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Archive for April, 2026

Most Puerto Rican genealogists start in the same place: civil registration records, census data, and church baptisms. Those are the right first steps. But there is a whole category of historical sources that most researchers never open, and it is sitting online, free, waiting for you.

I am talking about newspapers.

Puerto Rican newspapers published birth announcements, marriage notices, obituaries, legal notices, property transactions, and ship arrivals. They named enslaved people as being freed and freedpeople as disputing labor contracts. They published the names of militia officers, business partners, and godparents. They covered events that left no trace in official records.

And the best collections are completely free.

Puerto Rico Electoral Census (1888): Voter Lists for Rincón and Mayagüez
Puerto Rico Electoral Census (1888): Voter Lists for Rincón and Mayagüez

Why Newspapers Fill Gaps That Other Records Cannot

Civil registration in Puerto Rico did not begin until 1885. Church records go back further, but they are incomplete, hard to access, and sometimes lost. For the decades between the 1840s and 1885, newspapers are often the best source you have for finding your ancestors by name.

Even after 1885, newspapers add something civil records cannot: narrative. A death certificate tells you when someone died. An esquela (the formal death notice published in Puerto Rican papers) may tell you where they were born, what they did for a living, who their parents were, which church they belonged to, and which relatives survived them. That is a life history in a single clipping.

Legal notices in colonial papers reveal property, debt, and family structure in ways that go far beyond what a census captures. The Gaceta de Puerto Rico, the official Spanish colonial government gazette, published royal decrees, land grants, militia appointments, and slave trade records. It ran from 1806 to 1902, making it one of the longest-running and most genealogically rich newspapers in Caribbean history.

Six Puerto Rican Newspapers Every Genealogist Should Know

Gaceta de Puerto Rico (1806-1902)

The oldest and most authoritative paper on the island. As the official colonial gazette, it published government notices, legal records, property transactions, and announcements of births, marriages, and deaths. It is especially valuable for slavery research: manumission notices, runaway slave advertisements, and slave sale notices ran throughout the slavery period, which ended in 1873. After abolition, it published liberto (freedperson) labor contract disputes.

Chronicling America (Library of Congress) has 10,643 digitized issues from 1836 to 1902, fully searchable and free. Search the Gaceta de Puerto Rico

Boletín Mercantil de Puerto Rico (1839-1918)

The second most important paper of the colonial era. The Boletín Mercantil is especially rich for reconstructing the economic and social lives of ancestors connected to commerce, landholding, or elite networks. Property sales, business partnerships, and travel notices appear throughout its run. Chronicling America has 34 of 37 years in print available. Search the Boletín Mercantil

La Correspondencia de Puerto Rico (1890-1943)

Founded in San Juan on December 18, 1890 by Ramón B. López, this one-cent paper was designed to reach the general public and quickly became the largest circulating daily on the island, with a print run of 5,000 copies a day. It is considered the first daily news report in Puerto Rico accessible to a wider public. Vital notices in La Correspondencia often include detailed family information that you will not find in official records. Chronicling America holds issues from the late 1800s through the early 1900s. Search La Correspondencia

La Democracia, Ponce (1890-1948)

Founded and published by Luis Muñoz Rivera, Puerto Rican poet, journalist, and politician. La Democracia was first published in Ponce in 1890 and is valuable for political activity, community leadership, and land issues. Chronicling America has 4,244+ digitized issues from 1891 to 1907. Search La Democracia

El Mundo (1919-1990)

The major conservative daily of the 20th century, El Mundo is now fully digitized and open access. The archive covers 1919 to 1990 and is full-text searchable, making it an exceptional resource for 20th-century vital notices, obituaries, and local events. It was made publicly available through the GPA CRL Alliance, a partnership between East View Information Services and the Center for Research Libraries (CRL), funded specifically to benefit scholars and the general public at no cost. Search El Mundo

El Imparcial (1918-1970s)

Covered the political and economic impacts of U.S. control. Available through the Eastview Global Press Archive (subscription) and partially through the Digital Library of the Caribbean. Browse El Imparcial at dLOC

Free Platforms: Where to Search

Chronicling America (Library of Congress)
The best starting point for Puerto Rican newspaper research. Filter by state/territory (Puerto Rico), then by newspaper title and date range. Six Puerto Rican titles, more than 33,000 issues, 1756 to 1963. Free. chroniclingamerica.loc.gov

Digital Library of the Caribbean (dLOC)
The Caribbean Newspaper Digital Library (CNDL) holds 130+ 18th and 19th century newspapers from 22 Caribbean islands, covering 1718 to 1876. Built by a consortium of 90+ institutions including the University of Florida and Florida International University. Includes Spanish, English, and French language papers. Essential for tracking migration between Puerto Rico, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, and other islands. dloc.com

