bureau February 12 2011 Retrieved July 26 2015 Eli D Oquendo Rodriguez De Criadero a Partido Ojeada de la Historia de los Origenes de Ponce 1645 1810 First Edition Lajas Puerto Rico Centro de Estudios e Investigaciones del Sur Oeste CEISO Editorial Akelarre 2015 ISBN 1516895487 Page 15 Informe Final del Proyecto de Monitoreo Socioeconomico en las Areas Protegidas Marinas y Costeras de Puerto Rico Reserva Natural Punta Cucharas Ponce Puerto Rico Rosemarie Vazquez Cruz Carlos J Carrero Morales Jeannette Ramos Garcia and Andreica Maldonado A joint project by NOAA DRNA Centro Interdisciplinario de Estudios del Litoral UPR Mayaguez and Programa de Colegio Sea Grant de la UPR 2011 Gaspar Pons Reserva Natural Punta Cucharas Ponce Puerto Rico Re published by Carlos Carrero November 2011 Page 37 Accessed 25 February 2019 Mariano Vidal Armstrong Ponce Notas para su historia Comite Historia de los Pueblos San Juan Puerto Rico 1986 p 7 Cayetano Coll y Toste Memoria del Gobernador Juan Lopez Melgarejo Biblioteca Historica de Puerto Rico 1914 Volume 1 Page 82 Eli D Oquendo Rodriguez De Criadero a Partido Ojeada de la Historia de los Origenes de Ponce 1645 1810 First Edition Lajas Puerto Rico Centro de Estudios e Investigaciones del Sur Oeste CEISO Editorial Akelarre 2015 ISBN 1516895487 Page 11 Alvaro Huerga Las Descripciones de Puerto Rico Hechas en 1582 In Historia Documental de Puerto Rico Vol XV Primeros Historiadores de Puerto Rico 1492 1660 Ponce Puerto Rico Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Puerto Rico 2004 p 141 Francisco Lluch Mora Origenes y Fundacion de Ponce San Juan Puerto Rico Editorial Plaza Mayor Segunda Edicion 2006 p 29 Salvador Perea Historia de Puerto Rico 1537 1700 Edited by Instituto de Cultura Puertorriquena and Universidad Catolica de Puerto Rico 1972 p 184 Eduardo Neumann Gandia Verdadera y Autentica Historia de la Ciudad de Ponce desde sus primitivos tiempos hasta la epoca contemporanea Abril de 1913 Edicion Conmemorativa del Centenario de la Fundacion del Partido Autonomista Puertorriqueno 1887 1987 San Juan Puerto Rico Instituto de Cultura Puertorriquena Henry Cobb Editor Primera Edicion 1987 p 19 Dennis DeJesus Rodriguez Fundacion de Ponce 1678 1692 In Hereditas Revista de genealogia puertorriquena San Juan Puerto Rico Sociedad de Genealogia de Puerto Rico Vol 10 Issue 2 Year 2009 pp 63 71 Mariano Vidal Armstrong Ponce Notas para su historia Comite Historia de los Pueblos San Juan Puerto Rico 1986 p 12 a b Francisco Lluch Mora Origenes y Fundacion de Ponce San Juan Puerto Rico Editorial Plaza Mayor Segunda Edicion 2006 p 33 a b Mariano Vidal Armstrong Ponce Notas para su Historia San Juan PR Comite Historia de los Pueblos Oficina de Preservacion Historica de Puerto Rico Second Edition 1986 p 17 Salvador Brau La fundacion de Ponce estudio retrospectivo que comprende desde los asomos de vecindad europea en las riberas del Portugues al terminar el siglo XVI hasta el incendio casi total del pueblo de Ponce en febrero de 1820 Ponce Puerto Rico Taller Tipografico Comercial La Democracia 1909 Reprinted at San Juan Puerto Rico at a later date p 4 See Francisco Luch Mora s Origenes y Fundacion de Ponce Editorial Plaza Mayor 2006 pp 29 33 a b Jose Leandro Montalvo Guenard In Luis Fortuno Janeiro Album Historico de Ponce 1692 1963 Section Algo Sobre Ponce y su Fundacion Ponce Puerto Rico Imprenta Fortuno 1963 p 11 Eduardo Neumann Gandia Verdadera y Autentica Historia de la Ciudad de Ponce April 1913 Instituto de Cultura Puertorriquena Edicion Comnmemorativa del Centenario de la Fundacion del Partido Autonomista Puertorriqueno 1987 p 283 a b US Board on Geographic Names