Florida Historical Quarterly

Florida Historical Quarterly

COVER An artist’s conception of the campus of the University of Florida, Gainesville, ca. 1920. The view is from the north. West University Avenue runs horizontally across the northern edge of the campus; Thirteenth Street is on the east. The buildings along the bottom edge of the picture are the Law School (now Bryan Hall), Language Hall (Anderson Hall), Science Hall (Flint Hall), and Buckman and Thomas halls (dormitories). South of Language Hall (above) are Peabody and Benton (no longer standing) halls. Beyond Science Hall is Floyd and a small storage building (probably the first building constructed on the site, now removed). Nearby is the University Commons (Richard Johnson Hall) and the Agricultural Experiment Station. The building on the right, just south and west of Thomas Hall, is the old auditorium and gymnasium. THE FLORIDA HISTORICAL SOCIETY Volume LV, Number 4 April 1977 COPYRIGHT 1977 by the Florida Historical Society, Tampa, Florida. Second class postage paid at Tampa and DeLeon Springs, Florida. Printed by E. O. Painter Printing Co., DeLeon Springs, Florida. THE FLORIDA HISTORICAL QUARTERLY Samuel Proctor, Editor Stephen Kerber, Editorial Assistant EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD Herbert J. Doherty, Jr. University of Florida Michael V. Gannon University of Florida John K. Mahon University of Florida Jerrell H. Shofner Florida Technological University Charlton W. Tebeau University of Miami (Emeritus) J. Leitch Wright, Jr. Florida State University Correspondence concerning contributions, books for review, and all editorial matters should be addressed to the Editor, Florida Historical Quarterly, Box 14045, University Station, Gainesville, Florida 32604. The Quarterly is interested in articles and documents pertaining to the history of Florida. Sources, style, footnote form, original- ity of material and interpretation, clarity of thought, and interest of readers are considered. All copy, including footnotes, should be double-spaced. Footnotes should be numbered consecutively in the text and assembled at the end of the article. Particular attention should be given to following the footnote style of the Quarterly.. The author should submit an original and retain a carbon for security. The Florida Historical Society and the Editor of the Florida Historical Quarterly accept no responsibility for statements made or opinions held by authors. Table of Contents CUBAN REVOLUTIONARIES AND MONROE COUNTY RECONSTRUCTION POLITICS, 1868-1876 Gerald E. Poyo 407 THE ALACHUA TRAIL: A RECONSTRUCTION Burke G. Vanderhill 423 NOTES AND DOCUMENTS: LETTERS FROM A JOURNEY THROUGH THE FEDERAL BLOCKADE, 1861-1862 Thomas Graham 439 A NEW ENGLAND EMIGRANT AID COMPANY AGENT IN POSTWAR FLORIDA: SELECTED LETTERS OF JAMES F. B. MARSHALL, 1867 Patricia P. Clark 457 THE ISLAND OF FLORIDA Earl R. Beck and Edward F. Keuchel 478 BALLOONING IN THE SECOND SEMINOLE WAR Michael G. Schene 480 BOOK REVIEWS ------------------------------------ 483 BOOK NOTES ------------------------------------- 508 HISTORY NEWS --------------------------------- 514 DIRECTORS’ MEETING, DECEMBER 11, 1976 ---------- 525 iii BOOK REVIEWS LEMON CITY: PIONEERING ON BISCAYNE BAY, 1850-1925, by Thelma Peters reviewed by John D. Pennekamp EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY FLORIDA: LIFE ON THE FRONTIER, edited by Samuel Proctor reviewed by J. Leitch Wright, Jr. PRESENCIA HISPANICA EN LA FLORIDA, AYER Y HOY: 1513-1976, edited by José Augustín Balseire reviewed by Bruce S. Chappell PARADE OF MEMORIES: A HISTORY OF CLAY COUNTY, FLORIDA, by Arch Frederic Blakey reviewed by George E. Buker SPAIN: FORGOTTEN ALLY OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION, by Buchanan Parker Thomson reviewed by Aileen Moore Topping THE IMPACT OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION ABROAD: PAPERS PRESENTED AT THE FOURTH SYMPOSIUM, MAY 8 AND 9, 1975. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS SYMPOSIA ON THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION reviewed by Robert A. Rutland THE PRESIDENCY OF THOMAS JEFFERSON, BY FORREST MCDONALD, AND JEFFER- SON: A REVEALING BIOGRAPHY, by Page Smith reviewed by Robert M. Calhoon A SOUTHERN ODYSSEY: TRAVELERS IN THE ANTEBELLUM NORTH, by John Hope Franklin reviewed by Joe Gray Taylor THIS SPECIES OF PROPERTY: SLAVE LIFE AND CULTURE IN THE OLD SOUTH, by Leslie Howard Owens reviewed by Julia F. Smith A GEORGIAN AT PRINCETON, by Robert Manson Myers reviewed by James Rabun THE TROUBLE THEY SEEN: BLACK PEOPLE TELL THE STORY OF RECONSTRUCTION, edited by Dorothy Sterling reviewed by Peter D. Klingman FREEDMAN, PHILANTHROPY, AND FRAUD: A HISTORY OF THE FREEDMAN’S SAVINGS BANK, by Carl R. Osthaus reviewed by Joe M. Richardson APPOINTMENT AT ARMAGEDDON: MUCKRAKING AND PROGRESSIVISM IN THE AMERICAN TRADITION, by Louis Filler reviewed by Arnon Gutfeld SOUTHERN