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El Cobre, Cuba

El Cobre
Monument to the cimarrón
Monument to the cimarrón
El Cobre is located in Cuba
El Cobre
El Cobre
Location in Cuba
Coordinates: 20°02′53″N 75°56′42″W / 20.048°N 75.945°W / 20.048; -75.945Coordinates: 20°02′53″N 75°56′42″W / 20.048°N 75.945°W / 20.048; -75.945
Country Cuba
Province Santiago de Cuba

El Cobre is a town in Cuba, until recently the site of a large copper mine worked by slaves, free coloured people, and for a while by miners from Cornwall. The town is now known mainly for a basilica in honour of the patron saint of Cuba.

The town of El Cobre grew up around the Cobre mine, the first open pit copper mine in Cuba. It is about 12 miles (19 km) north west of Santiago Bay in the Sierra Maestra mountains. Copper was first mined there in 1532. The Spanish crown confiscated the mines in 1670 after the private contractor had failed to comply with the terms of his contract and had neglected them for years. 270 private slaves became the property of the king, and the town of El Cobre became a pueblo of king's slaves and free coloured people, a unique type of settlement in Cuba. By 1730 El Cobre was one of just fourteen officially recognised settlements on Cuba, of which two or possibly three were Indian corporate pueblos.

In 1780 an attempt was made to return the mine to private hands and increase production. By that time El Cobre had 1,320 inhabitants, including 64% royal slaves and 34% free coloured people, mostly manumitted descendents of slaves. 2% were the private slaves of the free coloured people. The men were mostly engaged in subsistence agriculture, while mining was mainly undertaken by the women. For much of this period the Cobre mine was the only source of copper on the island, supplying Cuba and sometimes other places in the Caribbean.

The first great uprising of cimarrones, or escaped slaves, occurred in Cuba in the 18th century, and is commemorated by a large sculpture on a hill beside the town. The 6 metres (20 ft) Monumento al Cimarrón was designed by Alberto Lescay Merencio and completed in 1997 as part of the UNESCO initiative to make people more aware of slavery. The inconspicuous location on a hill above the mine, was chosen by a local babalao, or Santería spirit guide.

The mine had been abandoned by 1830. The British El Compañía Consolidada de Minas del Cobre (Cobre Mining Company) acquired the mine and reopened it in the early 1830s. An adjacent concession was acquired and opened by the British El Real de Santiago (Royal Santiago Mining Company). Both companies turned to Cornwall for skilled labour and for steam engines to pump out the mines. A Protestant burial ground was opened since the Cornish, considered heretics, could not be buried in the Catholic cemetery.


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