El Mundo Digital Archive
Full open access to 71 years of Puerto Rico’s major daily. Search by keyword, browse by date. No subscription required. UC Berkeley announcement with link

Archivo Digital Nacional de Puerto Rico (ADNPR)
Searchable repository of Puerto Rican archives, maps, newspapers, government gazettes, and periodicals. adnpr.net

Biblioteca Digital Puertorriqueña (UPR)
The University of Puerto Rico’s digital collections include newspapers, manuscripts, photographs, and rare books. upr.contentdm.oclc.org

Hemeroteca Digital (Biblioteca Nacional de España)
Spain’s national library has fully digitized and made searchable historical Spanish-language newspapers, including some with coverage of the Caribbean. Free. bdh.bne.es

What to Look For Once You Find the Right Paper

Once you find the right newspaper, search beyond just your ancestor’s name. Colonial and early 20th-century Puerto Rican papers published:

  • Birth, marriage, and death announcements with family details
  • Esquelas: formal death notices naming parents, spouse, children, and community ties
  • Property transfers, tax assessments, and probate filings
  • Business licenses and partnerships (many were family enterprises)
  • Guardianship appointments (which tell you there were minor children)
  • Ship arrival and departure lists (migration evidence)
  • Manumission notices and slave advertisements (pre-1873)
  • Godparent relationships (padrinos) that reveal extended family networks
  • Censo electoral para Diputados a Cortes (electoral census lists): official voter eligibility rolls for Spanish parliamentary elections, published in the colonial press

A note on electoral census lists: These rolls name voters by full name, municipality, barrio, and qualification (property ownership, income, or recognized occupation). Because voter eligibility was restricted to propertied and educated men, an ancestor’s appearance is a strong indicator of economic standing and places them precisely in a barrio at a specific date. If your ancestor does not appear, that does not mean they were not present: it means they did not meet the restricted criteria.

Search Tips That Will Save You Time

Try spelling variations. Surnames were Hispanicized, accent marks were dropped in typesetting, and transcriptions are imperfect. Search just the first three or four letters of a surname to cast a wider net.

Search for women differently. Women were often listed as “wife of [husband’s name]” rather than by their own name. If you cannot find a woman directly, search for her husband and read nearby announcements.

Browse when keyword searches fail. If you know approximately when your ancestor was alive in a particular town, browse issues from that period rather than searching by name. The context you find around other families will orient you.

Document your negative searches. If you searched a title, date range, and found nothing, write it down. A documented absence is a data point. It tells future you (and anyone reading your research) what was already checked.

Cross the colonial boundaries. Puerto Rican families moved between islands. The dLOC holds newspapers from Cuba, the Dominican Republic, and other Caribbean islands that may name your relatives in a way no Puerto Rican paper does.

Paid Options Worth Knowing

If you have a subscription, these platforms add depth:

PlatformWhat it holds
GenealogyBankPuerto Rican marriage records with biographical detail; claims 95% exclusive content
Latin American Newsstream (ProQuest)Full-text access to 41 Puerto Rican newspapers (requires university or public library card)

Start Here

If you have never used newspaper research for your Puerto Rican family, start with Chronicling America. Go to the site, select Puerto Rico as the state, and search your oldest known surname alongside the town your family came from. Spend twenty minutes browsing. You may not find your ancestor on the first try, but you will learn what the papers look like, how names were recorded, and what was happening in your ancestral town.

Newspapers do not replace civil records or church registers. They work alongside them. When the official record gives you a name and a date, the newspaper gives you the story.


*Want to go deeper? I have put together a free five-lesson mini-course on using Puerto Rican newspapers for genealogy, hosted at PuertoRicanGenealogy.org. It walks through each platform step by step, with search exercises and case studies. Check out Looking for Ancestors in Historical Puerto Rican Newspapers


© 2026 Sylvia Vargas. looking4myroots.co. All rights reserved.

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If you have roots in the western side of Puerto Rico, chances are you’ve hit a wall trying to find records from the early 1800s. FamilySearch has a lot, but not everything. And some of the best records are sitting in places most people never think to look.

This week, someone in the Facebook group Sociedad Puertorriqueña de Genealogía shared something I hadn’t seen before: the Archivo Digital de Aguadilla. Free, online, and full of parish records going back to 1780. I want to walk you through what it is and how to use it, especially if you’re just getting started.

What Is the Archivo Digital de Aguadilla?

