History of Ponce, Puerto Rico
Ponce, Puerto Rico’s most populated city outside the San Juan metropolitan area, was founded on August 12, 1692. In honor of Juan Ponce de León y Loayza. He is the great-grandson of Spanish conquistador Juan Ponce de Leon. Ponce is La Perla del Sur (The Pearl of the South), La Ciudad Señorial (The Manorial City), and La Ciudad de las Quenepas.
The Municipality of Ponce, officially the Autonomous Municipality of Ponce, is located in the southern coastal plain region of the Island. Its location is 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 town’s metropolitan area. The historic Ponce Pueblo district, located in the city’s downtown area, consists of 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.
Early Residents of Ponce
Taino Guaynia reigned in the area of what is now Ponce. It stretched along the southern coast of Puerto Rico. Agüeybaná, a cacique who led the area, 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.
During the first years of the colonization, Spanish families settled around the Jacaguas River in the south of the Island. Then, for security reasons, these families moved to the banks of the Rio Portugués, called Baramaya. Around 1646, the whole area from the Rio Portugués to the Bay of Guayanilla encompassed Ponce. In 1670, a small chapel was raised in the middle of the small settlement and dedicated to Our Lady of Guadalupe. Its earliest settlers were Juan Ponce de León y Loayza and the Portuguese Don Pedro Rodríguez de Guzmán from nearby San German.
On September 17, 1692, the King of Spain, Carlos II, issued a Cédula Real (Royal Permit), converting the chapel into a parish and officially recognizing the small settlement as a hamlet. Juan Ponce de León y Loayza, Juan Ponce de León’s great-grandson, is instrumental in obtaining the royal permit. This will allow it to formalize the founding of the hamlet. Captains Enrique Salazar and Miguel del Toro were also instrumental.
Early 18th century
In the early 18th century, Don Antonio Abad Rodriguez Berrios built a small chapel named San Antonio Abad. The area would later receive the title of San Antón, a historically significant part of modern Ponce. In 1712 the village was known as The Village of Our Lady of Guadalupe of Ponce.
19th-century immigrants
During the early 19th century, Ponce was just one of many small villages scattered throughout the Island. The residents then relied on subsistence farming, cattle breeding, and illegal trading with foreign ships. Mayor José Benítez divided the area into different categories, including cotos, hatos, criaderos, monterías, and terrenos realengos. Cotos were granted to residents as a reward for their services to the king, later developed into estancias for agricultural purposes. Hatos, on the other hand, were communal lands where cattle roamed freely. Monterías were hilly areas next to hatos where trained dogs helped gather cattle. Criaderos were lands designated for milk production and herding of animals such as goats, sheep, pigs, mules, and mares. Finally, Terrenos realengos were lands that belonged to the state, specifically the king.
However, in the 1820s, three events dramatically changed the town’s size. The first of these events was the arrival of many white Francophones fleeing the Haitian Revolution of 1791–1804. 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 extensive flatlands and came with enough capital and enslaved people. Commercial connections would stimulate Ponce’s sugarcane production and sales.
Secondly, landlords and merchants migrated from various Latin American countries. They had migrated for better conditions, leaving economic decline following the revolutions and disruption of societies as nations gained independence from Spain in the 1810s-1820s.
Royal Decree of Graces of 1815
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, the town’s size changed, but the character of its population also changed. Europeans, including many Protestants, immigrated from a variety of nations. On July 29, 1848, and as a result of this explosive growth, the Ponce hamlet was declared a villa (village) by Queen Isabella II, and in 1877 the town obtained its city charter.
Fortunes Made
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 immigrants made considerable fortunes in coffee, corn, sugarcane harvesting, rum production, banking, finance, importing industrial machinery, iron foundries, and other enterprises. At the time of the American invasion of the Island in 1898, Ponce was a thriving city, boosting the Island’s leading financial center. The Island’s first communications link to another country, the best capitalized financial institutions, and its currency. In addition, it had consular offices for England, Germany, the Netherlands, and other nations.
Personal Notes/Observations
Unfortunately, about two hundred years’ worth of records is missing due to a fire in 1850. Fortunately, there is a census record for Ponce that exists before 1850. This could help fill in those gaps. In addition, some records had recorded births, marriages, and deaths before 1850 that survived.
