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Belize City

 

 

Overview of Belize City, Belize

Although all international flights arrive in Belize City, few visitors stop and tarry in the city before heading to other destinations in the country. As the nation’s largest municipality, Belize City offers a sharply contrasting experience to the natural mainland and offshore destinations that are more widely popular with visitors. An additional impetus for hastening their departure from the area is Belize City’s reputation for endemic poverty and a high crime rate.

Local residents and tourists who have taken the time to explore the city’s charm note that despite its cultural vibrancy and urban energy, Belize City is perhaps the lone exception to the laid-back, easygoing rhythms that mark the rest of the country. In an effort to promote tourism, the government of Belize has taken steps to battle crime and improve visitor safety.

Founded in 1638 by British loggers, Belize City served as the British colony’s capital until the government was relocated to Belmopan in 1970. With more than 70,000 residents, Belize City is easily the largest municipality in the country and still serves as Belize’s industrial and financial capital. Although some of the historic buildings are still intact, much of the city was leveled in 1961 by Hurricane Hattie.

 

Top Things To See And Do In Belize City


  • St. John’s Anglican Cathedral – Once used to crown five different kings.
  • The Belize Museum – A former prison, the museum showcases the rich culture and history of the country.
  • Battlefield Park – The town square where food vendors vie for the business of locals who use the area to give stirring political speeches.
  • Fort George Lighthouse – Built to the specifications of the country’s greatest benefactor, Baron Bliss.
  • The Marine and Coastal Zone Museums – With interactive displays about the reefs and their rich abundance of marine flora and fauna.

Highlights of Belize City

  • Enjoy the never ending Caribbean breeze at the famous Sea Wall. Take a stroll downtown on Albert Street & meet some wonderful locals.
  • When visiting Belize City be sure to take a city tour and see old Colonial structures.
  • Visit the Belize zoo and meet Buddy and Lucky Boy.
  • See the hustle and bustle of the Metropolitan Center of the country.
  • Not up for walking? Take a lovely horse and buggy tour of the city.

Tour Down Town Belize City

When to go to Belize City

There is plenty to tempt visitors all year-round in Belize City but one of the most popular sporting events of the year is held every year on the day before Easter. Known as the Cross Country Cycling Classic, the grueling bicycle race features hundreds of competitors who ride in a loop from Belize City to San Ignacio Town and back. Baron Bliss Day, held every year on the closest Monday to March 9, is celebrated with a regatta in the harbor.

History of Belize City

Belize City stands on land inhabited by Maya people, explorers and colonizers. At one time, it served as Belize’s capital. This city’s history is filled with twists and turns that may surprise you.

You don’t have to be a historian to appreciate the importance of prominent cities that have done so much to change the way mankind has evolved over time. Just two centuries ago, only 3-percent of all people lived in cities, notes Richard Florida, a distinguished professor at the University of Toronto. “By the year 2030, more than five billion people (six out of every ten human beings) will live in cities and urban centers,” he predicts.

No nation is immune from this projected growth, which is why understanding how Belize City’s evolution has become such a fascinating topic as citizens look into the future of this area, founded by the Maya people. One of this society’s oldest settlements was established not far from where Belize City now stands. At Altun Ha, an advanced civilization thrived thousands of years ago.

The Maya are replaced by explorers and colonizers

Over time, the Maya vanished and while the reason for their disappearance remains a hot debate topic, their ancestors can be found throughout the nation, having married Spanish, Portuguese and English explorers who came to the nation’s shores in waves. Intent only upon exploiting the area’s lumber resources, the Brits made Haulover Creek, a Belize River branch, a hub that formally became Belize City in 1779.

Folklore about the origins of Belize City contain horrific details of mosquito-ridden swamps at the river mouth and encampments of huts installed on the mahogany chips left behind when trees brought from inland camps were processed for export back to Europe. Settlers running these Belize City “production” centers were called Baymen. They lived hard-scrabble lives within this Haulover Creek community that grew in direct proportion to the expansion of the lumber industry.

Belize City becomes a hub of diversity

By the 19th century, both sides of Haulover Creek had been developed, reflecting class distinctions imported from Europe and imposed on citizens. By this time, African slaves and Brits had begun to intermarry, so in addition to new generations of blended Maya/Spanish legacies, a Creole society emerged as well.

Buildings housing the ruling elite sprawled across the southern seafront while inland cabins housed the lower echelons of this burgeoning society. While the population of Belize City had grown to around 5,000 by the turn of the century, the class divide became starker.

Riots in 1894 and 1919 divided the city and exposed underlying unrest that was quelled for a few decades until 1950, when the revolutionary spirit of citizens hungry for self-governance once more erupted. Despite the turmoil, Belize City remained the nation’s capital–until a series of hurricanes forced the Belize government to move the nation’s business to Belmopan, located 52 miles inland.

No longer Belize’s capitol, the city undergoes a troubled transition

Once government offices were moved, it was up to residents to decide upon the shape the city would take in the future. To say that this evolution was tumultuous would be an understatement. An era of lawlessness borne of poverty, overpopulation and unrest pervaded the area throughout the 1980s and 1990s.

While areas along Haulover Creek maintained a core cultural and commercial identity, it took until the 21st for the city to find its footing when cruise ships began to anchor off Belize City in 2004, revitalizing the area.

A Tourism Village sprung up and began to serve as a welcoming entity for tens of thousands of cruise tourists annually. Many departed for inland and island destinations, but little-by-little, they stayed in Belize City as it developed a unique personality. The mouth of the river that had been the founding point of Belize City began to turn around.

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What remains of this city’s history?

Remnants of the past and promise for the future. A rich legacy lives on amid Belize City’s business and commercial centers and while these entities look toward the future, they have not forgotten the past. Visitors roam Albert and Queen Streets, named for Victoria, the monarch occupying England’s throne when Belize was known as British Honduras and served as a crown colony.

Vintage buildings that did not succumb to hurricanes are being remodeled to serve as quarters for artisans, thus when visitors tour historic Baron Bliss Lighthouse, the Marine Terminal and Museum and the former Government House (now the Belize City House of Culture) they get a taste of Belize City’s past and future.

Visits to guest houses, local hotels and museums include fabulous displays of Belize furniture, crafted from trees that, according to some historians, literally launched Belize City. Belizeans are as excited about the future as they are proud of the past, which is why Belize City is destined to remain a symbol of how a city remains strong and vibrant, no matter how many changes come to pass.

Questions about Belize City? Send us an email or call 501-601-0315. We will love to help you plan a Belize City Tour.


Get a copy of The Ultimate Belize Bucket List! Written by Larry Waight, a local with more than twenty years of experience in the travel industry, the book is packed with tips, information, and recommendations about all of the best things to see and do in Belize.

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