The name
El Tuque comes from the name of a farm of measuring 267.11
cuerdas that was located in that area of Barrio Canas in the early 20th century. The once deserted beach was developed into a
balneario (balneary or bathhouse) by the
government of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico in the mid-1960s, as part of the central government's attempt to provide a network of such recreational facilities throughout the island. It included gazebos and fire pits near the beach, a restaurant, changing rooms with showers and lockers, a children's pool, and two adult Olympic-size swimming pools with snack bars. It was inaugurated on 17 July 1965. Due to
beach erosion that occurred over the years, a
beach replenishment project then took place in 1979, but the sand added was darker than the original sand there and locals now consider the beach "dirty". By the early-1980s, however, the area had fallen into disrepair, starting with the swimming pools and parking areas, for lack of proper maintenance by the Commonwealth Government. As a result, the beach opened only sporadically. Eventually the complex was permanently shut down in the late 1980s. The Municipality of Ponce, then obtained ownership of the property from the Commonwealth government via a transfer. About a decade later, in 1996, the
United States Army Corps of Engineers picked up the El Tuque project again for purposes of re-furbishing the beach with new sand. ==El Tuque Recreational Complex==