Long before the arrival of the Spanish, the westernmost tip of Cuba —today's Pinar del Río province— was inhabited by the guanahatabey (also written guanajatabey), considered one of the oldest peoples on the island. Unlike the farming Taíno who dominated the center and east, the guanahatabey were hunters, gatherers and fishermen, with a more archaic culture, who lived on the coasts, the mangroves and, above all, in the numerous caves of the region, especially on the remote Guanahacabibes Peninsula, which preserves their name.
The Spanish chronicles and archaeological studies describe them as a people who lived off the resources of the sea and the forest, without developed agriculture or elaborate pottery, which suggests they descended from very ancient waves of settlement. Their isolation in the west of the island, an infertile and hard-to-reach area, helps explain why they kept a way of life so different from that of the Taíno.
With the Spanish conquest and colonization in the 16th century, these native peoples died out rapidly, victims of disease, forced labor and violence, as happened throughout Cuba. Of them remain the place names —Guanahacabibes, Guanahatabey—, the archaeological remains found in caves and shell middens, and the memory that the Pinar del Río region was one of the last refuges of the island's oldest population.
During the first centuries of Spanish rule, western Cuba —the future Vuelta Abajo and the Pinar del Río region— was a peripheral zone, sparsely populated and far from the great colonial centers. While Havana grew as a key strategic port of the Spanish empire in the Caribbean, the western lands were devoted mostly to extensive cattle ranching, with large herds and corrals where livestock was raised, and to the exploitation of the forests.
The effective colonization of the region was slow. Small settlements and hamlets gradually formed, tied to the cattle ranches and, over time, to the crop that would end up defining its destiny: tobacco. The tobacco plant, native to America and cultivated by the indigenous peoples long before the arrival of the Europeans, found exceptional conditions in the soils of western Cuba.
The nucleus that would give rise to the city of Pinar del Río gradually took shape beside the Guamá river. According to the most widespread tradition, the city's name comes from the pine groves (pinares) that grew on the banks of that river, from which 'Pinar del Río' derived. Throughout the 17th and 18th centuries, the region gained population and activity, always with a rural profile and with tobacco as a growing economic engine, though without yet reaching the importance it would have later on.
The true prominence of Pinar del Río in the history of Cuba —and of the world— came hand in hand with tobacco. The region known as Vuelta Abajo, in the southwest of the province, turned out to have an unrepeatable combination of sandy, fertile soil, microclimate, humidity, sun and rainfall pattern that made it the best area on the planet for growing quality tobacco. To this was added the development of an artisanal know-how, passed down from generation to generation among the vegueros (tobacco growers).
From the 18th century and, above all, in the 19th, the tobacco of Vuelta Abajo established itself as the raw material of the best Havana cigars, the cigars that would make Cuba world-famous. The Pinar del Río leaf supplied the great factories of Havana and was exported to Europe, where the 'Havana' became a symbol of luxury and distinction. Tobacco growing shaped the landscape, the economy and the culture of the region: the fields, the drying houses and the figure of the veguero became part of the Pinar del Río identity.
The economic importance of tobacco drove the growth of the city of Pinar del Río, which in 1859 was officially elevated to city status. The region experienced the tensions typical of the colonial tobacco economy, marked by the Crown's monopoly, the conflicts between producers and merchants, and the weight of labor —including that of the enslaved— in the fields. But the prestige of Vuelta Abajo tobacco never stopped growing, and it remains today a world-famous appellation of origin.
Like all of Cuba, the Pinar del Río region was shaken by the wars of independence against Spain in the second half of the 19th century and at the end of that century. Although the initial focal points of the insurrection were in the east of the island, the war ended up reaching the west, and the Pinar del Río territory was the scene of military operations and of the passage of the mambí troops (the Cuban independence fighters).
During the War of Independence begun in 1895, the so-called 'invasion of the West' —the military campaign that took the independence forces from the east to the westernmost tip of the island, commanded by figures like Antonio Maceo and Máximo Gómez— reached Pinar del Río province. Maceo, the 'Bronze Titan', carried out part of his campaign in these western territories, bringing the war to the heart of the tobacco region, which had a strong symbolic and military impact by demonstrating that the insurrection could spread to the whole colony.
The war left a deep mark on the region: battles, destruction of property, reconcentration of the rural population by the Spanish authorities and a harsh impact on the tobacco economy. With the end of Spanish rule in 1898 and the birth of the Republic, Pinar del Río was integrated as one of the provinces of Cuba, keeping its rural character and its tobacco vocation, which had defined it for centuries.
During the 20th century, Pinar del Río kept its profile as an eminently rural and tobacco province, often considered one of the poorest and most neglected regions of Cuba, from which comes its affectionate nickname of 'Cinderella'. The economy continued to revolve around tobacco, agriculture and cattle ranching, while the city of Pinar del Río grew slowly as a provincial capital and service center.
After the triumph of the Cuban Revolution in 1959, the province, like the rest of the country, underwent profound transformations: the agrarian reform, the nationalization of tobacco production and the state organization of the economy. Tobacco remained a strategic export product for Cuba, and the brands of Havana cigars —made with Vuelta Abajo leaf— continued to be an international symbol of the island. Programs of education, health and infrastructure were also developed that changed the life of the rural population.
In recent decades, Pinar del Río has added to its traditional tobacco vocation a growing tourism prominence, driven above all by the spectacular Viñales Valley —declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999 as a cultural landscape— and by its natural areas, such as the Guanahacabibes Biosphere Reserve and the northern cays. Today the province combines its rural and tobacco identity with the appeal of exceptional nature, which has made it one of the most authentic destinations for anyone visiting Cuba.