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Exterior of El Centro Español de Tampa today.
Courtesy of the Florida Division of Historical Resources
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El Centro Español de Tampa, a National Historic Landmark,
is an exemplary Spanish ethnic and cultural club building located
in the Gold Coast States. This area of the country was the main
focus of immigration from Spain in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries. The clubhouse dramatically illustrates the role of ethnic,
social and mutual assistance organizations in the daily life of
immigrant populations during that time period. Today it is one of
only a few building to survive nationwide that represent this phase
of Spanish immigration to America.
In 1891, Spanish settlers in Tampa's rapidly growing cigar manufacturing
center organized the community's first social and mutual aid society,
El Centro Español. It was the first ethnic club established
in Ybor City, Tampa's "Latin Quarter" and is a jewel among all
the extraordinary clubs that were built there. (The Ybor City
Historic District is also a National Historic Landmark, and is
the subject of a Teaching With Historic Places Lesson
Plan). Tampa had no existing philanthropic or charitable institutions
at the beginning of this immigration wave and, in comparison to
other communities, religious institutions played a relatively
modest role there. El Centro Español was founded by the
Spanish elite who dominated Ybor City, to preserve their identity,
provide recreational opportunities and to offer low-cost health
care for the many single men and the increasing number of families
settling in the area. The club's Sanatorio, completed in 1906,
was probably the most modern and complete hospital in Florida
at the time. The club also welcomed Cuban-born immigrants who
were loyal to Spain, in contrast to those that supported revolution
there (Cuba was a Spanish territory until 1898).
"El Gran Teatro Español," part of the international
itinerary for Spanish-speaking artists and visiting dignitaries
to Tampa.
Photograph from the National Register collection
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Attesting to the society's strength, within 20 years it was able
to replace its original two-story wooden building, with a massive
brick and stone-trimmed clubhouse. Finished in 1912, El Centro
Español is an impressive example of Spanish, Moorish and
French Renaissance-influenced architecture. Inside, the club contains
a central lobby, flanked by a theater and cantina, and a ballroom
on the second floor. The lobby is decorated with hexagonal tile
floors, glazed tile wainscoting, and a marble staircase. The same
floor and wainscoting appear in the cantina, richly embellished
with a pressed metal ceiling and Tuscan colonnades that divided
the room into three sections. "El Gran Teatro Español,"
with seating for several hundred, quickly became part of the international
itinerary for Spanish-speaking artists and visiting dignitaries.
The original oak parquet floors and musicians gallery still remain
in the ballroom.
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Ballroom of El Centro Español de Tampa, with
the original oak parquet floors and musicians gallery.
Photograph from the National Register collection |
El Centro Español thrived between World War I and the
Great Depression, but began to decline slowly thereafter--the
result of numerous social and cultural changes including Prohibition,
the decline of the cigar industry, the acculturation of young
men from the community that served in the Armed Forces during
World War II, immigration restrictions, the shift to government-provided
social welfare programs such as Social Security, and 1960s redevelopment
of the Ybor City area. Sold in 1983, the building today is privately
owned.
El Centro Español
de Tampa | Casa Amadeo | Briones
House | Rodriguez Sculptures
Tumacacori NHP | Hispanic
Heritage Home | NR HOME
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