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Bacardi Bat in the Bacardi Building in Cataño, Puerto Rico. Bacardi drinks are not easily found in Cuba today. The main brand of rum in Cuba is Havana Club, produced by a company that was confiscated and nationalized by the government following the revolution. Bacardi later bought the brand from the original owners, the Arechabala family.
The Bacardi Building (Edificio Bacardí) is an Art Deco Havana landmark designed by the architects Esteban Rodríguez-Castells and Rafael Fernández Ruenes and completed in 1930. It is located on the corner of Calles Monserrate and San Juan de Dios on a 1,320 m 2 (14,200 sq ft) lot in Las Murallas, Old Havana .
Emilio Bacardi (son), Lucia 'Amalia' Victoria Moreau (wife) Church of Saint Bartholomew and Saint Thecla (Sitges), where Facundo Bacardí was baptised on October 14, 1813. Don Facundo Bacardí Masó ( Catalan : Facund Bacardí i Massó , IPA: [fəˈkund bəkəɾˈðij məˈso] ; 13 October 1813 – 9 May 1886) was a Spanish businessman who, in ...
Entrance to Lubee Bat Conservancy. Lubee Bat Conservancy is a nonprofit organization in Gainesville, Florida. [1] The organization was founded in 1989 by Luis F. Bacardi as a center for the research, conservation, and breeding of endangered animals; it later narrowed its focus solely to bats, particularly megabats.
Instead of trying to make his stamp at all costs, Bacardi's new unlikely leader Troy Arquiza welcomes feedback from his retired boss. This engineer went from ‘gung-ho’ graduate to Bacardi’s ...
A bust of its founder, Facundo Bacardi Masso was unveiled. [7] Then Governor Luis Fortuño also declared a new holiday called Bacardi Day, to be celebrated on February 4, in honor of the company's important ties to Puerto Rico and its economy. [4] The Bacardi complex is the second most visited tourist attraction in Puerto Rico. [4]
Donald Trump Jr., the eldest son of U.S. President Donald Trump, broke Italian and European Union environmental protection laws when he hunted ducks near Venice in December, according to two ...
José Maria Bosch Lamarque (Pepín Bosh) was a Cuban exile and the chief executive and president of Bacardi for 32 years. [1] He is credited for saving the Bacardi company from bankruptcy and closure several times in his tenure, and oversaw its rum empire during the most tumultuous moments in the company's history, including the Great Depression and the Cuban Revolution. [1]