In 1895, in a wooden house in a dusty city of the Dominican northwest, two men signed a document that would help ignite Cuba's last war of independence. One was José Martí; the other, the Dominican general Máximo Gómez. That a text decisive for Cuba's freedom was signed in Monte Cristi is no coincidence: this arid city, today quiet and secluded, was for decades a cosmopolitan port connected with half the world, a place where tobacco, capital, revolutionaries and merchants of all nationalities crossed paths. Its history is that of a boom and a decline, with centuries of depopulation in between.
Monte Cristi, officially San Fernando de Monte Cristi, is one of the oldest towns in the Dominican Republic, with origins going back to the early colonial period of the 16th century. Its name, 'Monte Cristi' (Mount of Christ), is attributed to the geography itself: the imposing El Morro plateau, visible from the sea, is said to have been named by the first Spanish navigators who sailed along the region, possibly linked to Christopher Columbus's passage through these waters on his voyages.
Monte Cristi's location, at the far northwest of the island of Hispaniola and near what would much later be the border with Haiti, gave it from the start a strategic and, at the same time, frontier and exposed character. Its natural harbor and its position made it a point of interest for trade and navigation, but also an area vulnerable to the ups and downs of the colonial geopolitics of the Caribbean.
During those first decades, however, the region did not achieve much development. Colonial Spain concentrated its effort on Santo Domingo and the richer areas, and the northwest remained a cattle-raising and commercial periphery, marked by distance and by a growing smuggling activity that would end up triggering one of the most dramatic episodes of its history.
One of the most decisive and traumatic episodes in the history of Monte Cristi were the so-called 'Devastations of Osorio', in the early 17th century. In 1605 and 1606, by order of the Spanish Crown and executed by governor Antonio de Osorio, the forced depopulation of much of the north and west of Hispaniola was carried out, including the Monte Cristi region.
The motive was to combat smuggling: the inhabitants of these secluded areas traded actively with foreign ships (Dutch, English, French), often Protestant, which the Crown considered both an economic and a religious threat. The solution imposed was radical: forcing the population to abandon their lands and move to areas closer to Santo Domingo, burning and destroying the settlements so they couldn't serve smuggling.
The consequences were enormous and long-lasting. The northwest was left practically depopulated and abandoned, and Monte Cristi ceased to exist as a city for a long time. Paradoxically, that vacuum made it easier for the French, decades later, to settle in the western part of the island, giving rise to the colony that would over time become Haiti. The Devastations of Osorio are, therefore, a key episode for understanding the history of the whole island.
After centuries of abandonment and gradual repopulation, Monte Cristi resurged strongly in the 19th century, when it became one of the most important export ports of the Dominican Republic. Its natural harbor in the northwest positioned it as the outlet to the sea for the production of the fertile Cibao valley, one of the country's richest agricultural regions.
Through the port of Monte Cristi, products such as tobacco —the Cibao's main wealth—, precious timber, hides and other goods left for the markets of Europe and America. This intense trade, especially active between the late 19th and early 20th centuries, brought prosperity, dynamism and a notable cosmopolitanism: merchants of many nationalities came to the city, and trading houses, consulates and a lively urban life were established.
That era of splendor left a visible imprint that still surprises the visitor today: the Victorian and European-style architecture of the historic center, with wooden and masonry houses with elegant galleries and balconies, and monuments like the famous Public Clock, brought according to tradition from France. Monte Cristi was, in those years, a city connected with the world through the sea.
A surprising and little-known chapter in the history of Monte Cristi connects it directly with Cuba's independence. In 1895, in this city of the Dominican northwest, the two great leaders of the Cuban independence struggle —the writer and patriot José Martí and the military man Máximo Gómez— signed the so-called 'Manifesto of Montecristi', a fundamental document that set out the principles, objectives and character of the war being prepared against Spanish rule in Cuba.
The presence of these leaders in Monte Cristi was no coincidence: Máximo Gómez, generalissimo of Cuban independence, was Dominican, born in nearby Baní, and had deep ties to his country. Monte Cristi, with its port and its position, was a meeting and organizing point for the revolutionaries. From here, Martí and Gómez would set out for Cuba to join the war, in which Martí would die shortly after.
The house where the manifesto was written and signed is preserved today as a house-museum dedicated to Máximo Gómez and that episode. The Manifesto of Montecristi is considered a key text of Martí's thought and of the Cuban independence cause, which gives this quiet Dominican city a prominent place in the political history of the Caribbean and Latin America.
Monte Cristi's commercial prominence did not last indefinitely. Over the 20th century, the changes in trade routes, the construction of roads that redirected the transport of goods toward other ports and centers, and the general transformation of the Dominican economy reduced the importance of the Monte Cristi port. The city gradually lost its old dynamism and became a quiet provincial capital of the secluded northwest.
However, that 'being left aside' had an unexpected positive effect: it helped preserve both its architectural heritage —the Victorian mansions that were not demolished by aggressive development— and, above all, its exceptional natural heritage. The arid northwest region, with El Morro, the mangroves, the salt flats and the Siete Hermanos Cays, kept a singular and little-altered nature.
That value led to the creation of Monte Cristi National Park, which protects this set of ecosystems unique in the country. Today, Monte Cristi presents itself as a nature and history tourism destination, off the mass circuits, where the traveler can discover an arid and wild landscape, an architecture laden with the past and a surprising historical connection with Cuba's independence. Its future depends on valuing and conserving that double heritage, natural and cultural.