United States Geological Survey October 25 2007 Retrieved July 26 2015 Bureau US Census PUERTO RICO 2020 Census The United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 25 2021 U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 31 2008 Ilia del Toro Robledo Acta 203 dated 17 September 1823 In Actas del Cabildo de Ponce Puerto Rico 1812 1823 Gobierno Municipal Autonomo de Ponce Comision Puertorriquena para la Celebracion del Quinto Centenario del Descubrimiento de America y Puerto Rico en Conmemoracion del Encuentro de Dos Mundos 1993 p 352 Salvador Brau La fundacion de Ponce estudio retrospectivo que comprende desde los asomos de vecindad europea en las riberas del Portugues al terminar el siglo XVI hasta el incendio casi total del pueblo de Ponce en febrero de 1820 Ponce Puerto Rico Taller Tipografico Comercial La Democracia 1909 p 5 Reprinted at San Juan Puerto Rico at a later date p 4 See Francisco Lluch Mora s Origenes y Fundacion de Ponce Editorial Plaza Mayor 2006 pp 29 33 Mariano Vidal Armstrong Ponce Notas para su Historia San Juan PR Comite Historia de los Pueblos Second Edition 1986 p 17 Mariano Vidal Armstrong Estampas Tradiciones y Leyendas de Ponce San Juan Puerto Rico Instituto de Cultura Puertorriquena 1986 Page 139 See also Calletano Coll y Toste and Salvador Brau s La fundacion de Ponce estudio retrospectivo que comprende desde los asomos de vecindad europea en las riberas del Portugues al terminar el siglo XVI hasta el incendio casi total del pueblo de Ponce en febrero de 1820 Ponce Puerto Rico Tipografia Comercial La Democracia 1909 Maps of Native Boriken A Map of the Chiefdoms and a Map of the Villages at Time of First Contact Boriken Taino Island World History Archives Resources for the History of Native Boriken Puerto Rico Taino Map Retrieved 22 November 2009 Catalogo del Centro Ceremonial Indigena de Tibes Secretaria de Cultura y Turismo Municipio Autonomo de Ponce Autonomous Municipality of Ponce Ponce Puerto Rico April 2002 Page 13 Tourism Puerto Rico com Archived 31 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 10 February 2010 Ponce Nuestro Ponce In Spanish Ponce Webcindario Retrieved 14 February 2010 Ponce Puerto Rico Algunos Datos In Spanish Areciboweb Retrieved 14 February 2010 Nombre y Escudos de los Pueblos de Puerto Rico In Spanish YerbaBruja Retrieved 14 February 2010 Luis Fortuno Janeiro Album Historico de Ponce 1692 1963 Page 6 1963 Imprenta Fortuno Ponce Puerto Rico Ponce Puerto Rico Algunos Datos In Spanish Datos sobre Ponce Retrieved 22 November 2009 Spain in Puerto Rico Early Settlements By Doris Vazquez The Yale New Haven Teachers Institute 1986 Archived 18 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 22 November 2009 Ponce Puerto Rico Algunos Datos In Spanish Portuguese Don Pedro Rodriguez de Guzman Don Antonio Adab Rodriguez Berrios and San Anton Retrieved 22 November 2009 Carta del Rey al Gobernador de Puerto Rico sobre las fundaciones de Ponce Coamo Arecibo Aguada y Loiza preb Ponce Puerto Rico Welcome To Puerto Rico Register of Porto Rico Page 196 Retrieved 28 March 2010 Juan Ponce de Leon Biography Travel Ponce Retrieved 22 November 2009 Explore Puerto Rico By Harry S Pariser San Francisco Manatee Press Page 239 Retrieved 30 November 2009 Some historians believe the city was named after conquistador Juan Ponce de Leon himself This includes Luis Fortuno Janeiro see Luis Fortuno Janeiro Album Historico de Ponce 1692 1963 1963 page 12 Imprenta Fortuno Ponce Puerto Rico Others yet believe it was named after the Juan Ponce de Leon family in general Portuguese Don Pedro Rodriguez de Guzman Don Antonio Adab Rodriguez Berrios and