Skip to main content

From Dozens of Farmers & Fishermen to Millions of Tourists: The Changing Face of the Isle Statistically

Residency statistics....
 
In 1592 and again in 1597, every human being on the islands of Isla Mujeres, Contoy, and Cozumel was seized and removed by Spanish conquistador Juan de Contreras and his men, including Maya rebels and Negroes from Guinea, who were hiding on the islands, fleeing from slavery.

Until the 1820's, when the Lafitte brothers were expelled, Isla Mujeres was a refuge for pirates. After that, the isle was only occupied a few months of the year by a handful of fishermen from the Yucatan peninsula and Cuba. A report in 1825 said there were about a dozen huts.
  *Link to Pirate history article   Link to Mundaca article         ..

In 1842, a visiting American archeologist found the isle was vacant except for "two huts and a shelter made from branches, inhabited by three fishermen and two natives, who were fishing for turtles."

In August, 1850, the town of Dolores was founded by ~250 refugees from the Caste War, who had to reside on the land and farm it for six years to receive ownership.
Link to Article about the founding of the townLink to Article about settlers founding town in Caste War. 

In 1866, a census reported 468 inhabitants. (of whom nearly half were under 20 years of age).
 Link to Article about the 1866 census.

In 1900, there were 651 inhabitants in the municipality.**
Link to Article from late 1800's. And another.   And another.

In 1922, a hurricane left most of the ~1000 residents of the island homeless. It's reported that of their  ~120 homes, 40 remained standing and only three were considered habitable. 
 Link to Article about the hurricane of 1922.

In 1960, the island population was still around 1000 inhabitants.  1071 people  
  Link to Article about Isla in 1960.  Link to Article about isle pre-tourism.   Link to Article about tourism mid 1900's.

In 1970, it increased by nearly 150%.  2663 people.  (+1592)


In 1980, about 500 more inhabitants. 3164 people.  

In 1990, the population more than tripled to 10,448 people.   (+7284) (This coincides with a boom in tourism after 1980).

In 1995, it dropped by nearly 2000 to 8482 people.   (-1966)  (This corresponds to a decrease in tourism during this time period)

In 2000, it was back to 10,666 people.  (+2184)

In 2005 it increased to 11,325 people.  (+659)

In 2010 it increased to 12,642 people.  (+1317)

These statistics (above) are just for the island and don't include the mainland part of the municipality & are from this Urban Development document. **The exception is the 1900 statistic.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

In 2015, the entire municipality of Isla Mujeres had 19,469 people (making it the least populous municipality in Quintana Roo). (source)   This compares to 16,203 in the entire municipality five years earlier, or an increase of +3266 people.
 

    The area of the island is 402.71 hectareas (1.56 sq mi) of which 22.84 are interior lagoons leaving a land area of 379.88 hectares (1.47 square miles.) So basically the area of the isle is about one and a half square miles. 
 
           ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Tourism statistics....


       In 1970,  8100 foreign residents visited
     Last weekend, 20,000 passengers arrived in ONE day.

     There are ~1.5 million MORE visitors annually vs 15 years ago.

     In the past decade, the number of passengers arriving per year doubled from ~1.1 million to ~2.2 million. It is estimated that ~80% of them visit for the day, and don't stay overnight. 

   
Passengers to Isla Mujeres
1970   8100 foreign tourists annually
2000 763,902
2005 1,126,115
2015 2,212,591
(source) (source) (source)


*Link to Tourism history article.


 Migration....

    "The municipality of Isla Mujeres, just like the state of Quintana Roo, has a strong migratory component with 54% of its inhabitants coming from another state outside Quintana Roo and just over 1% come from abroad. Since the population of the municipality mainly consists of the inhabitants of the island, this indicator establishes that more than half of the population of the Island is not native to the area".~~ Island Development Plan 2009-2030.
 (The number of foreign residents appears to have increased considerably since that report was written a nearly a decade ago, and the significant migration from other states in Mexico appears to be continuing, imo.)

Old photos from Recuerdos de Isla Mujeres, current photos from Isla Mujeres al Dia.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

  This blog is brought to you by....
View from the rooms.

