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| CulturalTravels.com - Home | More Heritage Sites |
Volume 6, October 2004 |
ISSN 1538-893X |
UNESCO World Heritage Sites
The World Heritage Committee has inscribed the following properties on the World Heritage List. The List, arranged alphabetically by nominating State Party, is current as of 3 July 2003. The list will be updated following the next meeting of the Committee in July 2004. |
Plantations from the Past |
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Although
coffee is so closely associated with Cuba today, the Spanish custom of
drinking chocolate dominated the island in its early days. Coffee was not
introduced to Cuba until 1748, when traders brought it from Santo Domingo.
Not long afterward, French families fleeing the Haitian slave revolt
(1789-1804) settled in Cuba and established coffee plantations. By 1827,
Cuba had more than 2,000 coffee plantations. Most were in the foothills of
the Sierra Maestra, a lush mountain range in southeastern Cuba. The French
emigres had to carve their estates from the overgrown slopes, but their
persistence paid off. Coffee production boomed. And for a time,
investments in coffee estates equaled investments in sugar plantations. However,
higher returns from sugar and competition in the coffee market from
Brazil, Venezuela and Costa Rica caused Cuba’s coffee production to
decline. Then the Ten Years’ War (1868-1878), Cuba’s first real battle
for independence from Spain, left the eastern end of the island in ruins,
devastating the local coffee industry. Plantations were abandoned to be
reclaimed by the jungle. In 2000,
UNESCO recognized the remains of these 19th century coffee plantations as
“unique evidence of a pioneer form of agriculture in a difficult
terrain,” casting “considerable light on the economic, social and
technological history of the Caribbean and Latin American region.” The
organization designated the Archaeological Landscape of the First Coffee
Plantations in the Southeast of Cuba as a World Heritage Site. What
survives only hints at what once was. Bits of architecture and equipment
are strewn around the Sierra Maestra, the largest mountain range in Cuba,
155 miles long and 19 miles wide. Trails into the site are accessible from
the bustling sugar mill town of Bartolome Maso in Granma Province and from
the colonial city of Santiago de Cuba in the province of the same name. An estate
that is relatively easy to visit is Cafetal La Isabelica, 16 miles outside
Santiago near La Gran Piedra, a huge rock at the highest point in the
Sierra Maestra Grand National Park. The rock, which is of volcanic origin,
is 167 feet long, 98 feet wide and 82 feet high, and weighs an estimated
63,000 tons. Climbing the
459 steps to La Gran Piedra, visitors pass through a jungle of ferns,
orchids and other endemic plants. Those with sharp eyes and good luck
might spot a Tocororo, the trogon that is Cuba’s national bird. Beyond
La Gran Piedra, a rough track leads to the former coffee plantation. La Isabelica
was established by a French immigrant who fled Haiti in 1791. The owner is
said to have named it for his mistress, a beautiful slave who later became
his wife. It was one of about 60 coffee plantations in the area. Still
standing is a two-story stone mansion built in the style of a rural French
manor house. Now a museum, it contains original furniture, slave
implements and other items related to Cuba’s early coffee industry.
Outside are three platforms where coffee beans were dried, and nearby is a
circular thatched hut where the beans were ground. High tariffs
placed on imports in 1927 and 1930 revived coffee production in Cuba to
some extent. Plantations again are operating in mountainous areas, where
climatic conditions produce high-quality Arabica beans noted for full
flavor and low caffeine. Nearly 12 varieties are grown and processed for
the domestic market and abroad under such brand names as Caracolillo,
Cristal Mountain, Cubita, Serrano and Turquino. Canadian
travel writer
Toni Dabbs is a regular contributor to The
Cultured Traveler. |
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