San Anton Retrieved 22 November 2009 Government of the Municipality of Ponce Transportate gt Walking Tour Archived 2012 07 03 at the Wayback Machine Eduardo Neumann Gandia Verdadera y Autentica Historia de la Ciudad de Ponce Instituto de Cultura Puertorriquena 1913 p 259 Neysa Rodriguez Deynes Brevario sobre la Historia de Ponce Gobierno Municipal de Ponce Oficina de Cultura y Turismo 2002 p 37 Eduardo Neumann Gandia Verdadera y Autentica Historia de la Ciudad de Ponce Instituto de Cultura Puertorriquena 1913 pp 67 68 a b Eduardo Neumann Gandia Verdadera y Autentica Historia de la Ciudad de Ponce 1913 Reprinted in 1987 San Juan Puerto Rico Instituto de Cultura Puertorriquena p 38 Figueroa L A 2006 Sugar Slavery and Freedom in Nineteenth Century Puerto Rico University of North Carolina Press pp 32 55 ISBN 978 0 8078 7683 1 Retrieved August 22 2019 Francisco A Scarano Puerto Rico Cinco Siglos de Historia McGraw Hill Interamericana Editores S A de C V 2000 Pages 407 490 Ponce Founding and History Puerto Rico Encyclopedia Archived 2012 07 07 at the Wayback Machine Declared a Villa Retrieved 22 November 2009 Ponce Fundacion e Historia Encyclopedia Puerto Rico In Spanish Archived 12 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Declared villa in Spanish Retrieved 22 November 2009 Museo Castillo Serralles Historia Archived 26 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine Declared city Retrieved 22 November 2009 Carta del Rey al Gobernador de Puerto Rico Sobre la Ereccion en Villa de los Pueblos de Ponce Coamo Arecibo Aguaga y Loiza PReb com Puerto Rico en Breve In Spanish Cedula Real Retrieved 22 November 2009 Memorias geograficas historicas economicas y estadisticas de la isla de Puerto Rico Cordova Pedro Tomas de Internet Archive October 23 2016 Retrieved July 20 2019 Ponce Puerto Rico Library of U S Congress Largest city Retrieved 22 November 2009 America s Colony the Political and Cultural Conflict Between the United States and Puerto Rico By Pedro A Malavet NYU Press 2004 Pages 52 53 ISBN 0 8147 5680 8 Retrieved 22 November 2009 History of the Atlantic Cable amp Undersea Communications From the First Submarine Cable of 1850 to the Worldwide Fiber Optic Network The CS Hooper Silvertown By Bill Glover First undersea communications link Retrieved 22 November 2009 Ponce Let s Go Archived 2010 12 04 at the Wayback Machine Ponce Had its own Currency Retrieved 22 November 2009 El Desembarco en Ponce In Spanish Retrieved 23 November 2009 Museo Casa Armstrong Poventud Instituto de Cultura Puertorriquena Archived 2012 06 04 at the Wayback Machine Click on Opusculo de la Casa Armstrong Poventud Taken from the brochure Museo Casa Armstrong Poventud ICP Museos y Parques Published by Instituto de Cultura Puertorriquena San Juan PR February 9 2009 Retrieved July 23 2009 The world of 1898 The Spanish American War Ponce Puerto Rico Library of Congress files Retrieved 22 November 2009 The American Army Moves on Puerto Rico Part 3 By Mark R Barnes Senior Archaeologist National Park Service Southeast Regional Office The Spanish American War Centennial Website Retrieved 22 November 2009 Neysa Rodriguez Deynes Breviario Sobre la Historia de Ponce y Sus Principales Lugares de Interes Gobierno Municipal de Ponce 1991 El desembarco en Ponce 1898 The Spanish American War in Puerto Rico Retrieved 22 November 2009 Library of Congress Retrieved 22 November 2009 Discovering Mamposteao Jonny amp Amy Seppy Sills We Are Never Full Musings on Starters Mains Desserts and Second Helpings 3 May 2012 Retrieved 19 July 2012 History of Ponce Lonely Planet Travel Information Lonely Planet Archived from the original on