Historic Marker Monday: How Cayo Hueso Became Key West
Host Michele O'Connor introduces the Fun in Key West podcast and this Historic Marker Monday episode focused on the origin of Key West's name, highlighted by a historic marker near Mallory Square. She explains how the Taíno word "cayo" (small island) passed through Spanish usage and into English as "key," and how "hueso" (bone) made the original Spanish name Cayo Hueso translate to "Bone Island." Michele shares theories for the island's bones, including Native American conflicts, shipwreck victims from the "graveyard of the Atlantic," and fishbone piles, noting settlers found large bone piles in the 1820s. She describes how American mapmakers misheard and simplified the name into "Key West," mentions Spanish speakers still use Cayo Hueso, and promotes self-guided walking tours, a Key West book club reading Pit Bulls in Paradise with an upcoming author interview, and a forthcoming map of historic marker locations.
00:00 Welcome to Fun in Key West
01:27 Historic Marker Monday Begins
01:46 Why Key West Has Its Name
03:39 Mallory Square Marker Hunt
06:10 Cayo to Key Language Shift
07:36 Bone Island Theories
10:05 How Cayo Hueso Became Key West
10:51 Cultural Blend and Fun Facts
13:34 Tours Book Club and Marker Map
16:45 Final Wrap and Next Time