The name Mayagüez has Taíno roots, from the original people who inhabited Puerto Rico before the arrival of the Spanish. The word 'Mayagüez' (sometimes related to 'Mayagüex' or variants) derives from an Indigenous term whose exact meaning is debated, but which is associated with the place and, above all, with the river that crosses the area: the Yagüez River, beside which the city would be founded.
The Taíno presence in the fertile western region of the island is documented, and the geography, the river, the coast, the valleys, offered abundant resources for the original peoples. The place name, preserved through the centuries, is a testimony to that Indigenous heritage that lives on in the toponymy of Puerto Rico, where so many names of places and rivers come from the Taíno.
So, from its very name, Mayagüez carries inscribed the mark of the island's first inhabitants. The Yagüez River, which also gives its name to the city's famous theater, remains an identifying element of the place, a link between the pre-Hispanic past and today's Mayagüez.
Mayagüez was founded as a town in 1760, next to the Yagüez River, on the fertile west coast of Puerto Rico. The founding came at a time when the Spanish Crown was promoting the settlement and organization of the island beyond San Juan, taking advantage of the good land and the sea access of the western region. As in other Puerto Rican towns, life was organized around the plaza and the parish church, dedicated to Our Lady of Candelaria.
Mayagüez's location, next to the river and with access to the sea, favored its development from early on. The fertility of the surrounding lands allowed agriculture to grow, while access to the coast opened the door to the port and commercial activity that would in time make the city prosperous.
That town founded in the mid-18th century was the seed of the great city of the west. Over the following decades, Mayagüez grew in population and importance, in a rise that would turn it into one of the most relevant centers in Puerto Rico.
The 19th century was Mayagüez's golden age. Thanks to its port, the city became one of the most important economic and commercial centers in Puerto Rico, exporting the products of the fertile western region: sugarcane, coffee and other crops. Port trade brought prosperity, attracted immigrants, including European and Corsican merchants, among others, and gave rise to a vibrant cultural and social life.
That prosperity and refinement earned Mayagüez the nickname 'the Sultana of the West', which evokes wealth, elegance and splendor. The city obtained the title of town (villa) in 1841 and, later, that of city, a reflection of its growing importance. Stately buildings were built, an active intellectual and artistic life developed, and Mayagüez consolidated itself as the great capital of the island's west.
Mayagüez coffee, and that of the western region, came to have international fame, and the port was a gateway of entry and exit that connected Puerto Rico with the world. That 19th-century splendor forged Mayagüez's proud identity and left a heritage and cultural legacy that the city preserves to this day.
A dramatic episode marked Mayagüez's history in the 20th century: the 1918 earthquake. On October 11 of that year, a strong quake, followed by a tsunami that struck the island's west coast, hit Mayagüez and the region hard. The earthquake, one of the most destructive in the history of Puerto Rico, caused numerous victims and serious material damage, knocking down buildings and seriously affecting the city.
Mayagüez, as the great urban center of the west, suffered the consequences especially. Many historic buildings were damaged or destroyed, and the city had to undertake a major rebuilding process. That recovery effort, though costly, allowed Mayagüez to rise again and continue its development.
The memory of that earthquake and tsunami is part of the city's history and of the awareness of natural risks on an island located in a seismic zone. Mayagüez's ability to rebuild and carry on is also a testament to the resilience of its people.
Throughout the 20th century, Mayagüez consolidated a new pillar of its identity: that of a university city. The Mayagüez University Campus (RUM) of the University of Puerto Rico, known as 'el Colegio', became one of the most prestigious academic centers on the island and in the Caribbean, especially recognized for its engineering, science and agriculture programs. The university brought the city a vibrant student, scientific and cultural life.
The university presence transformed Mayagüez, attracting students from all over the island and abroad, energizing its economy and its culture, and reinforcing its role as capital of the west. The city also kept its cultural tradition, with institutions like the Teatro Yagüez, an architectural emblem and stage of Mayagüez's artistic life.
During the 20th century, Mayagüez also developed industrial and commercial activity, and remained the great service center of the west. Although the island's economy changed a great deal over the century, the city knew how to combine its historical heritage, its university calling and its role as regional capital, laying the foundations of contemporary Mayagüez.
Today Mayagüez remains the main city of western Puerto Rico and the fourth most populous on the island. It keeps its role as the urban, commercial, university and service center of the whole region, and it keeps alive its proud identity as 'Sultana of the West'. The city combines its rich historical heritage, the Plaza Colón, the Teatro Yagüez, the cathedral, with the modernity of an active university city.
Mayagüez is also the gateway and the natural base for the tourism of the Porta del Sol region, the brand that promotes the sunny west of the island with its beaches, its colonial towns and its landscapes. From Mayagüez you can easily reach Rincón, Cabo Rojo, San Germán and the west coast, which makes it a strategic point for touring the area.
In 2010, the city hosted the Central American and Caribbean Games, an event that spurred improvements in its infrastructure. With its mix of history, culture, university life and its own cuisine, like the famous brazo gitano, Mayagüez remains one of the cities with the most character in Puerto Rico and the undisputed heart of the Boricua west.