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Our War with Spain for Cuba's Freedom

Chapter 10 THE CITIES OF CUBA.

Word Count: 4086    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

as-Sports of the Car

y-Cardinas, the Comm

e Beauties of Trini

ort

culture, the refinement, and the wealth of the island, but there are several other towns of considerable importance, and ma

les east of Havana, with which it is connected by rail and water. Its shipping interests are second only

which prevail at some seasons. This makes the port a favorite with marine men. A large amount of money has been spent by the government to fortify and protect the city, and it has been connected by rail with all the principal towns and producin

secure architectural beauty. The pride of the city is the new theater, which is pointed out as the handsomest bui

hedral dedicated to the black virgin. It is a reproduction of a cathedral in the Balearic Islands. The view from its steeple is magnificent. Looking backward the valley of the Yumuri stretches to the right. It is about ten miles wide and sixty miles long

ish peaks in Colorado. These mountains are the headquarters of General Betancourt, who commands the insurgents in the province. The Spaniards h

In the Plaza, under the shadow of the Governor's residence, twenty-three people died from starvation in one day. The province of Matanzas is not

ven in the midst of war's alarms they find time for amusemen

almost every town of any importance there is an association of young men, generally known as 'El Liceo,' organized for artistic and literary purposes, and for social recreation. A fine large building is generally occupied by the association, with ample space for theatrical representations, balls, etc.; in addition to which there are billiard

ata,' which was indeed a very grand affair, attended by the beauty and fashion of Matanzas. The ball commenced at the seasonable hour of 8 o'clock in the even

ged in double rows of chairs the full length of the room in front of the colonnade, sat hundreds of dark-eyed angels, calm, dignified, and appearing, most of them, to be mere lookers on; not a black coat among them. All of thes

e polished and gentlemanly, as a general thing-sufficiently intelligent, apparently; while the ladies are dignified and pretty.

r nothing can be kinder, more friendly and courteous than the manners of the Cuban ladies to strangers, at least, judging from what is seen. It may be as a lady with whom I was arguing the point s

, if beauty is to be the test, it would seem to be a hard matter to make up one's mind, there is so much of it, but after

e, he finds them highly accomplished and entertaining. Several that I had the pleasure of meeting on this and othe

young men, under the direction of a leader, in some fancy costume very handsomely made, who, after making their bow to the audience, go th

grand ceremony of the 'Pinata,' from which the ball takes its name. This word I can hardly give the meaning of as applied to this ceremony, which consists in having pendent from the ceiling a form of ribbands and flowers, the ribbands numbered and hanging from the flowery the rights to pull which are drawn like prizes in a lottery. Of these ribbands, one is fastened to a beautiful crown of flowers, which,

verywhere. Songs and mirth have taken complete possession of the place, while people of all ages, sexes and colors are mixed together, in what seems inextricable confusion, intent up

THE HOME OF

terraces, backed by high hills and higher mountains, all so vague in mist and cloud that you do not know where land ends and sky begins. Coming nearer, gray ridges are evolved, which look like cowled monks peering over each other's shoulders, with here and there a majestic peak towering far above his fellows-like the Pico Turquino, 11,000 feet above the sea. Sailing westward along this south shore, the "Queen of the A

as become of considerable consequence, by reason of a railway which connects it with Santiago, and also because the patriot army, hidden in the nearby mountains, have entertained hopes of overcoming the Spanish garrison and making it a base for receiving outside assistance. Before the war there were extensive sugar plantations in this city, now all devastated. The Cobre mountains, looming darkly against the horizon, are the great copper and iron range of Cuba, said to contain untold mineral wealth, waiting to be developed by Yankee enterprise. In earlier days $4,000,000 a year was the average value of Cuba's copper and iron exports; but in 1867 6,000,000 tons were taken out in less than ten months. Then Spain put her foot in it, as usual. Not content with the lion's share, which she had always

AGO D

a perfect picture of a rock-ribbed fortress of the middle ages. This is the famous castle of San Jago, the Moro, which antedates the more familiar fortress of the same name in Havana harbor by at least a hundred years. Words are of little use in describing this antique, Moorish-looking stronghold, with its crumbling, honey-combed battlements, queer little flanking turrets and shadowy towers, perched upon the face of a dun-colored cliff 150 feet high-so old, so odd, so different from anything in America with which to compare it. A phot

s, you have ample time to study it. Window holes cut into rock in all directions show how extensive are the excavations. A large garrison is always quartered here, even in time of peace, when their sole business is searching for shady places along the walls against which to lean. There are ranges above ranges

er places the bare, unbroken wall of rock runs up, sheer straight 100 feet. Below, on the ocean side, are caves, deep,

them might well be written, "Leave hope behind, ye who enter here!" A crowd of haggard, pallid faces are pressed against the bars; and as you steam slowly by, so close that you might speak to the wretched prisoners, it seems as if a shadow had suddenly fallen upon the bright sunshine, and a chill, like that of coming death, oppresses the heart. Since time out of mind, the

ep. Scores of later patriots have been led out upon the ramparts and shot, their bodies, perhaps, with lif

s lies the city which Diego Velazquez, its founder, christened in honor of the patron saint of Spain, as far back as the year 1514. It is the oldest standing city in the new world, excepting Santo Domingo, which Columbus himself established only eighteen years earlier. By the way, San Jago, San Diego and Santiago, are really the same name, rendered Saint James in our language; and wherever the Spaniards have been are numbers of them. This particular city of Saint James occupies a sloping hillside, 600 miles southeast from Havana, itself the capital of a department, and ranks the third city of Cu

d turquoise mountains. Its low massive buildings, whose walls surround open courts, with pillared balconies and corridors, the great open windows protected by iron bars instead of glass, and roofs covered with earthen tiles-are a direct importation from Southern Spain, if not from further east. Tangiers, in Africa, is built upon a similar sloping hillside, and that capital of Morocco does not look a bi