The Archivo Digital de Aguadilla is a free online archive of historical documents from Aguadilla, Puerto Rico. It was created by Haydée E. Reichard, and the heart of the collection is the Libros Parroquiales (Parish Books) from 1780 to 1843: baptism, marriage, and burial records from the parishes of Aguada and San Carlos Borromeo.

These are the kinds of records that can take you back generations before civil registration began in 1885. If your family is from the western part of the island, this archive is worth knowing.

The records have been alphabetized by surname, which makes it much easier to navigate than flipping through unindexed handwritten pages.

Browsing the Site

When you land on the site, you’ll notice it’s primarily in Spanish. Don’t let that stop you. Tools like Google Translate can help you read the navigation and any descriptions.

The site is organized into categories you can explore from the footer or sidebar:

  • Libros Parroquiales: Parish birth, marriage, and death records (this is the main collection)
  • Genealogía: Genealogical collections
  • Documentos Nuevos: Newly added documents
  • Ensayos: Historical essays
  • Other collections from researchers like Herman Reichard, Ramón Añeses, and Jaime González

Click the hamburger menu (the three lines, ≡) in the top right corner to access all sections, including Noticias, which is where they announce new additions to the archive.

How to Search

Here’s where it gets a little different from what you might be used to on FamilySearch or Ancestry. There are two ways to search, and the one that looks most obvious is actually the less useful one.

Option 1: Site-Wide Keyword Search
Go to “Buscar en Archivo Digital” in the main menu, type a surname, and click Buscar. This searches across all posts and pages on the site.

Option 2: External Archive Database (Better for Parish Records)
On that same search page, look for a link that says “BUSQUEDA”. Click it. This takes you to an external tool at archivonacional.com where the full Haydée Reichard collection is searchable as a proper database. This is the better option for finding a specific person.

Using the Parish Book Viewer

When you open one of the parish book entries, an embedded document viewer loads right on the page. It looks like this:

Inside the viewer, the records are sorted alphabetically by surname. You have a few options for navigating:

  • Use the Índice (Index) button to pull up a list of surnames and jump directly to the one you’re looking for.
  • Use “Otros Libros” (Other Books) to switch between the available volumes: baptisms, marriages, and death records across different years.

My Experience: The Search That Didn’t Work

I want to save you some frustration. When I first tried the site, I searched for “Acevedo” using the viewer’s built-in search bar. It came back with no results at all.

Search bar displaying the name 'Acevedo' with options for 'Exact match' and 'Whole words', indicating no results found.

I almost moved on. But I tried the Índice instead (again, click the hamburger menu ), and there it was: a long list of Acevedos.

A list of names and titles from a historical document dated November 19, 1814 to August 20, 1818, possibly related to individuals of 'blancos y pardos'.

The lesson: do not expect this search to work like FamilySearch or Ancestry.

  • Use the Índice.
  • Browse by letter.

The site was built differently, and once you understand that, it makes much more sense.

What You’ll Find Once You Get There

Once you locate a record, you’ll be reading handwritten text from the 1700s and 1800s. That’s both exciting and a little intimidating if you’ve never done it before.

There are no typed summaries or extracted data fields. You’re reading the original handwriting directly. A few things to keep in mind:

  • If you’re comfortable reading cursive in English, you can figure out many of the letters.
  • AI tools can help you get started with a transcription, but always verify what any AI produces by comparing it word-by-word to the original image. AI makes mistakes with old and new handwriting!
  • If you want to build your skills, the Spanish Paleography Digital Teaching and Learning Tool is a wonderful free resource designed to help people read early modern Spanish handwriting from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

A Few Honest Limitations

This archive is a labor of love, not a commercial database. That means:

  • The collection is not exhaustive. Some years and volumes are missing because access to the originals was limited.
  • The site is primarily in Spanish.
  • The search tool inside the viewer does not behave like a modern search engine. Use the Índice.

For related Puerto Rico records, the Enlaces page on the site links to the broader Archivo Digital Nacional de Puerto Rico at adnpr.net, which is worth bookmarking.

One More Resource Worth Knowing

The same Facebook group also shared another resource this week: Rutgers University’s Digital Library of Historians of Puerto Rico.

This is a digital collection of books by Puerto Rican historians, including Francisco Moscoso, Fernando Picó, David Stark, and Francisco Scarcano.

If you’re not fluent in Spanish, having these books in digital form means you can use Google Translate to read them or use them as a reason to start learning Spanish. Context matters in genealogy, and these historians can help you understand what life was like for your ancestors.

Start Looking

If your family is from Aguadilla or the surrounding area, or if you simply want to push further back than civil records allow, give the Archivo Digital de Aguadilla a try. Go to the site, click on a book, and look through the index. You might be surprised what comes up.

And if you find something, share it with the community. That’s how we all move forward.

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