Colorful boats beached on the sand, nets spread in the sun and the smell of sea and fish: that's how Punta del Diablo began, and that scene is still its heart. The town was born in the early 20th century as a small and isolated hamlet of fishermen on the Atlantic coast of the department of Rocha, in the far east of Uruguay. Unlike other planned resorts, it did not arise from a real-estate project or the will of a founder, but from the work and daily life of the fishing families who settled on this point of the Atlantic litoral. They built with their own hands simple houses of wood, cane and materials from the area, and organized their existence around the sea.
The central activity, for decades, was the artisanal fishing of shark, especially school shark. From these fish they made use of the meat and, above all, the liver, rich in oil, which had commercial value. It was a hard life, marked by outings to sea in small boats, the harshness of the Atlantic and the isolation of a remote town, without good roads or services. That fishing identity left a mark that you can still breathe in the 'port' —the cove where the colorful boats are beached— and in La Playa de los Pescadores.
The name of the place itself is surrounded by explanations and stories. The most widespread versions associate it with a rocky point dangerous for navigation or with local legends around the figure of the 'devil', common in coastal towns where the sea and its dangers feed the popular imagination. Whatever the exact origin, the name stuck and is today part of the singular and slightly mythical aura of the place.
To understand the history of Punta del Diablo you have to look at the broader context of the Rocha region, an area of frontier disputed between the Portuguese and Spanish empires during the colonial period. This strip of the Atlantic litoral, near what is today the border with Brazil, was during the 18th century a contested territory, where both crowns sought to assert their dominion over the southern limits of their American possessions.
The most imposing testimony of that dispute is the Fortress of Santa Teresa, today a few kilometers from Punta del Diablo, within the national park of the same name. The Portuguese began to raise it in October 1762, under the command of Osorio, to halt the Spanish advance after the conquest of Colonia del Sacramento by Pedro de Cevallos. It would last little in their hands: on 19 April 1763, the Spanish general Pedro de Cevallos himself took it by capitulation, capturing Osorio and just over a hundred men of the garrison. From then on it was the Spanish who enlarged and finished the fortress —a major work built between 1765 and 1775, designed by the engineer Bartolomé Howel and worked by Guaraní natives— and the Treaty of San Ildefonso (1777) confirmed its Spanish possession. Of polygonal plan, with thick stone walls, bastions and moats, it controlled the coastal passage between the disputed territories beside the sea and the lagoons.
This military and frontier history is part of the landscape and identity of the whole area. When, much later, the fishing hamlet of Punta del Diablo arose, it did so in a territory charged with that colonial past. Today the fortress, declared a National Historic Monument and restored, is one of the must-see visits of the region, and lets you imagine those times when this coast, today quiet and bohemian, was the scene of tensions between empires over control of the southern frontier of the continent.
For most of the 20th century, Punta del Diablo remained a remote fishing village, known only to some travelers who ventured to this corner of the Rocha coast. Its isolation, the lack of large developments and the rugged beauty of its beaches, its dunes and its wild sea were, paradoxically, what ended up drawing a new kind of visitor.
Toward the final decades of the 20th century, artists, surfers, backpackers and travelers in search of nature and authenticity began to discover the place. The town, with its wooden houses, its sandy streets and its free and barefoot atmosphere, gradually became a bohemian refuge, an alternative to the more urbanized and exclusive resorts of the Uruguayan coast like Punta del Este. Artisans arrived who set up their markets, hostels, inns and fish eateries opened, and that alternative identity that characterizes it today was gradually forged.
That growth brought, over time, a notable increase in tourism, especially in summer, when the town's population multiplies spectacularly. The challenge of Punta del Diablo has been, since then, to grow as a tourist destination without losing the soul that made it famous: that rustic, artistic and relaxed character of an old fishing village. Today the bohemian, crowded effervescence of summer coexists with the deep and melancholy calm of the low season, when the town almost empties and is left alone again with its sea.
The history of Punta del Diablo cannot be understood without its natural setting, one of the richest and best preserved in Uruguay. The department of Rocha is home to a set of coastal lagoons, wetlands, palm groves, dunes and woodland that make up ecosystems of enormous ecological value, recognized internationally for their biodiversity and their importance for migratory birds.
Near the town is Laguna Negra, so called for the dark color of its waters, which is part of this system of lagoons and wetlands. Together with other bodies of water in the region, it forms protected areas that safeguard abundant wildlife: aquatic and migratory birds, mammals, reptiles and a flora characteristic of the transitional environments between the Atlantic coast and the interior. Santa Teresa National Park itself, with its planted woods, its virgin beaches and its fortress, combines historical and natural heritage in a single space.
This natural richness is today one of the great attractions of the area and an essential component of its identity. Nature tourism —birdwatching, horseback riding, hiking, visits to ranches— coexists with beach and surf tourism. The conservation of these environments is also a central issue for the future of the region, which seeks a balance between tourist development and the protection of a natural heritage that, together with the soul of a fishing village, defines the unique character of Punta del Diablo and of the whole Rocha coast.