4. El mapa de Cuba
Cuba is the largest
island in the
Caribbean.
It is only 90 miles
south of Miami,
Florida.
It belonged to the
Spanish until 1898.
5.
6. Cubanos nativos
The original
inhabitants of Cuba
suffered the same
fate as the rest of
the indigenous
Caribbean Indian:
they were killed of
by, slavery, small
pox and war by the
Spanish settlers.
7. Cuba española
Spanish control of
Cuba began in the
early 1500s with the
arrival of the
Spanish.
The island was ruled
by governors
obeying the rules of
the King from Spain
back in Europe.
9. La economía de Cuba
The Cuban
economy was based
mainly on the
production of
sugarcane for the
global market.
Europeans
developed quite a
taste for sugar after
its discovery.
10. El negocio de esclavos
The free labor that
slavery provided helped
Cuba’s agriculturally
based economy
prosper.
Slaves brought over
from Africa did the
majority of the work
while Spanish
landowners profited
immensely.
12. La Havana, Capital de Cuba
The prosperity of the
Cuban economy
allowed Havana to
be one of the
wealthiest and most
cosmopolitan cities
in the New World.
13. Carlos Manuel de Céspedes
Carlos Manuel de
Céspedes freed
slaves on October
10, 1868 on his La
Demajagua
plantation near
Manzanillo, starting
the Ten Year War
for Cuban liberation.
14. Carlos Manuel de Céspedes
Carlos Manuel de
Céspedes is
considered by
many Cubans to
be the 'Father of
the Nation'.
He was later killed
by the Spanish
Army.
15. Diez años de guerra
The 10 years of Civil War was
eventually crushed by the Spanish
army, but the causes for the
insurrection did not go away.
Inequality, poverty, racism, and lack of
opportunity for slaves was still rampant
in Cuba.
16. José Martí
José Martí was a prolific
writer on the topic of
Cuban independence.
He was eventually
exiled from Cuba for
protesting the Spanish
rule there.
He fled abroad but
continued to conspire
against the Spanish
government form
abroad.
17. José Martí
Martí returned to Cuba to fight in a second
war for political independence form Spain in
1895.
José Martí would later die in the initial
conflicts of the Cuban-Spanish War for
Independence in 1895.
It was not until 1898, after three years of
fighting, that the United States would declare
war on Spain.
19. Spanish-Cuban-American War
You probably don’t recognize that War,
but that is how the Cubans call it.
The Cubans had been struggling for
years against the Spanish rule.
You see the bias in the name of the
Spanish-American War. Up until now
you may not even have known that
Cubans fought in this war.
21. February 15, 1898
The USS Maine
exploded in Havana
Harbor in Cuba.
As a result,
McKinley petitioned
Congress for War
and on April 18,
1898 the US was at
war with Spain.
23. The Teller Amendment
On April 18,1898 an amendment to the U.S.
declaration of war against Spain which
proclaimed that the United States would not
establish permanent control over Cuba. It
stated that the United States "hereby
disclaims any disposition of intention to
exercise sovereignty, jurisdiction, or control
over said island except for pacification
thereof, and asserts its determination, when
that is accomplished, to leave the
government and control of the island to its
people."
26. The Spanish-American War
The Spanish-American War lasted 3
months.
American Secretary of State John Hay
referred to it as “a splendid little war”.
Not a single Cuban was allowed to be
present present at the surrender
negotiations between the Spanish and
American officials.
28. General Calixto García
General García was a
leading General in the
fight against Spain in
Cuba.
His army and
supporters were not
even invited to be
present at the peace
treaty between Spain
and the United States.
American authorities
keep many Spanish
officials in their posts
after the surrender.
29. Después de la guerra
García wrote to the General of the US forces
at the end of the war: “I have not been
honored with a single word from yourself
informing me about the negotiations for
peace or the terms of the capitulation by the
Spaniards ... when the question arises of
appointing authorities in Santiago de
Cuba….I cannot see but with the deepest
regret that such authorities are not elected by
the Cuban people, but are the same ones
selected by the Queen of Spain.”
30. Ocupación militar
After the War, American troops maintained a
military presence in Cuba.
Also after the war, American businesses
began to pour into the country.
United Fruit Company bought 1,900,000
acres at 20 cents an acre.
Timber companies moved in to harvest the
10,000,000 acres of virgin forest in Cuba.
American tobacco companies and steel
companies also moved onto the island to
exploit Cuba’s wealth of natural resources.
31. The Platt Amendment
Platt Amendment of February 1901
allowed the United States "the right to
intervene for the preservation of Cuban
independence, the maintenance of a
government adequate for the protection
of life, property, and individual liberty..."
The Platt Amendment was finally
abrogated on May 29, 1934.
32. Fidel Castro, comunista
After 50 years of
military dictatorships
supported by the
US, in 1953 Castro
attempted to
overthrow the US
backed military
dictator, Fulgencio
Batista.
