The history of Puerto Cortés dates back to the early years of the Spanish conquest of Honduras. Its excellent natural bay, wide, deep and protected, soon caught the attention of the conquistadors, who were looking for a good port on the Caribbean coast to connect the new province with Spain. In 1524, within the framework of the conquest expeditions, a port settlement was founded in this area that would go down in history under the name Puerto Caballos.
Tradition explains the curious name by an episode of the landing: it's said that during the arrival several horses —animals very valuable to the Spanish— were lost, died or had to be sacrificed, and that from this the place name 'Puerto Caballos' (Port of Horses) remained. Beyond the anecdote, what matters is that the bay became, from early on, a key point of the Spanish presence on the north coast of Honduras.
The region, like the whole territory, had been inhabited by native peoples before the arrival of the Europeans. The conquest and colonization radically transformed the area, which came to revolve around the port and colonial trade. Puerto Caballos would be, for a long time, one of the main maritime outlets of the province of Honduras to the rest of the Spanish Empire.
Thanks to its natural bay, Puerto Caballos became one of the main ports of the Central American Caribbean during the colonial period. European goods entered here and the products of the province of Honduras left for Spain, which integrated it into the colonial trade routes of the Empire. That commercial importance, however, had a dangerous flip side: it made the port a coveted target.
During the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries, the coasts of the Central American Caribbean were ravaged by pirates, corsairs and buccaneers —English, French and Dutch— who attacked the Spanish ports and fleets in search of loot. Puerto Caballos suffered attacks and sackings, which exposed the vulnerability of the Honduran coast and the need to defend it. The pirate threat was a constant that marked the life of the region's colonial ports.
Faced with these difficulties —the attacks, the conditions of the place and other factors—, part of the area's port activity gradually shifted over time to other points on the coast. The most important was Omoa, somewhat to the west, where the Spanish Crown would decide, in the 18th century, to raise a powerful fortress to protect trade and the coast from enemy attacks.
The need to protect the Caribbean coast of Honduras from the siege of pirates and, above all, from the growing British power in the Caribbean, led the Spanish Crown to a far-reaching decision in the 18th century: the construction of the Fortress of San Fernando in Omoa, not far from Puerto Caballos. Conceived as the great military defense of the coast and of the region's colonial trade, it would become the largest Spanish fortress in Central America.
This great work of military engineering, with its triangular plan, its thick walls, its bastions and its artillery pointing out to sea, reflects the strategic importance the Crown gave to this strip of coast, located across from the maritime routes and near the territories under English influence (the Mosquito Coast and Belize). Omoa came to concentrate much of the area's port and defensive activity during the end of the colonial period.
The history of Omoa and that of Puerto Cortés are thus closely linked: both localities, neighbors on the coast of the present-day department of Cortés, were pieces of the same colonial board, dedicated to maritime trade and to defense against the enemies of the Empire. Today the fortress of Omoa is one of the best-preserved colonial monuments in Honduras and an essential visit for anyone touring Puerto Cortés and its surroundings.
After the independence of Central America from Spain (1821) and the subsequent consolidation of Honduras as an independent republic, the old Puerto Caballos was renamed Puerto Cortés, in honor of the conquistador Hernán Cortés. The name change marked the passage of the port city from the colonial era to the new national stage, in which the port would recover and expand its central role in the country's economy.
The great transformation came at the end of the 19th century and accelerated in the 20th with two linked processes: the development of the railroad on the north coast and the boom of the banana industry. The banana companies, which turned the Honduran Caribbean coast into one of the great banana-producing regions of the world, needed ports to export their fruit to the United States and Europe, and Puerto Cortés —with its excellent bay and its rail connection to the interior— consolidated as the country's main export port.
The railroad linked Puerto Cortés with San Pedro Sula and the Sula Valley, structuring the most dynamic region of Honduras around the port-industry-agriculture axis. Thus, Puerto Cortés went from being a colonial port besieged by pirates to becoming the maritime engine of the modern Honduran economy, a function it maintains to this day.
Today, Puerto Cortés is the main port of Honduras and one of the most important in Central America. A very significant part of the country's foreign trade passes through its facilities: containers, general cargo, imports and exports that connect Honduras with the rest of the world. Its modernization and its capacity have kept it a strategic piece of the national and regional economy.
The port is the natural outlet to the sea for the Sula Valley region and for San Pedro Sula, the country's industrial capital, with which it forms a fundamental economic axis. That function defines the character of the city: a port, commercial and working town, marked by the rhythm of maritime activity, the Caribbean heat and coastal life. The population combines Honduran roots from the interior with the Garifuna presence and the Caribbean culture of the coast.
Beyond its economic weight, Puerto Cortés preserves its beach and gastronomic side —the boardwalk, the beaches of Travesía, the seafood and the conch soup— and its proximity to historic Omoa, which let the visitor glimpse both the productive present and the colonial past of the Honduran Caribbean coast. The city remains, as it was five centuries ago, the great maritime gateway of the country.