November 23 2018 Retrieved March 15 2019 The Hurricane San Ciriaco Disaster and Politics in Puerto Rico 1899 1901 By Stewart B Schwartz Hispanic American Historical Review Vol 72 Issue 1992 Duke University Press Pages 303 305 PDF Experience Puerto Rico The Coffee Industry By Carol M Bareuther RD Retrieved 28 March 2010 Central Aguirre Salinas Oficina Estatal de Conservacion Historica de Puerto Rico In Spanish Retrieved 13 April 2010 Sugar in Puerto Rico Encyclopedia Puerto Rico Archived 16 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 13 April 2010 Puerto Rican Sugar Mills Start Operations The Daily News 3 February 1971 Page 9 Retrieved 13 April 2010 Company History Cafe Rico Archived from the original on September 23 2010 Retrieved March 28 2010 Register of Porto Rico Page 197 Retrieved 28 March 2010 I Vote My Conscience The Debates Speeches and Writings of Congressman Vito Marcantonio Puerto Rico and the Puerto Rican People 1935 1950 On H R 7674 a bill for a Puerto Rican Constitution its purpose is to perpetuate the present system of colonialism March 16 1950 Facts about sugar Archived 10 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Editors Annette T Ruberstein and Associates Retrieved 22 June 2012 Rico Puerto March 15 2019 Acts of the Legislature of Puerto Rico via Google Books Appletons Annual Cyclopedia and Reguister of Important Events 1898 Page 587 Ponce recalls 19th century colonialism in Puerto Rico Suzanne Van Atten The Atlanta Journal Constitution 20 Oct 2012 Retrieved 9 January 2013 a b Report of the Commission of Inquiry on Civil Rights in Puerto Rico By The Commission of Inquiry on Civil Rights in Puerto Rico 70p np 22 May 1937 Law Library Microform Consortium Kaneohe HI Archived 14 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 22 November 2009 Five Years of Tyranny Speech by U S Congressman Vito Macartonio Archived 2012 01 12 at the Wayback Machine Congressman Marcantonio later reported on the events before the U S House of Representatives Retrieved 23 November 2009 Puerto Rico Encyclopedia Archived 9 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 23 November 2009 Five Years of Tyranny Speech before the U S House of Representatives Archived 2012 01 12 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 23 November 2009 Latin American Studies Retrieved 23 November 2009 Five Years of Tyranny Speech before the U S House of Representatives Archived 2012 01 12 at the Wayback Machine U S Congressman Marcantonio gave a speech critical of Governor Winship s involvement in the massacre The entire speech is contained in the Congressional Record of 14 August 1939 a b c Report of the ACLU as echoed by U S Congressman Vito Marcantonio Archived 2012 01 12 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 23 November 2009 Remembering Puerto Rico s Ponce Massacre Democracy NOW The War and Peace Report 22 March 2007 Retrieved 23 March 2010 Eileen J Findlay Decency and Democracy the Politics of Prostitution in Ponce Puerto Rico 1890 1900 Feminist Studies Vol 23 1997 Page 471 Retrieved 30 November 2009 a b Profile of General Population and Housing Characteristics 2010 Geography Ponce Municipio Puerto Rico American Fact Finder U S Census Bureau U S Department of Commerce 2010 Accessed 27 June 2017 Puerto Rico A Travel Guide Randall Peffer Lonely Planet Page 224 2002 ISBN 9781740592741 Accessed 27 June 2017 The changing categories the U S census has used to measure race Anna Brown Pew Research Center 25 February 2020 Accessed 3 December 2022 Reinaldo E Gonzalez Blanco El Turismo Cultural en Ponce durante el Plan Ponce en Marcha 1900 2000 Neysa Rodriguez Deynes