In January 1869, the inhabitants of Bayamo made a decision that very few cities in the world have dared to make: rather than hand their city over to the Spanish troops coming to reconquer it, they set it on fire with their own hands. That night, one of the oldest towns in Cuba burned to the ground by the will of its own people. To understand such a gesture, one must go back three and a half centuries, to the birth of the city. Bayamo was founded by the adelantado Diego Velázquez de Cuéllar around 1513, under the name San Salvador de Bayamo, as the second of the first towns the Spanish established on the island (after Nuestra Señora de la Asunción de Baracoa). It was built inland, on a fertile plain in the east, on the banks of the Bayamo river, in a region inhabited by native peoples.
The name 'Bayamo' is of indigenous origin (Taíno or from the languages of the peoples who inhabited the area); some sources associate it with the name of a local cacique. That pre-Hispanic root connects the city with the inhabitants who populated the region before the conquest, devoted to agriculture, hunting and fishing in the Cauto valley.
From its earliest days, Bayamo established itself as a center of cattle ranching and agriculture in the fertile Cauto valley, Cuba's largest river system. Its inland location, far from the great ports but connected to the sea by the river and the nearby coast, would shape its development and its character over the centuries.
During the colonial centuries, Bayamo prospered as one of the most important centers of eastern Cuba. Its economy was based on cattle ranching, the agriculture of the Cauto valley and active trade. The city, located inland but connected to the sea through the Bayamo river and the nearby coast, also developed a notable smuggling activity, which allowed it to trade outside Spain's rigid monopoly with ships of other nations.
That trade —legal and illegal— made Bayamo a prosperous and relatively autonomous town, with a well-off creole society that over time would develop a strong sense of its own identity. The ranching and agricultural wealth, added to the independent character of its inhabitants, gradually created the breeding ground for what would later manifest itself on the political plane.
Throughout the colonial period, Bayamo was also the scene of tensions, slave rebellions and conflicts, and it always kept the character of a proud, unruly city in the face of central power. That spirit would prove decisive in the 19th century, when Bayamo became one of the epicenters of the fight for Cuba's independence.
The moment that changed the history of Bayamo —and of Cuba— came on October 10, 1868. That day, the Bayaman landowner Carlos Manuel de Céspedes, at his La Demajagua sugar mill (near Manzanillo), freed his slaves, called on them to join the fight and proclaimed the start of the war for Cuba's independence from Spanish rule. This act, known as the 'Grito de Yara' or 'Grito de La Demajagua', began the Ten Years' War (1868-1878), the first great Cuban independence conflict.
A few days later, the insurgent forces took the city of Bayamo, which became one of the first liberated territories and the symbolic capital of the revolution. Céspedes, recognized as the 'Father of the Homeland', embodied the ideal of a free Cuba and of the abolition of slavery, two causes that intertwined in the struggle.
The capture of Bayamo by the independence fighters was an event of enormous symbolic value: for the first time, an important city was in Cuban hands, under a banner of freedom. In that atmosphere of patriotic exaltation, another of the nation's great symbols was born: the anthem that would soon resound in its church.
In the climate of patriotic fervor that followed the taking of Bayamo, one of the supreme symbols of the Cuban nation was born: its anthem. Perucho Figueredo (Pedro Felipe Figueredo), a Bayaman patriot, had composed a march that would become known as 'La Bayamesa' or 'Himno de Bayamo'. Its lyrics, with the famous verse 'To battle, run, Bayamans, / for the homeland watches you proudly...', were sung for the first time before a crowd in Bayamo's Iglesia Mayor. That song became Cuba's National Anthem.
But the glory was brief. In January 1869, Spanish troops advanced to reconquer the city. Faced with the impossibility of defending it and rather than see it fall again into colonial hands, the inhabitants of Bayamo themselves made a heroic and tragic decision: they burned their city. The fire destroyed much of Bayamo's colonial architecture, which was left in ruins. That gesture, which preferred destruction to surrender, sealed forever the city's patriotic fame.
The fire explains why today Bayamo preserves few original colonial remains: much of what you see is later reconstruction. Among the few treasures that survived the flames is the Chapel of La Dolorosa, in the Iglesia Mayor, with its valuable baroque altarpiece. Because of the anthem and the fire, Bayamo was consecrated as the cradle of Cuban nationhood.
After the fire of 1869 and the end of the wars of independence, Bayamo was rebuilt little by little, keeping its layout and recovering its role as a center of eastern Cuba. The city always kept the pride of its history alive, becoming a kind of sanctuary of Cuban patriotic memory: here are the birthplace of Céspedes, Plaza del Himno and the places tied to the birth of the nation.
With the political reorganization of Cuba, Bayamo became the capital of Granma province (a name that recalls the yacht 'Granma' on which Fidel Castro and his companions landed in 1956 to begin the revolutionary struggle, on the coast of this very province). Thus, Granma and its capital hold key chapters of both the 19th-century independence and the 20th-century Revolution.
Today Bayamo is a quiet and proud city, known for its horse-drawn carriages, its clean tree-lined streets, its 'Bayamo Saturdays' (the weekly folk festival) and its strong cultural identity. It combines the weight of its history with an unhurried, friendly life, and it serves as the gateway to the deep east: the Sierra Maestra, Pico Turquino, the Granma coast and Desembarco del Granma National Park. To visit Bayamo is, to a large extent, to visit the place where the very idea of Cuba began to be forged.