This institute aims to accentuate the rich and complex cultural world established by the Cuban, Sicilian and Spanish immigrants around the cigar industry in turn-of-the-century Florida. Photo courtesy of the Tampa-Hillsborough County Public Library System
A key figure in this historical convergence is José Martí, the extraordinarily prolific writer and activist who would become the intellectual leader of Cuban independence.
The immigrant communities of Tampa and Key West were fundamental to the evolution of Martí’s political thought concerning both the U.S. and the envisioned future Cuban republic.
Institute Expectations
In addition to the expertise brought by our visiting faculty, the Institute will engage more directly and intimately with the legacy of these immigrant communities through direct contact with their material culture via site visits and guided tours to cigar factories, mutual aid societies, preserved homes and historic neighborhoods.
This is the second time this institute will be hosted. The first was in 2019.
Participants will have access to important local archives such as the Ybor City and West Tampa Collections and Cuban Wars of Liberation/Spanish-American War Collections at the University of South Florida Special Collections, the Tampa Bay History Center Archives and the Ybor City State Museum.