El Graduado
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I just published my latest book, The True History of Playa del Carmen. It is available as an eBook or paperback on Amazon.com
There is a lot more to PDC than shops and bars. The book tells all about the area's early history, the many Maya ruins still standing in the city, the cave shrines, and the quirky things that happened when the town started to grow. PDC was burned to the grown by Maya rebels in 1918, but rebuilt soon after. Most of the chicle for Wrigley Gum was shipped to Cozumel from PDC before making its way to the US. It is an amazing story of slow growth over decades and then a population explosion that was faster than Cancun's. The first time I drove to Playa del Carmen there were less than 700 people living there. By 1980, there were only 737. Ten years later, there were over 3,000. Today, there are over 300,000.
There is a lot more to PDC than shops and bars. The book tells all about the area's early history, the many Maya ruins still standing in the city, the cave shrines, and the quirky things that happened when the town started to grow. PDC was burned to the grown by Maya rebels in 1918, but rebuilt soon after. Most of the chicle for Wrigley Gum was shipped to Cozumel from PDC before making its way to the US. It is an amazing story of slow growth over decades and then a population explosion that was faster than Cancun's. The first time I drove to Playa del Carmen there were less than 700 people living there. By 1980, there were only 737. Ten years later, there were over 3,000. Today, there are over 300,000.