Editor Ponce Puerto Rico Professional Editions 2018 pp 24 25 ISBN 978 1 64131 139 7 Map Showing Susceptibility to Rainfall triggered Landslides in the Municipality of Ponce Puerto Rico Scientific Investigations Map I 2818 By Mattew C Larsen Marylin Santiago Randall Jibson and Eduardo Questell USGS 2004 Contrary to popular belief Mameyes in not located in barrio Tibes Mameyes is located in Barrio Portugues Urbano Please see map Retrieved 2 March 2010 Natural Hazards and Disasters Landslides in Puerto Rico Caribbean Natural Hazards Unit for Disaster Studies University of the West Indies Mona Jamaica Mameyes landslide survivors were relocated to more stable grounds Retrieved 22 November 2009 Landslide and Debri Flow Executive Office of the President of the United States President s National Science and Technology Council Committee on Environment and Natural Resources Subcommittee on Disaster Reduction Washington D C 2005 Archived 6 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 22 November 2009 Ley Num 256 del 13 de agosto del ano 2008 Para ordenar a la Comision Denominadora de Puerto Rico designe la Carr PR 9 con el nombre de Rafael Churumba Cordero Santiago In Spanish LexJuris Puerto Rico First Autonomous Municipality Retrieved 22 November 2009 An Act To amend Sections 1 and 2 of Act No 100 of June 27 1956 Archived 12 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Act No 81 of 30 August 1991 Autonomous Municipalities Act of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico In An Act To amend Sections 1 and 2 of Act No 100 of June 27 1956 Act No 66 3rd Session of the 13th Legislature of Puerto Rico 14 April 1998 Retrieved 22 November 2009 Mayita ofrece su mensaje de logros Archived 2 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine El Sur a la Vista Ponce Puerto Rico 12 October 2011 Retrieved 13 October 2011 Luis Irizarry Pabon Preve escabroso proceso de transicion tras su victoria en las urnas En enero Irizarry Pabon tomara el control de una alcaldia que arrastra un deficit operacional de 48 3 millones y una deuda acumulada de 293 4 millones segun detalla la auditoria externa del ano 2018 Jason Rodriguez Grafal La Perla del Sur 11 November 2020 Printed edition Year 38 Issue 1928 11 17 November 2020 pp 4 5 Accessed 11 November 2020 Archived Government Judiciary Welcome to Puerto Rico Retrieved 23 November 2009 La Rama Judicial de Puerto Rico Tribunal de Primera Instancia In Spanish Archived 14 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Ponce is a Regional Center for the Judiciary of Puerto Rico Retrieved 22 November 2009 Ley Num 293 of 25 de diciembre de 2002 Article 1 f In Spanish Archived 12 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Ponce is a Regional Center for the Puerto Rico Judiciary for several Neighboring Municipalities Retrieved 22 November 2009 Centros de Servicios de ARPE Archived 27 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish Map showing commonwealth s ARPE regional center at Ponce Retrieved 22 November 2009 Port of the Americas Commonwealth of Puerto Rico Port of the Americas Authority Archived 12 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 8 March 2010 Discover Ponce s Neoclassical Buildings and Museums Archived 14 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine PuertoRico com Retrieved 22 November 2009 Ponce Welcome to Puerto Rico Retrieved 21 April 2010 La Perla Theater Puerto Rico Encyclopedia Archived 12 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 21 April 2010 Ciudad de Las Quenepas Archived 2012 07 07 at the Wayback Machine Genip is one of the common names in English for Melicoccus bijugatus