A few kilometers from the deserted beaches of La Esmeralda, on a hill swept by the Atlantic wind, rises an enormous stone fortress that two empires fought over with cannon fire. It's hard to imagine that this corner, so peaceful today —houses hidden among pines, sandy roads, silence—, was, two and a half centuries ago, the hottest frontier line in South America, the exact point where the dominions of Portugal and Spain clashed. That founding tension, guarded by the mass of Santa Teresa, is the backdrop of the history of this whole coast, including that of La Esmeralda.
To understand La Esmeralda you have to start with the territory in which it sits: the Atlantic coast of the department of Rocha, at the far east of Uruguay. It's a region of long beaches, coastal woodland, lagoons, wetlands and great dune fields, historically sparsely populated and far from the country's major urban centers. For centuries, this coast was an almost virgin landscape, traveled by fishermen and trackers, with scattered settlements and a nature that remained largely intact.
That rugged condition is, paradoxically, the great value of the area. While the Maldonado coast (with Punta del Este at the forefront) developed as a glamorous seaside hub, the Rocha coast kept a more natural and wild profile, which over time became its greatest tourist appeal. Resorts such as La Esmeralda, Punta del Diablo, Aguas Dulces or Cabo Polonio share that identity of nature, calm and simple life by the sea.
La Esmeralda, tucked among woodland and dunes and very close to Punta del Diablo, is an example of that rugged Rocha coast: a small, sparsely populated resort where the natural landscape —the coastal woodland, the wind-shaped dunes, the beaches open to the Atlantic— remains the protagonist.
The deep history of this portion of the Rocha coast is marked by the closeness of one of the most important historical sites in Uruguay: the Fortress of Santa Teresa, today the heart of Santa Teresa National Park, a short distance from La Esmeralda. The fortress, an imposing 18th-century military structure, was the scene of the dispute between the crowns of Portugal and Spain for control of the frontier and the Atlantic coast of the Río de la Plata.
The Portuguese began to build the fortification in October 1762: they laid the foundation stone on 6 October and named it under the dedication of Saint Teresa of Ávila. Just a few months later, in April 1763, the Spanish general Pedro de Cevallos, governor of Buenos Aires, advanced on the area and took the fortress by capitulation (on 19 April 1763), then ordering the work to be continued and reoriented —now against Portuguese Brazil— reusing the materials of the earlier construction. Spanish possession was finally ratified by the Treaty of San Ildefonso of 1777. That dispute over the coast and the frontier —which also explains the founding of cities and forts in the region, such as the neighboring Fuerte de San Miguel— is part of the history that gave eastern Uruguay its identity.
For a long time, this whole coastal area remained sparsely populated, devoted to artisanal fishing, cattle-raising and life by the sea. The natural spots that today are resorts like La Esmeralda were, for centuries, woodland and dunes almost uninhabited, part of a wild shoreline symbolically guarded by the mass of Santa Teresa.
During much of its history, life on this Rocha coast revolved around artisanal fishing and a simple existence by the sea. The fishing families of the area —whose best-known expression is in neighboring Punta del Diablo, a famous fishing village— worked the Atlantic and lived in modest houses among the woodland and the dunes, in a way of life set by the rhythm of the sea and the seasons.
That human and natural landscape —fishermen, scattered houses, woodland, dunes and open beaches— defines the atmosphere still felt today in small, rugged resorts like La Esmeralda. Unlike the great built-up resorts, the Rocha coast kept that human scale and that direct contact with nature, which over time became its main tourist charm.
The fishing tradition, the fish and seafood cuisine, the wooden cabins and the quiet life by the ocean are part of the cultural heritage of the area, shared by La Esmeralda, Punta del Diablo, Aguas Dulces and the other spots of this coast.
As a resort, La Esmeralda arose and consolidated within the tourism development of the Rocha coast over the course of the 20th century. As Uruguayans —and later visitors from the region— began to seek rugged beaches, nature and calm as an alternative to the more developed and worldly resorts of Maldonado, natural spots of Rocha like La Esmeralda began to fill with summer houses.
Unlike other coastal developments, La Esmeralda always kept a profile of a small, natural and sparsely populated resort, with houses scattered among the woodland and dunes and without large buildings or massive infrastructure. That rugged character, which in many places gradually disappeared through urbanization, was preserved here as a choice, in tune with the spirit of the Rocha coast.
The closeness to Punta del Diablo —which did grow more as a bohemian tourist destination— and to Santa Teresa National Park finished defining La Esmeralda's role: a refuge of calm and nature, an ideal complement to the neighboring attractions, for those seeking quiet beaches and contact with the landscape without entirely giving up the closeness of services.
The present of La Esmeralda is intimately tied to the natural value of its surroundings and to that of the whole Rocha coast, a region that in recent decades gained recognition for its biodiversity and its landscapes. The closeness of protected areas of great ecological richness —Santa Teresa National Park, the dunes and woodland of the area, and further west the famous Cabo Polonio area and Laguna de Rocha— places La Esmeralda in a nature corridor of relevance to the country.
That context reinforced the resort's identity as a destination for rest, nature and low impact. The conservation of the dunes (which play a key role in the stability of the coast), of the coastal woodland and of the open beaches is today a concern shared by neighbors and authorities, aware that this rugged landscape is the main heritage of the place.
Thus, La Esmeralda reaches the present as what it always was: a small, natural and sparsely populated resort, a refuge of calm on the Atlantic coast of Rocha. Its history is, to a large extent, the history of this whole wild coast of eastern Uruguay: that of a shoreline that managed to preserve its natural character and turn it into its greatest treasure.