DIN

s the capital of a fertile district. It is one of the main outlets of Cuba's richest province, Matanzas, and is the great railroad center of the island, or,

00 tons a year. To the west and south stretch the great sugar estates which have made this section of Spain's domain a prize to be fought for. T

cobble paved streets are considerably wider than those of Havana, and have two lines of horse cars. T

tulating each other on the presence of eternal summer, Cardinas is not an attractive town. One misses the glamor of antiquity and historic

IES OF IM

coasts, 305 miles southeast of Havana, and forty-five miles southwest of Nuevitas, its port, with which it is connected by railroad. Its population is about 30,000 and it is surrounded by a rich agri

by rail from the port of Casildas. It is beautifully situated on high land overlooking the sea, an

atural advantages, and with a just form of government, and the advent of American enterpris

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1 Chapter 1 A WAR FOR LIBERTY AND HUMANITY.2 Chapter 2 HOW COLUMBUS FOUND THE PEARL OF THE ANTILLES. 3 Chapter 3 SPAIN'S BLACK HISTORICAL RECORD.4 Chapter 4 BUCCANEERING AND THE WARFARE IN THE SPANISH MAIN.5 Chapter 5 COMMERCIAL DEVELOPMENT OF CUBA.6 Chapter 6 BEAUTIES OF A TROPICAL ISLAND.7 Chapter 7 WEALTH FROM NATURE'S STORES IN THE FORESTS AND FIELDS OF CUBA.8 Chapter 8 THE CUBANS, AND HOW THEY LIVE.9 Chapter 9 HAVANA, THE METROPOLIS OF THE ISLAND.10 Chapter 10 THE CITIES OF CUBA.11 Chapter 11 MUTTERINGS OF INSURRECTION.12 Chapter 12 OUTBREAK OF THE TEN YEARS' WAR13 Chapter 13 THE MASSACRE OF THE VIRGINIUS OFFICERS AND CREW.14 Chapter 14 OPERATIONS OF THE TEN YEARS' WAR.15 Chapter 15 THE PEACE OF ZANJON AND ITS VIOLATED PLEDGES16 Chapter 16 PREPARATIONS FOR ANOTHER REBELLION.17 Chapter 17 THE CUBAN JUNTA AND ITS WORK.18 Chapter 18 KEY WEST AND THE CUBANS.19 Chapter 19 ANOTHER STROKE FOR FREEDOM.20 Chapter 20 JOSE MARTI AND OTHER CUBAN HEROES.21 Chapter 21 DESPERATE BATTLES WITH MACHETE AND RIFLE.22 Chapter 22 FILIBUSTERS FROM FLORIDA.23 Chapter 23 WEYLER THE BUTCHER.24 Chapter 24 CUBA UNDER THE SCOURGE.25 Chapter 25 FITZHUGH LEE TO THE FRONT.26 Chapter 26 AMERICANS IN SPANISH DUNGEONS.27 Chapter 27 MACEO DEAD BY TREACHERY.28 Chapter 28 WEYLER'S RECONCENTRATION POLICY AND ITS HORRORS.29 Chapter 29 AMERICAN INDIGNATION GROWING.30 Chapter 30 OUTRAGES ON AMERICANS IN CUBA.31 Chapter 31 No.3132 Chapter 32 THE CASE OF EVANGELINA CISNEROS.33 Chapter 33 WORK OF MISS CLARA BARTON AND THE RED CROSS.34 Chapter 34 THE CATASTROPHE TO THE MAINE.35 Chapter 35 PATIENCE AT THE VANISHING POINT.36 Chapter 36 EVENTS IN THE AMERICAN CONGRESS.37 Chapter 37 No.3738 Chapter 38 STRENGTH OF THE OPPOSING SQUADRONS AND ARMIES.39 Chapter 39 BATTLESHIPS AND TROOPS BEGIN TO MOVE.40 Chapter 40 DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS TERMINATE.41 Chapter 41 FIRST GUNS AND FIRST PRIZES OF THE WAR.42 Chapter 42 DECLARATION OF WAR.43 Chapter 43 CALL FOR THE NATIONAL GUARD, OUR CITIZEN SOLDIER.44 Chapter 44 BLOCKADE OF CUBAN PORTS.45 Chapter 45 SPANISH DISSENSIONS AT HOME.46 Chapter 46 THE PHILIPPINES, PUERTO RICO, AND OTHER COLONIES OF SPAIN.47 Chapter 47 PROGRESS OF HOSTILITIES.48 Chapter 48 SEA FIGHT OFF MANILA, AMERICANS VICTORIOUS.49 Chapter 49 HAWAII, AND OUR ANNEXATION POLICY.50 Chapter 50 CONTINUED SUCCESS FOR AMERICAN SOLDIERS AND SAILORS.51 Chapter 51 THE INVASION OF PUERTO RICO.52 Chapter 52 THE SURRENDER OF MANILA.53 Chapter 53 VICTORIOUS CLOSE OF THE WAR54 Chapter 54 PERSONAL REMINISCENCES.