The word used in Puerto Rico is quenepa Other Spanish speaking countries call the fruit mamoncillo Retrieved 23 July 2009 A ready to be eaten Quenepa Archived 12 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine The quenepa is the city fruit of Ponce Retrieved 23 November 2009 Ponce History Museum Hector L Feliciano Torres InterAmerican University 2003 Accessed 29 December 2020 Maria un nombre que no vamos a olvidar Maria no perdono a la Ciudad Senorial Maria a name we will never forget Maria didn t forgive the Ciudad Senorial El Nuevo Dia in Spanish June 13 2019 Retrieved September 11 2022 Preliminary Locations of Landslide Impacts from Hurricane Maria Puerto Rico USGS Landslide Hazards Program USGS Retrieved March 3 2019 Preliminary Locations of Landslide Impacts from Hurricane Maria Puerto Rico PDF USGS Landslide Hazards Program USGS Retrieved March 3 2019 Directorio de Municipios Gobierno de Puerto Rico Pagina Oficial de Gobierno de Puerto Rico In Spanish Neighboring Towns Retrieved 22 November 2009 Tourism Puerto Rico Ponce Details Archived 30 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine Second largest land Retrieved 22 November 2009 Surface Water Water Quality and Ground Water Assessment of the Municipio of Ponce Puerto Rico 2002 2004 Scientific Investigations Report 2005 5243 By Jesus Rodriguez Martinez Luis Santiago Rivera Jose M Rodriguez and Fernando Gomez Gomez United States Geological Survey U S Department of the Interior Prepared in Cooperation with the Municipio Autonomo de Ponce Puerto Rico Office of the Mayor 2005 Page 3 Retrieved 22 November 2009 Boricua Online Ponce Facts Source USGS Retrieved 21 February 2010 Surface Water Water Quality and Ground Water Assessment of the Municipio of Ponce Puerto Rico 2002 2004 Scientific Investigations Report 2005 5243 By Jesus Rodriguez Martinez Luis Santiago Rivera Jose M Rodriguez and Fernando Gomez Gomez United States Geological Survey U S Department of the Interior Prepared in Cooperation with the Municipio Autonomo de Ponce Puerto Rico Office of the Mayor 2005 Page 4 Retrieved 22 November 2009 Surface Water Water Quality and Ground Water Assessment of the Municipio of Ponce Puerto Rico 2002 2004 Scientific Investigations Report 2005 5243 By Jesus Rodriguez Martinez Luis Santiago Rivera Jose M Rodriguez and Fernando Gomez Gomez United States Geological Survey U S Department of the Interior Prepared in Cooperation with the Municipio Autonomo de Ponce Puerto Rico 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12 September 2012 Year 30 Issue 1502 Page 8 Accessed 22 March 2019 Hacen justicia con heroes del Polvorin Archived 23 March 2019 at the Wayback Machine Reinaldo Millan La Perla del Sur Ponce Puerto Rico 19 25 January 2012 Kal Wagenheim and Olga Jimenez De Wagenheim The Grim Years in The Puerto Ricans A Documentary History Markus Wiener Publishers 2008 pp 179 180 ISBN 9781558764767 Siete decadas no anulan tragedia Archived 23 March 2019 at the Wayback Machine Reinaldo Millan La Perla del Sur Ponce Puerto Rico 15 21 March 2012 Abolition of Slavery 1873 Archived 4 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine Enciclopedia de Puerto Rico Accessed 2 March 2019 Todos el viernes a la Concha Acustica Los actos de conmemoracion de la abolicion de la esclavitud comenzaran a las 5 00 de la tarde y seran dedicados al polifacetico artista David Santiago Torres Archived 23 March 2019 at the Wayback Machine Patricia Collazo La Perla del Sur 20 March 2019 Accessed 22 March 2019 Printed edition La Perla del Sur 20 26 March 2019 Year 36 Issue 1842 Page 13 28 de abril a punto para otro Dia de la Bandera Poncena