Getting back to the index records, I suggest that you research them first. It will save you a great deal of time. The indexes list people by first name and some indexes by surname. This is frustrating, especially if your ancestor’s name started with Maria or Jose! If you are looking for Antonio, and can’t locate him by that name, look for Jose Antonio. Many of our ancestors had two names. Keep that in mind when researching. It is how I found the people I was looking for. It is helpful if you are researching someone with an unusual name. But regardless, we have a substantial amount to review. So these indexes are a time saver for us!
Miscategorized Baptism Records
- 1850, Book 1. Misplaced baptism records from 1836 to 1882. Image 80.
- 1858, 1859-Book 8. Lost baptism records from 1858 to 1872. Image 2219.
- 1869, Book 16. Misplaced baptism records ranged from 1869 to 1921—image 236.
- 1886-1887-Book 30. Misplaced baptism records ranged from 1885 to 1921—image 2112.
Indexes Baptisms from 1850 through 1883 (Books 1 to 26)
Indexes of Baptism Books from 1850-1948 by Name/Surname
Book | Year | Image | Index |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 1850 | 7 | 4 |
2 | 1850-1851 | 91 | 384/10 |
3 | 1852 | 425 | 405/30 |
4 | 1852-1853 | 727 | 718 (Listed by first name, no surname included in the indexes.)/55 |
5 | 1854-1855 | 1083 | 1057/77 |
6 | 1855-1856 | 1399 | 106 |
7 | 1856-1858 | 1599 | 123 |
8 | 1858-1859 | 1913 | 155 |
9 | 1860-1861 | 4 | 191 |
10 | 1861-1862 | 317 | 229 |
11 | 1862-1863 | 640 | 262 |
12 | 1863-1865 | 926 | 293 |
13 | 1865-1866 | 1239 | 322 |
14 | 1866-1867 | 1560 | 356 |
15 | 1868-1869 | 1848 | 390 |
16 | 1869-1870 | 5 | 418 |
17 | 1870-1871 | 247 | 439“ |
18 | 1871-1872 | 563 | 473 |
19 | 1872-1874 | 883 | 508/547** |
20 | 1874-1875 | 1156 | 576 |
21 | 1875-1877 | 1482 | 615 |
22 | 1877-1879 | 1810 | 657 |
23 | 1879-1880 | 2124 | 697 |
24 | 1880-1881 | 4 | 723 |
25 | 1881-1882 | 294 | 755 |
26 | 1882-1883 | 609 | 792 |
Puerto Rico Church Indexes 1877 through 1899 Books 26 through 39
Indexed Alphabetically
Index by Letter | L.26 1882-1883 | L.27 1883-1844 | L.28 1884-1885 | L.29 1885-1886 | L.30 1886-1887 | L.31 (1*)&(2) 1887-1888* | L.32 1888-1889 | L.33 1889-1890 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | 826 | 827 | 829 | 830 | 831 | 832 | 834 | 835 |
B | 836 | 837 | 837 | 838 | 839 | 839 | 840 | 841 |
C | 841 | 843 | 845 | 848 | 849 | 851 | 853 | 855 |
CH | 857 | 857 | 857 | 857 | 857 | 857 | 857 | 858 |
D | 858 | 858 | 859 | 860 | 860 | 861 | 861 | 862 |
E | 862 | 863 | 863 | 863 | 863 | 863 | 863 | 864 |
F | 864 | 865 | 865 | 866 | 867 | 867 | 868 | 868 |
G | 869 | 870 | 872 | 873 | 874 | 870 (HN) 875* 876* | 877 | 878 |
H | 879 | 870 | 870 | 870 | 880 | 880 | 880 | 881 |
I | 881 | 881 | 881 | 881 | 881 | 881 | N/A | N/A |
1882 – 1890 (Image 826) for Books 26 through 33 (J-Z)
Index by Letter | L.26 1882-1883 | L.27 1883-1844 | L.28 1884-1885 | L.29 1885-1886 | L.30 1886-1887 | L.31 (1*)&(2) 1887-1888* | L.32 1888-1889 | L.33 1889-1890 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
J | 882 | 882 | 882 | 882 | 882 | 882/883 | 883 | 883 |
L | 883 | 884 | 884 | 885 | 886 | 887 | 890 | 891 |
M | 892 | 894 | 897 | 898 | 901 | 903 | 905 | 908 |
N | 910 | 910 | 910 | 910 | 911 | 911 | 912 | 912 |
O | 912 | 913 | 913 | 914 | 915 | 915 | 916 | 916 |
P | 917 | 918 | 919 | 920 | 920 | 921 | 923 | 924 |
Q | 925 | 925 | 925 | 925 | 925 | 926 | 926 | 926 |
R | 927 | 929 | 933 | 935 | 938 | 941 | 945 | 949 |
S | 952 | 954 | 955 | 956 | 958 | 960 | 961 | 963 |
T | 964 | 965 | 966 | 967 | 968 | 969 | 970 | 971 |
U | 972 | 972 | 972 | 972 | 972 | 972 | 972 | 972 |
V | 972 | 973 | 974 | 975 | 976 | 977 | 979 | 980 |
W/X/Y/Z | 981(Y/Z) | 981(Z) | 981(Z) | 981(Z) | 981(U/Z) | 981(Y/Z) | 981 (W/Z) | 981 (W/Y/Z) |
- See the Tables above for the indexes for books 27 to 33.