MaraVilla Caribe   Bed & Beach    Three rentals with large glass doors overlooking our white sand beach and the beautiful Caribbean sea, with  kitchenettes & free WIFI. In the coastal neighborhood of  Bachilleres, among upscale villas & boutique hotelitos, convenient to downtown or the colonias, yet separate.  Quiet & Private.   
 Kitchen in a large studio. (Sur & Norte are identical)
Kitchenette in small room, Medio. There's a table & chairs across from it & a double bed.
A large slider opens from each of the 3 rooms onto the patio where each has a table & chairs, hammock & clotheslines. The BBQ is behind the pole, and the outdoor shower is outa the pic at left.
Large studio (Norte), I'm standing in the kitchen. A queen & single bed.

Free amenities such as hammocks, bikes, outdoor shower, portable beach chairs & beach towels, washer, loungers. Breathtaking panoramic views from the rooftop terrace. Upstairs room also available.   Downtown is  ~ a mile away; if you don't feel like walking or biking, flag a $2 taxi. Parking. You can enjoy the music & crowds downtown, then come home our quiet neighborhood of Bachilleres where you'll  sleep to the sounds of the sea.$275/$325/$425 wk   $40/50/$65nt  Monthly Discounts

Large studio (Sur) with Queen & Single bed. Slider door & view are behind me.

Fine dining a few steps away at Da Luisa or try the traditional neighborhood eateries a couple blocks farther. Within ten minutes walk are the restaurants Mango Cafe, Brisas, Manolitos,  Green Verde, Kash Kechen Chuc, and the large department store-grocery Chedraui. Visit marinas, bars, & beach clubs that are minutes away by bike or on foot. Attend Yoga classes a couple villas away at hotelito Casa Ixchel. Fresh juice, produce & tortillas a few blocks away in the village, as well as a variety of other stores and small local restaurants. It takes 20-30  minutes to walk downtown.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Chronological Table of Contents (Click on "Read More" to open the Chronological Table of Contents)

Chronologically: From Mayas to Tourism PRECOLONIAL     Ruins of a second temple to Ixchel were found on the Mundaca Hacienda a few years ago EARLY CONTACT Mayan Merchant-Sailors Traded Salt & Stingray Spines and Met Columbus PIRATES Hard times in the 1500's: Attacks by Conquistadors, Corsairs & Pirates Do you think of Isla Mujeres pirates when you hear the song "La Bamba"? SETTLED IN 1850 From Pirate Refuge to Established Settlement   From Five Fishermen to 1500 Refugees: Isla Mujeres in the 1840's Sending Slaves to Cuba, Conspiring With Rebels & Liberating Sailors from Cozumel: The Caste War The Census of 1866 (16 years after the town was founded) Mundaca & La Trigueña   Isla Mujeres in 1876 1876: The Fishermen & the Bay by Alice Le Plongeon AMONG THE TURTLE CATCHERS by Alice le Plongeon in 1876 This Town was Built by Farmers Who Learned to Fish and Survive Disasters & Disease 1900's The Hu

Remembering the Coco Plantation: El Chocolate Garrido I from article by Fidel Villanueva Marid

In this article, eighty-year-old islander "El Chocolate" Garrido talks about his life to Isla Mujeres historian Fidel Villanueva Madrid. This is part I and a copy in Spanish is below.      Don Chocolate related his story while sitting in his wheelchair, remembering the days when he was a coprero, milpero, carbonero, artesano, marino naval, lagartero, and pescador. (Copreros work on coconut plantations, milperos are farmers, carboneros make charcoal, and he was an artesan, Naval sailor, crocodile hunter, and a fisherman.)      He is one of those pure blooded islanders who each day watches his community lose some of the charm that made it famous.He was born June 18, 1933 and his full name is Perpetuo Socorro Garrido Tuz. His parents were islanders who lived and worked on the coast as copreros. He was born with a midwife in attendance, between coconut palms. He says, "As soon as I learned to walk, I helped plant coconuts, pruned the plants, remo