Aunque muchos no nos demos cuenta existen alrededor de cinco versiones de la bandera poncena debido a revisiones y celebraciones de momentos historicos Archived 4 February 2022 at the Wayback Machine Melina Aguilar Colon Ponce Puerto Rico La Perla del Sur 17 April 2019 Accessed 1 October 2020 Printed version Year 36 Issue 1846 17 to 23 April 2019 Pages 12 13 Salvador Brau Origenes de Ponce p 4 Jose Leandro Montalvo Guenard In Luis Fortuno Janeiro Album Historico de Ponce 1692 1963 Algo Sobre Ponce y su Fundacion Ponce Puerto Rico Imprenta Fortuno 1963 p 11 Ponce se prepara para celebrar su dia mundial Darisabel Texidor Guadalupe Primera Hora 30 August 2013 Retrieved 30 August 2013 Storm Data PDF 27 10 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration October 1985 30 Retrieved May 1 2012 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help permanent dead link Nicholas DeGraff July 24 1999 Landslides in Puerto Rico University of the West Indies Archived from the original on March 18 2007 Retrieved May 2 2012 Ferdinand Quinones and Karl G Johnson 1987 The Floods of May 17 18 1985 and October 6 7 1985 in Puerto Rico PDF Report United States Geological Survey Retrieved May 3 2012 Conmemoran 30 anos de la devastacion en Mameyes Aguaceros produjeron el derrumbe de lodo arropando a hogares en el que murieron alrededor de 93 personas Univision 7 October 2015 Accessed 22 March 2019 Latente la Tradicion Multitud Madruga para Venerar en Ponce la Virgen de Guadalupe Archived 23 March 2019 at the Wayback Machine Coral Negron Almodovar La Perla del Sur Year 35 Issue 1724 14 to 20 December 2016 Ponce Puerto Rico p 4 Vuelven a Ponce las Fiestas Patronales Carmen Cila Rodriguez La Perla del Sur Ponce Puerto Rico 5 December 2012 Retrieved 24 January 2015 Archived at WayBack Machine on 1 February 2015 External links EditPonce Puerto Rico at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Texts from Wikisource Travel information from Wikivoyage Data from Wikidata Photos of Ponce Photos of Ponce at Getty Images Photos of Ponce at Flickr 1930s Panoramic view of the city of Ponce Tourism Information about Ponce s tourist attractions Centro Ceremonial Indigena de Tibes Video amp Contact Info Historic Places in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands a National Park Service Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary Management Plan for La Esperanza Nature Preserve in Ponce Puerto Rico Archived 6 February 2015 at the Wayback Machine Matthew Bourque Drew Digeser Stephen Partridge and Hussein Yatim Worcester Polytechnic Institute Worcester Massachusetts 2 May 2012 Retrieved 4 August 2013 Autonomous Municipalities Laws Commonwealth Laws Regarding Autonomous Municipalities permanent dead link Text of Autonomous Municipalities Law in Spanish Ponce History Official website of Municipality of Ponce Ponce y su Importancia Historica 29 December 2000 Ponce en Marcha Final Decision by the Puerto Rico Supreme Court 2000 DTS 194 MUNICIPIO DE PONCE V AUTORIDAD DE CARRETERAS 2000TSPR194 Case Number CC 98 241 Cons CC 98 231 250 257 258 and 259 29 December 2000 Ponce en Marcha Dissent Opinion from Associate P R Sup Court Justice Honorable Efrain Rivera Perez page 1 29 December 2000 Ponce en Marcha Dissent Opinion from Associate P R Sup Court Justice Honorable Efrain Rivera Perez page 2 Census Ponce and its barrios United States Census Bureau Others Autonomous Municipality of Ponce official site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ponce Puerto Rico amp oldid 1145619086, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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