His attempt was
feeble and he was
sentenced to jail for
1 year.
33. Cuban Revolutionary War
Castro was released from jail and fled to
Mexico to begin preparations for a military
takeover of Batista.
In Mexico he gathered together many Cuban
exiles to fight for his cause.
There he met Ernesto “Che” Guevara, a
young communist who despised US political
involvement in Cuban politics.
In 1956, Castro and 81 supporters returned
to Cuba on a boat called the Granma and
began a gorilla insurgency against Batista
from the mountains of the Sierra Maestra in
western Cuba.
34. Cuban Revolutionary War
20,000 people had been killed in the
liberation war. As he entered Havana
on 8 January, 32-year-old Castro
reportedly ordered 50,000 rifles and
machine guns to be imported to defend
the Revolution.
35. Reforma agraria
After Castro seized power, many
wealthy Cuban landowners lost their
land as Castro expropriated (stole) I
tand turned into state farms.
The US owned United Fruit Company
lost much of theirt land and was turned
over to small farmers.
In total, 1,000,000 acres were
redistributed to the poor.
36. Los resueltos del gobierno
comunista
On 2 January 1959, the government
announced that 50-60% of casino profits
would be directed to welfare programs. The
first of a series of land reforms was enacted
on 17 May.
The Cuban government offered to discuss
compensation for US-owned farms and
mineral properties. The US Secretary of State
declined the offer.
37. Castro y los Estados Unidos
Ever since his rise to power in 1959,
Cuban Premier Fidel Castro struggled
to survive America's efforts to
"encourage" his political demise”
When Castro came to power, the U.S.
stopped buying Cuban sugar and
refused to supply its former trading
partner with much needed oil and other
trade.
38. The Bay of Pigs
The CIA began to
recruit Cuban exiles
to return to Cuba to
overthrow Castro in
the late 1950’s.
These troops were
trained in
Guatemala and
outfitted with
American weapons.
39. Invasión cubana
On April 17, 1961, the US supported
troops attempted to invade Cuba.
The invasion was crushed by Castro’s
military.
There is little proof the public would
have supported Castro’s removal from
power.
40. La bahía be chanchos
Cuban air force pilots managed to destroy
ships just off the beach that were to supply
the invaders with needed ammunition and
communication equipment. Cut off from this
lifeline and running short on bullets, the exile
brigade struggled in vain for a few days
before almost all of its members were killed
or captured.
When the shooting was over, 114 members
of the brigade were dead and 1,189 had
become Castro's prisoners.
41. La crisis nuclear de Cuba
Fueled by concerns that the U.S. had
some nuclear missiles based a mere
150 miles from its boarders, in Turkey,
the Soviet leadership grew increasingly
desperate to somehow tip the balance
of power in its favor.
42. El crisis nuclear de Cuba
The Soviet Union offered Castro new
trade opportunities, to ease the effects
of U.S. sanctions, and a promise of
protection from U.S. hostilities. The
cozy alliance which ensued between
Castro and Khrushchev laid the ground
for what culminated in a Soviet missile
base in Cuba and ended in the Cuban
missile crisis.
44. El crisis nuclear de Cuba
On October 22, 1962, after reviewing newly
acquired intelligence, President John F.
Kennedy informed the world that the Soviet
Union was building secret missile bases in
Cuba, a mere 90 miles off the shores of
Florida. After weighing such options as an
armed invasion of Cuba and air strikes
against the missiles, Kennedy decided on a
less dangerous response.
46. El crisis nuclear de Cuba
In addition to demanding that Russian
Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev remove all the
missile bases and their deadly contents,
Kennedy ordered a naval quarantine
(blockade) of Cuba in order to prevent
Russian ships from bringing additional
missiles and construction materials to the
island.
In response to the American naval blockade,
Premier Khrushchev authorized his Soviet
field commanders in Cuba to launch their
tactical nuclear weapons if invaded by U.S.
forces.
48. El crisis nuclear de Cuba
Deadlocked in this manner, the two leaders of
the world's greatest nuclear superpowers
stared each other down for seven days - until
Khrushchev blinked. On October 28, thinking
better of prolonging his challenge to the
United States, the Russian Premier conceded
to President Kennedy's demands by ordering
all Soviet supply ships away from Cuban
waters and agreeing to remove the missiles
from Cuba's mainland..
49.
50. Guerra nuclear
After several days of
teetering on the
brink of nuclear
holocaust, the world
breathed a sigh of
relief.
51. CIA y Fidel Castro
Since the Bay of Pigs,
the CIA has made
various attempts to kill
Castro.
Castro stepped dwon
from the Cuban
Presidency in 2008, and
was seceded by his
brother Raúl.
American tourism to
Cuba is severely
restricted to this day.