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CIENFUEGOS (originally FERNANDINA DE ...

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Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 364 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CIENFUEGOS (originally
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FERNANDINA DE JAGUA)
  , one of the
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principal cities of Cuba, in
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Santa Clara province, near the central portion of the S. coast, 195 m . E.S.E. of Havana . Pop . (1907) 30,100 . Cienfuegos is served by the
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United
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railways and by steamers connecting with Santiago, Bataban6,
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Trinidad and the Isle of Pines . It lies about 6 m. from the sea on a peninsula in the magnificent landlocked
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bay of Jagua . Vessels
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drawing 16 ft. have
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direct access to the wharves . A circular railway about the
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water-front, wharves and warehouses facilitates the loading and unloading of vessels . The city streets are broad and regularly laid out . There is a handsome
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cathedral; and the Tomas Terry theatre (given to the city by the heirs of one of the millionaire
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sugar planters of the jurisdiction), the governor's house (1841–1844), the military and government hospitals, market place and railway station are worthy of note . In the Cathedral Square (Plaza de Armas), embracing two citysq'lares, and shaded—like all the plazas of the island—with laurels and royal palms, are a statue of
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Isabel the Catholic, and two marble lions given by Queen Isabel II.; elsewhere there ay e statues of General Clouet and Marshal Serrano, once captain-general . The city is lighted by
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gas and
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electricity, has anabundant water-supply, and cable connexion with
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Europe, the United States, other
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Antilles and South
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America .

The surrounding

country is one of the prettiest and most fertile regions in Cuba, varied with woods, rivers, rocky gulches, beautiful cascades and charming tropic vegetation . Several of the largest and finest sugar estates in the
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world are situated in the vicinity, including the Soledad (with a botanical experiment station maintained by Harvard University), the Terry and others—most of them connected with the city by good drive-ways . Cienfuegos is a centre of the sugar trade on the south coast;
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tobacco too is exported . The bay of Jagua was visited by Columbus . The city was founded in 1819, with the aid of the
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Spanish government, by a Louisianian, General Luis de Clouet; it was destroyed by a
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hurricane and was rebuilt in 1825 . Many naturalized
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foreign Catholics, including Americans, were among the
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original settlers . The settlement was first named in honour of Ferdinand VII., and later in honour of Captain-General Jose Cienfuegos Jovellanos . The harbour was known from the earliest times, and has been declared by Mahan to be the most important of the Caribbean Sea for strategic purposes . In 1740–1745 a fortification called Nuestra Senora de los Angeles was erected at the entrance; it is still
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standing, on a steep bluff overlooking the sea, and is one of the most picturesque of the old fortifications of the island . On the 11th of May 1898 a force from two vessels of the United States
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fleet under
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Admiral Schley, searching for Cervera and blockading the
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port, cut two of the three cables here (at Point
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Colorado, at the entrance of the harbour), and for the first time in the Spanish-
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American War the American troops were under fire .

End of Article: CIENFUEGOS (originally FERNANDINA DE JAGUA)
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wonderful place I love Cienfuegos.
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