GOVERNORS AND CIVIL RIGHTS: RACIAL SEGREGATION As A CAMPAIGN ISSUE IN THE SECOND RECONSTRUCTION, by Earl Black reviewed by David R. Colburn SIMPLE JUSTICE: THE HISTORY OF BROWN v. BOARD OF EDUCATION AND BLACK AMERICA’S STRUGGLE FOR EQUALITY, by Richard Kluger reviewed by Augustus M. Burns, III CUBAN REVOLUTIONARIES AND MONROE COUNTY RECONSTRUCTION POLITICS, 1868-1876 by GERALD E. POYO* HE INTRICATE historical relationship between the United TStates and Cuba has traditionally fostered intimate contacts between segments of their populations. Florida has served as the primary stage upon which the two cultures have confronted and coexisted. Although the post-Castro immigration has domi- nated the attention of those interested in tracing Cuban contri- butions to the development of the state, it should be emphasized that the Cuban presence in Florida has been equally important during earlier periods. The first significant immigration of Cubans into Florida began in 1868 upon the outbreak of the Cuban war against Spanish dominance, and continued for the next thirty years at varying levels of intensity. Cubans initially established them- selves primarily in Key West, and later in other areas—in and around Jacksonville and in the Tampa Bay area—producing intimate political, economic, and social contacts with Floridians. In Monroe County, Cubans exerted decisive influences in political affairs, and economically they were the backbone of the community. Although in Cuban historiography several studies have examined Cubans in Key West, these have usually stressed their activities in relation to the history of their home- land. The cross-cultural aspects of the Cuban presence have received limited attention. A paucity of research relating to Cuban involvement in Florida politics, for example, has delayed recognition of their vigorous and effective participation in local and state political affairs. During the 1870s, Monroe County provided a prime example of the determination and effective- ness with which Cubans participated in the political system of * Mr. Poyo is a graduate student in Latin American history, University of Florida, Gainesville. He would like to acknowledge the assistance of Dr. George Pozzetta, University of Florida, in the preparation of this article. [407] 408 FLORIDA HISTORICAL QUARTERLY their adopted homeland. They operated in two realms: those activities related directly to the independence cause and actions connected with the political system in the United States. The two were not mutually exclusive given that the Cuban insurrec- tion became the focal point for political decision-making in the community. With the adoption of a new state constitution in 1868 and the election of its government officials, Florida again became a full-fledged member of the Union. There followed almost a decade of intense turbulence as the Democratic party, representa- tive of the traditional economic and social elite of the state, wrested political control from the Republicans. The same year that Florida rejoined the Union, across the Straits of Florida in the Spanish colony of Cuba, events of a dramatic nature un- folded that proved important not only for the inhabitants of the island, but for the political situation in Florida and particularly in Monroe County. On October 10, 1868, the Grito de Yara in Cuba signaled the initiation of what proved to be many years of struggle to achieve political independence. The first phase of the move- ment, the Ten Years’ War, plunged the island into a protracted and bloody civil war that produced an emigrant flow of Cubans to Key West. The establishment of a large Cuban community devoted to securing the independence of its homeland exerted a powerful impact on all aspects of life in Key West. Economic inducements aided the immigrant flow into Florida. A special allure was the incipient cigar industry founded by Vicente Martinez Ybor, a Spanish tobacco capitalist from Havana.1 The factories attracted Cuban workers, adding sub- stantially to the emigre population. By February 1869, a Cuban colony was thriving in Key West. Revolutionary clubs were organized to raise funds and arm men who were sent to join the expeditionary forces being formed in New York Key West became a major area of support to the revolutionary effort. According to one Cuban resident, “In Key West nothing was discussed except the revolution; 1. Willis Baer, The Economic Development of the Cigar Industry in the United States (Lancaster, Pennsylvania, 1933), 106-07. CUBAN REVOLUTIONARIES 409 each Cuban home was a conspiratorial center; people only thought about the redemption of the fatherland.“2 Immigration radically altered the demography of Monroe County in the years after the Civil War. A population of 5,657 in Key West in 1870 increased to something over 12,000 six years later. The Cuban proportion increased also, from

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