Travel and tourism in Miami reached even greater
heights with the opening of Pan American Airways in Miami in 1928.
After moving operations from Key West to the airfield on Dinner Key, Juan Trippe’s
airline offered service first to Havana and eventually catered to the
rest of Latin America. The birth of commercial aviation further tightened the
connections between Miami and Latin America, and especially Cuba. Following the
Spanish-American War of 1898, there were closer connections between the Untied
States and Cuba as a result of the increasing presence of American businesses on
the island as well as the American military presence now there. Wealthy American
travelers often set sail for Cuba and made stops in Miami. In 1921 Carl Fisher proposed the creation of the Havana-American Steamship
Line that would ferry passengers between Miami and Havana, but the venture fell
apart as a result of the economic recession following World War I. The cruise
industry did eventually take off in Miami as a result of the dredging of
Government Cut that allowed for the development of Miami Harbor in 1927. Soon
the S.S. Florida began providing tourists with a “Havana Holiday” that
featured an overnight cruise from Miami to Havana.
Of course, these opportunities for travel between the two cities would spark
the largest wave of immigration to South Florida in its history following the
Cuban Revolution and the ascendancy of Fidel Castro in 1959. The influx of Cuban
migrants coincided with the rise of the Civil Rights movement in Miami, and
brought with it special challenges for confronting the history of racial
segregation and injustice in South Florida. The 1980 McDuffie riots highlighted
these challenges. The riots were sparked when an all-white jury in Tampa,
Florida acquitted four white Miami-Dade police officers in the 1979 shooting
death of black insurance agent Arthur McDuffie in Miami. Coming at the same time
as the Mariel boat lift that brought over 100,000 Cuban refugees to Miami, the
verdict and the resulting riots signaled the continuation of ethnic and racial
tension in Miami.
Yet Cubans were not the only group immigrating in record numbers to South
Florida. As a result of political and economic instability, groups such as
Haitians and Nicaraguans, and later Columbians, Venezuelans, and Brazilians,
among others, came and transformed the cultural landscape of South Florida. Now
Miami truly can be called the "gateway to the Americas," as its economy,
politics, and culture are intimately bound up with those of Latin America.
Miami’s cultural offerings reflect this cosmopolitan character. Restaurants,
theater, and arts institutions including the New World Symphony, Miami City
Ballet, and the Museum of Contemporary Art have been transformed to showcase the
influence of Latin culture on the region. Glossy magazine pieces, Hollywood
films, and fashion photography all provide images of Miami as a site of dynamic
cultural exchange, where tourists move to the pulsating beat of Latin rhythms
through the hot spots of the city. Travel and tourism, then, continue to fuel
the growth of South Florida and spark new challenges and opportunities for the
future of this tropical urban landscape. Dr. Robin Bachin
Project Director, Travel, Tourism, and Urban Growth in Greater Miami
|
Cuban family arrives in the United States
|
|