The mountainous region that Orocovis occupies today, in the very heart of Puerto Rico, was Taíno territory long before the arrival of the Spanish. The mountains, valleys and rivers of the central cordillera offered resources and refuge to the original peoples, organized in yucayeques (villages) under the command of their chiefs.
The municipality's current name honors precisely one of those Indigenous leaders: the chief Orocovix (also spelled Orocobix), who lived in this area of the cordillera. Although the details of his life and rule are known only fragmentarily, as is the case with most documented Taíno chiefs, his name became forever associated with this mountain territory.
With Spanish colonization, the island's Indigenous population was decimated by war, forced labor and disease, and much of its material culture disappeared or mixed with that of the colonizers and the enslaved Africans who would arrive later. But the memory of Orocovix survived in the toponymy, waiting almost a century to be officially recovered as the municipality's name.
The municipality we know today as Orocovis was born with another name: Barros. Its founding goes back to early 1825, when a local resident, Juan Rivera de Santiago, obtained the legal backing of other inhabitants of the region to petition the governor for authorization to found a new municipality in the area known as Barros. For this, fourteen cuerdas of land were bought from Eulalia (Olaya) de Rivera Meléndez, who also donated an additional cuerda for the municipal works.
The original site, however, proved impractical because of its distance from adequate watercourses, so the settlement had to be moved to a more convenient spot. Finally, on November 10, 1825, Governor Miguel de la Torre granted official permission to found the new municipality of Barros, thus joining the network of towns that Spain was organizing in the mountainous interior of Puerto Rico.
As in so many other towns of the central cordillera, the founding of Barros responded to the growth of a scattered agricultural population that needed its own administrative and religious center, without depending on distant municipalities. That mountain town, isolated by the ranges and the rivers, would be the seed of today's Orocovis.
The religious and communal life of the emerging town of Barros was organized, as in all of colonial Puerto Rico, around its parish. The parish of San Juan Bautista de Barros was created in 1838, and its church was blessed and inaugurated on October 29 of that same year, becoming the center of the spiritual and social life of the newly founded municipality.
However, the young community suffered a harsh blow a few decades later: in 1875 a devastating fire destroyed the parish church, the Casa del Rey (seat of the administration), the priest's house and several of the town's homes. This kind of fire, frequent in the wooden villages of the time, forced the inhabitants of Barros to rebuild much of their urban core.
The rebuilding after the 1875 fire marked a new stage for the town, which continued to grow throughout the 19th century supported by the agriculture of the highlands of the central cordillera: coffee, minor crops and cattle-raising, in an economic pattern similar to that of other mountain municipalities on the island.
For a century, the municipality bore the name of Barros, inherited from the original locale where its founding had been arranged. But in 1928, the Legislative Assembly of Puerto Rico approved a resolution to officially change the town's name, replacing 'Barros' with 'Orocovis', in homage to the Taíno chief who had inhabited the region centuries earlier.
This kind of renaming, recovering Indigenous place names to replace more generic colonial ones, was part of a broader phenomenon in several municipalities of Puerto Rico during the first decades of the 20th century, in a context of searching for an identity of its own within the island's new status as a territory of the United States (after the change of sovereignty in 1898).
The name change was not merely administrative: it reinforced the municipality's symbolic bond with its Indigenous past and with its identity as the 'heart of Puerto Rico', a name that alludes both to its central geographic location on the island and to its character as a mountainous, deeply Puerto Rican land. Since then, the town has borne the name of Orocovis with pride.
As a municipality of the central cordillera, Orocovis (the former Barros) developed during the 19th and 20th centuries around highland agriculture, with coffee as one of its important crops. The cool climate and the altitude of its lands favored coffee production, which was added to other crops and to the cattle-raising typical of the mountainous zones of the island's interior.
The life of the town, organized around its plaza, its church and its mountain neighborhoods, followed for generations the calm rhythm of mountain communities, marked by farm work, the mild climate and the relative isolation from the great urban centers and the coasts. The landscape of green mountains, valleys and rivers, including the imposing Toro Negro State Forest, with the Cerro de Punta, the highest point on the island, within its boundaries, defines the character of the municipality.
For a long time, Orocovis was just another agricultural town of the central cordillera, known above all for its position in the geographic heart of the island and for its natural setting. That condition of a mountain town, cool and green, would lay the foundations for its later transformation into a nature and adventure destination.
In recent decades, Orocovis took a turn toward adventure tourism that put it on the map of the whole island and beyond. The milestone was the opening of Toro Verde Nature Adventure Park, an adventure park set in its mountains that takes advantage of the spectacular relief of the central cordillera to offer zip lines, suspension bridges and other adrenaline activities with impressive views.
The great emblem of the park, and of Orocovis, is 'La Bestia' (The Beast), a zip line about 1,446 meters long that came to be considered one of the longest and fastest in the world, on which visitors fly in a horizontal position at speeds of up to 97 km/h over the valley. Later 'El Monstruo' (The Monster) was added, with a cable of about 2.5 kilometers, promoted as the longest zip line in the Americas. These attractions, along with the rest of the park's experiences, Guinness-record cable bikes, climbing walls, ATV tours, turned the municipality into a star destination for adventure tourism in Puerto Rico.
The success of Toro Verde transformed the economy and image of Orocovis, which added to its traditional character as an agricultural and coffee-growing town a new facet as capital of mountain adventure. Today, the 'heart of Puerto Rico' combines its natural setting, the Toro Negro Forest, the Doña Juana Waterfall, the overlooks of the Ruta Panorámica, its mountain and Indigenous heritage and its offer of adrenaline, providing a unique experience in the island's interior.