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  2. Little Havana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Havana

    Little Havana (Spanish: Pequeña Habana) is a neighborhood of Miami, Florida, United States. Home to many Cuban exiles, as well as many immigrants from Central and South America, Little Havana is named after Havana, the capital and largest city in Cuba. Little Havana is noted as a center of social, cultural, and political activity in Miami.

  3. Versailles (restaurant) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Versailles_(restaurant)

    Versailles is a popular place for Cuban food and social gathering in Miami, serving "cafecito", "cortadito", Cuban pastries (beef or guava), and "croquetas" at a walk-up window. [ 3 ] In its main dining room, the restaurant also serves dishes including Moros, palomilla steaks (Cuban minute steak ), maduros , tasajo, croquetas de yuca, tamal en ...

  4. List of cities in Cuba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cities_in_Cuba

    Map of Cuba Havana, Capital of Cuba Santiago de Cuba Camagüey Holguín Santa Clara Guantánamo. This is a list of cities in Cuba with at least 20,000 inhabitants, listed in descending order. Population data refers to city proper and not to the whole municipality, because they include large rural areas with several villages.

  5. Paseo del Prado, Havana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paseo_del_Prado,_Havana

    Paseo del Prado is a street and promenade in Havana, Cuba, near the location of the old city wall, and the division between Centro Habana and Old Havana.Technically, the Paseo del Prado includes the entire length of Paseo Martí approximately from the Malecon to Calle Máximo Gómez, [a] the Fuente de la India fountain.

  6. Havana Biltmore Yacht and Country Club - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Havana_Biltmore_Yacht_and...

    Following the winter of 1957, Miami-based company Polevitzky, Johnson and Associates was commissioned to redesign the original 1920s-era structure but the Cuban Revolution prevented it from ever being constructed. [6] Due to errors in the land's original title, the Biltmore was confiscated on March 19, 1960, in the wake of the Cuban Revolution.

  7. Belen Jesuit Preparatory School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belen_Jesuit_Preparatory...

    The building no longer exists and is now downtown Miami's Gesu Church's parking lot. In 1962, a new building was acquired and the school moved to the new site on the corner of SW 8th Street and 7th Avenue. Since 1981, Belen Jesuit sits on a 33-acre site in western Miami-Dade County.

  8. Havana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Havana

    Ballet Nacional de Cuba performing at the Gran Teatro de La Habana Facing Havana's Central Park is the baroque Gran Teatro de La Habana , a prominent theater built in 1837. [ 125 ] It is now home of the National Ballet of Cuba and the International Ballet Festival of Havana , one of the oldest in the New World.

  9. National Railway Company of Cuba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Railway_Company...

    Cuba's railway history began on October 12, 1834, when the Queen Regent of Spain, Maria Christina of the Two Sicilies, approved the building of the first line. When the Compañía de Caminos de Hierro de la Habana opened the 27.5 kilometers (17.1 mi) line from Havana to Bejucal on November 19, 1837, the first steam railway line in Latin America.