Monthly Archives: January 2024

Insights for U.S. Law Professors in the History of Cuba

Ada Ferrer, Cuba: An American History (2021).

On the day in 1853 when Franklin Pierce was inaugurated as president of the United States, his vice president, William Rufus King, took the oath of office remotely—from his sugar plantation in Cuba, where he was dying of tuberculosis. An Alabama cotton planter, King also owned an estate on the island and was resting there in the hopes (which proved futile) that the tropical air might cure him. As Ada Ferrer writes when recounting this anecdote in her awe-inspiring, Pulitzer Prize-winning work, Cuba: An American History: “The story of the inauguration of an American vice president in Cuba is unexpected” (P. 109).

I’ll say! As the holder of an advanced degree in U.S. history, I would like to think I know a little bit about the twists and turns of American designs on Cuba, but I must admit I did not know this story. As Ferrer goes on to explain, “the spectacle of an Alabama slaveholder taking office as vice president of the United States in the heart of Cuban sugar country” is not merely a fun piece of historical trivia but exemplifies just how intertwined the island and its northern neighbor have always been throughout their respective histories, initially through the economic system of slavery and also through the persistent dreams of prominent Americans that the United States might one day annex Cuba as a territory (Pp. 109-10). Continue reading "Insights for U.S. Law Professors in the History of Cuba"