Book | Year | Image | Index/Notes |
---|---|---|---|
27 | 1883-1884 | 825 | |
28 | 1884-1885 | 1140 | |
29 | 1885-1886 | 1461 | |
30 | 1886-1887 | 1804 | |
31 | 1887-1888 | 5 | |
32 | 1888-1889 | 227 | |
33 | 1889-1890 | 532 |
1899 through 1921 Books 40 to 58
These indexes will be worked on soon and will have tables like the above.
- 1890 – 1899 (Image 985) for Books 34 through 39
- 1899 – 1907 (Image 1312) for Books 40 through 46
- 1906 – 1914 (Image 1138) for Books 49 through 52
- 1914 – 1920 (Image 1453) for Books 53 through 57
- 1920 – 1925 (Image 1634) for Books 58 through 61
- 1926 – 1931 (Image 1798) for Books 62 through 65
- 1931 – 1940 (Image 1975) for Books 66 through 73
- 1940 – 1948 (Image 2187) for Books 74 through 80
Book | Year | Image |
---|---|---|
34 | 1890-1893 | 792 |
35 | 1893-1894 | 1314 |
36 | 1894-1895 | 1620 |
37 | 1895-1896 | 2002 |
37 | 1896-1897 | 6 Continuation of Book 37. |
38 | 1897-1898 | 161 |
39 | 1898-1899 | 426 |
40 | 1899-1900 | 737 |
41 | 1900-1901 | 1052 |
42 | 1901-1902 | 1367 |
43 | 1902-1903 | 1706 |
44 | 1903-1905 | 2026 |
45 | 1905-1906 | 4 |
46 | 1906 | 364 |
47 | 1906-1907 | 691 |
48 | 1907-1908 | 1037 |
49 | 1908-1910 | 1378 |
50 | 1910 | 1658 |
51 | 1910-1912 | 1915 |
52 | 1912-1914 | 6 |
53 | 1914-1915 | 366 |
54 | 1915-1916 | 729 |
55 | 1916-1918 | 1099 |
56 | 1918-1919 | 1459 |
57 | 1919-1920 | 1821 |
57 | 1920 | 57-Continuation of Book 57. |
58 | 1920-1921 | 81 |
Recognition and Justifications of Books
These books consist of over 1,800 records. Therefore, do not dismiss researching this section. If you cannot find an individual’s record in the books of baptisms above, look here.
So, many children were later recognized, sometimes ten years later. In addition, parents may have married years after their children were born, thus having their records updated with the new information. I wish more of the other municipalities had these books for us to research.
Additional Books to Research
- Recognition & Justifications
Transcription on the first page:
- Libro de Reconocimientos y Justificaciones.
- Bautismales de Matrimonio y defuncion. July de 1881.
- Nota: Se han encuadernado y refundido en este presente y solo tomo las Justificaciones de tres libretas sebaladas cin número 2. Seguiendo en este, los folios, numeracion corralativa.
- Empiezan: 1a. la libreta de Justificaciones bautismales al folio 304, de este tomo.
- 2do. la de matrimoniales. al folio 349, y la de la Justificaciones de defunciones al 358 la ha hecho asi para mayor economico y comodidad. Año 1899
English Translation:
Transcribed from Image 381
- Book of Acknowledgments and Justifications.
- Baptismal marriage and death. July 1881.
- Note: They have been bound and consolidated in this present, and I only take the Justifications of three notebooks labeled with the number 2. Following this, the folios, correlative numbering.
- They start 1a—the notebook of Baptismal Justifications on folio 304 of this volume.
