Forts of San Juan
Survey numbers: HABS PR-47, HABS PR-48, HABS PR-52, HABS PR-54, HABS PR-55, HABS PR-94, and HABS PR-135
San Juan, Puerto Rico
When the Spanish came to the New World, they founded their second city at San Juan, Puerto Rico, building several forts to protect the city and the prosperity it promised: Fort San Felipe del Morro (El Morro), Castle San Cristóbal, and El Palacio de Santa Catalina (La Forteleza). Built in the sixteenth century, the forts are the only European-style battlements on United States territory, and were designated a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1983.
The forts followed well-established Spanish conventions in construction and architecture. Along with their subsequent additions, like the dome-shaped sentry boxes called garitas on El Morro and a World War II addition of a concrete artillery observation post in the Castle San Cristóbal, they illustrate military history at its finest. El Morro was built specifically to guard against enemy threats from the sea and has become one of the most visited sites in Puerto Rico. Castle San Cristóbal was built to protect against enemy threats from land and was the largest fortification built by the Spanish in the New World. La Forteleza was the first built and continues in use today as the governor's palace, making it the oldest executive mansion in the New World. Other smaller fortifications on the island served as support for the larger forts, such as the Fortín de San Juan de la Cruz (El Cañuelo), and the Fuerte El Abanico. These forts have been extensively documented by HABS since the 1930s. In an effort to track and monitor deterioration in the exterior stucco layer, HABS photographer Jack Boucher, accompanied by Cultural Resources Geographic Information Systems (CRGIS) staff, visited the site in 1998 to rephotograph the walls from the precise vantage points he had used in 1960. It was hoped that photographs from different periods would not only show where the deterioration was occurring, but would also alleviate concerns over the need for re-stuccoing. As part of this project, the CRGIS staff collected data representing the fortifications and city walls within the San Juan National Historic site, a portion of the waterline around Old San Jaun, and buildings, roads, road traces, and parking areas within Old San Juan. In an additional effort by HABS to document the walls of San Juan, HABS architects produced measured drawings of the walls in 1999-2000 to aid in their conservation and restoration.
Learn More...
- HABS documentation of Castillo de San Cristobal (HABS PR-47)
- HABS & HAER documentation of El Morro (HABS PR-48, HABS PR-48-A, HABS PR-55, and HAER PR-23)
- HABS documentation of El Cañuelo (HABS PR-52)
- HABS documentation of La Fortaleza (HABS PR-54)
- HABS documentation of El Abanico (HABS PR-94 series)
- HABS documentation of las Murallas del Viejo San Juan (HABS PR-135 series)
- National Historic Landmark nomination for Distrito Histórico del Viejo San Juan—Old San Juan Historic District
- UNESCO World Heritage Sites listing of the Forts of San Juan
- Teaching with Historic Places lesson plan on the Forts of Old San Juan
- San Juan National Historic Site
- Federal website for National Hispanic Heritage Month
- National Register of Historic Places celebrates National Hispanic Heritage Month
- HDP Hispanic Heritage Month homepage