Cruceta El Vigía

Cruceta El Vigía

sea. Visitors can reach the skybridge via glass elevators or a stair case.

One of many landmarks of the city of Ponce, the cross is owned by the Municipality of Ponce and is currently operated by the "Patronato de Ponce", a non-profit organization dedicated to preserving and administrating several of the city's landmarks.

The cross sits at the same spot on Vigia Hill where early Spanish settlers once looked out for merchant ships and would-be invaders, including marauding pirates. In 1801, the settlers built a much smaller cross made of two intersecting tree trunks where an observer would constantly watch the sea and the city's port, raising different flags to either notify local merchants of incoming trade ships or alert military authorities of possible threats (a replica of this wooden cross now sits behind the current monument). The Vigia Hill also served as a refugee camp for citizens during a storm on September 12, 1738, an earthquake on May 10, 1787, a tsunami on November 18, 1867, and the United States invasion on July 25, 1898.

Made of reinforced concrete, the cross has withstood various natural disasters, including 3 major hurricanes. The Vigia Hill is right next to Mameyes Hill, site of the famed mudslide disaster in 1985. A monument dedicated to the victims of the disaster can be seen from the skybridge. At the base entrance there's a plague to commemorate the sacrifice made by brothers Ricardo and Alberto Lugo. They served as lookout for pirates for many years at the site of the cross.Fact|date=January 2008

References

External links

* [http://home.coqui.net/castserr/cruceta.htm Site dedicated to El Vigia Cross and the Serralles Castle]
* [http://www.ponceweb.org Official Ponce Website]


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