In 1905, a doctor named Alfred Livingston bought 1,700 acres of coast in the Dorado area to plant coconut palms and citrus. Half a century later, his daughter Clara — a pioneering aviator and one of the first women pilots in Puerto Rico — sold those lands to Laurance Rockefeller, and that plantation was transformed into one of the most legendary golf resorts in the Caribbean. That improbable chain — from coconut farm to luxury paradise — is the axis of Dorado's modern history, but the town's name, and its 'golden' calling, come from much earlier.
The region of present-day Dorado, on the north coast of Puerto Rico, was inhabited by the Taíno before the arrival of the Spanish. As in much of the island, the native peoples lived off fishing, cassava farming and gathering, making use of the resources of the coast and the area's rivers. That Indigenous presence is part of the territory's historical substrate.
The origin of the name 'Dorado' (golden) has several explanations that coexist in tradition. The simplest and most widespread associates it with the golden color of the landscape: the shine of the sun on the sand, the water and the fields. Another, more legendary version links it to old searches for gold in the region's rivers during the colonial era, which are said to have given the place its name.
Whatever its origin, the name stayed associated with this stretch of the north coast. Over time, the 'golden' of the landscape would become almost prophetic: centuries later, Dorado would become synonymous with luxury tourism, where what shines are the beaches, the golf courses and the resorts.
During the Spanish colonial era, the lands of Dorado were part of the jurisdiction of the neighboring towns of the north coast, especially Toa Baja and Toa Alta, on which it administratively depended before becoming a municipality of its own. The region was devoted to agriculture and ranching, taking advantage of the fertile soils and the closeness to the rivers and the coast.
The area's typical crops included sugarcane, fruit trees and other tropical farm products, in a pattern common to the whole coastal strip of northern Puerto Rico. Life revolved around the haciendas, the farms and the small rural settlements, still far from the tourist profile the municipality would acquire much later.
This agricultural and rural past laid the foundations of the town of Dorado, which gradually gained its own identity within the region, until conditions were ripe for its establishment as an independent municipality in the 19th century.
On November 22, 1842, Jacinto López Martínez, sergeant-at-arms of the Dorado ward, submitted a petition to the Spanish governor of Puerto Rico, Santiago Méndez Vigo, for the municipality of Dorado to be established. The governor authorized the town's founding on the condition that the public works — the king's house (administrative building) and a church next to the plaza — be built. In 1848, with those works finished, López Martínez himself became the first mayor of Dorado. Thus, the growing population and the area's activity justified the administrative separation from the Toa towns on which it depended. With its establishment as a municipality, Dorado came to have its own civil and religious organization, with the plaza de recreo and the parish church as the heart of the town center, following the traditional model of Puerto Rican towns.
The town's formal founding consolidated a local identity that had been taking shape since the colonial era. The town center, with its plaza, its shops and its houses, became the center of community life, while in the rural surroundings the agricultural and ranching labors that had sustained the region for centuries continued.
Throughout the rest of the 19th century and the first decades of the 20th, Dorado remained, above all, a coastal town on the north coast, with an agricultural economy and a quiet life. Nothing yet foreshadowed the radical transformation that would come in the mid-20th century and would forever change its appearance and its destiny.
The great turning point in Dorado's history came in the mid-20th century, at the hands of the Rockefeller family. The lands came from the coconut and citrus plantation that Dr. Alfred Livingston had established on 1,700 acres of coast from 1905. In 1955, Laurance S. Rockefeller — son of John D. Rockefeller Jr., a venture capitalist and pioneer of ecological and luxury tourism — acquired the property from Livingston's daughter, Clara, and three years later, in 1958, transformed it into a resort and nature sanctuary: Dorado Beach was born, one of Rockefeller's RockResorts. The complex brought to the north coast of Puerto Rico a then-novel concept: a high-end hotel-resort integrated into the tropical landscape, with beaches, gardens and, above all, championship golf.
Of the 1,700 acres, only about 65 were devoted to the hotel and about 232 to the golf courses, designed by the famous course architect Robert Trent Jones Sr. Those courses soon earned a place among the best in the Caribbean, drawing golfers, celebrities and exclusive travelers from all over the world. Dorado Beach became an icon of luxury tourism on the island and put Dorado on the international map, forever associating the town's name with the idea of elegant rest by the sea. Over the years, Rockefeller added a second adjoining hotel, the Cerromar.
This development radically changed Dorado's economy and appearance: from an agricultural town it became a top-tier tourist destination. Over the decades, the complex went through various stages, closures and renovations, but its legacy endured, laying the foundations of the exclusive profile that defines Dorado to this day.
After the consolidation of Dorado Beach, the municipality developed an increasingly high-end tourist and residential profile. Around the resort area arose gated communities, luxury residences, additional golf courses and services geared toward a well-off public, both Puerto Rican and foreign. Dorado became one of the most coveted places on the island to live and to vacation.
This evolution transformed Dorado into a destination that combines beach relaxation, golf and luxury with the closeness of San Juan, just half an hour away by road. Modernization brought shopping centers, restaurants, hospitals and all the infrastructure of a prosperous municipality, without the town entirely losing its traditional center, with its plaza and church.
Today Dorado keeps that double identity: on one hand, the exclusive resort and golf destination, heir to the Rockefeller legacy; on the other, the coastal town of the north coast, with its public beach and its local life. It's that combination — luxury and authenticity, calm sea and proximity to the capital — that defines Dorado's current character.