- 2nd. that of matrimonial to folio 349, and that of the Justifications of deaths to 358 has done so for greater economy and comfort, the Year 1899.
Book | Year | Image | Index | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1881-1892 | 381 | ||
2 | 1892-1898 | 733 | ||
1892-1893 | 752 | Index | The parents’ names in the index are not in alphabetical order. |
Confirmation Books
Ponce Marriage Books
Book | Year | Image | Index | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1850-1860 | 1041 | Index | Indexed by the first name. Index |
2 | 1860-1880 | 1340 | Index | Indexed by the first name |
3 | 1880-1884 | 1631 | No index is available. | |
3 | 1884-1888 | 4 | Continuation of Book 3. | |
4 | 1888-1894 | 206 | Index | |
5 | 1894-1906 | 503 | Index | |
6 | 1906-1910 | 918 | Index | |
7 | 1910-1917 | 1253 | Index | |
8 | 1917-1921 | 1596 | Index |
Ponce Burials-1854 through 1874
Book | Year | Image | Index | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
5 | 1854-1856 | 1925 | ||
6 | 1857 | 4 | Continuation of Book 5. | |
7 | 1857-1859 | 44 | ||
8 | 1859-1860 | 329 | Index | Indexed by the first name. |
9 | 1860-1862 | 73 | Index | |
10 | 1862-1863 | 643 | Index | |
11 | 1863-1864 | 985 | Index | |
12 | 1864-1865 | 1319 | Index | |
13 | 1865-1866 | 1651 | Index | |
14 | 1866-1868 | 2269 | Index | |
14 | 1868 | 4 | Continuation of Book 14. | |
16 | 1870-1871 | 1955 | Index | |
17 | 1871-1872 | 57 | Index | |
18 | 1872-1873 | 372 | Index | |
19 | 1873-1874 | 686 | Index |
Ponce Burials 1874 to 1899
Book | Year | Image | Index | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
20 | 1874 | 1052 | Index | |
21 | 1875-1876 | 1389 | Index | |
22 | 1876-1877 | 2040 | Index | |
23 | 1877 to 1880 | 2335 | Index | |
24 | 1881 | 2468 | Index | The index is upside down and starts with the last page. You will need to go to the end to locate the first page and work your way back. |
25 | 1882-1883 | 4 | Continuation of Book 25. | |
26 | 1883-1884 | 234 | Index | |
27 | 1884-1885 | 470 | Index | |
28 | 1885-1887 | 810 | Index | |
29 | 1887-1888 | 1184 | Index | |
30 | 1888-1889 | 1531 | Index | |
31 | 1889-1890 | 1873 | Index | |
32 | 1890-1892 | 2224 | Index | |
32 | 1892-1893 | 4 | Index | Continuation of Book 32. |
33 | 1893-1894 | 240 | Index | |
34 | 1894-1896 | 575 | Index | |
35 | 1896-1897 | 885 | Index | |
36 | 1897-1898 | 1082 | Index | |
37 | 1898-1899 | 1253 | Index |
Burials 1899 to 1940
Book | Year | Image | Index/Notes | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
38 | 1899-1900 | 1593 | Index | |
39 | 1900-1909 | 1934 | Index | |
40 | 1909-1920 | 2279 | Index | |
41 | 1920-1923 | 4 | Book 41 is separated with no index. | |
41 | 1937-1940 | 39 |
Playa de Ponce Church Records
- Film # 008124781
- This film has been duplicated four times.
Book | Year | Image | Index | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Baptisms | ||||
1 | 1883 to 1889 | 247 | Index | |
2 | 1889 to 1894 | 22 | Index | |
3 | 1894 to 1904 | Image | Index | |
4 | 1904 to 1914 | 728 | 701/1336 | |
5 | 1914 to 1922 | 1013 | 994/1364 | |
Marriages | ||||
1 | 1883 to 1914 | 1417 | 1392 | |
2 | 1914 to 1941 | 1627 | 1617 |
Sources:
- Wikipedia
- FamilySearch
- Digitized online Church Indexes
[…] was proclaimed Queen of Flowers at the ball that, for charitable purposes, the Isabelline Ladies of Ponce celebrated last Saturday night. – Photo. […]
[…] Puerto Rico,, is located north of Ponce, east of Utuado, and west of Ciales. Their local parish known as Our Lady of Monserrate (Nuestra […]