Fidel Castro Threatens to Sleep in Central Park in Outrage Over Hotel Prices During 1960 Visit

November 28, 2016

Castro at the U.N.  General Assembly

Just four months after Cuban President Fidel Castro led a successful revolution to overthrow Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista in 1959, he visited New York City for 11 days on an invitation from the American Society of Newspaper Editors. With his signature green army uniform and boots, bushy beard, and exuberant nature, Castro reportedly hired a PR firm (though it seems he hardly needed to), enjoyed the city’s famous hot dogs, and “kissed ladies like a rock star, and held babies like a politician,” according to Mashable. During a tour of the Bronx Zoo, which he called “the best thing New York City has,” Mr. Castro is said to have jumped a railing and stuck his hand into a cage to pet a Bengal tiger.

Fidel Castro, Cuba, Hotel Theresa, Sherburne Hotel, History, Cuba
Fidel Castro and Malcolm X at the Hotel Theresa. Photo via imgur

And like many visitors, he balked at hotel prices, at one point threatening to “go any place, even Central Park,” rather than pay the $10,000 deposit the Shelburne Hotel in Midtown reportedly demanded of Castro and his entourage, who they claimed were plucking chickens in their rooms and otherwise behaving as rockstar entourages do. “We are mountain people,” he told reporters. “We are used to sleeping in the open air.”

He eventually decamped to the Hotel Theresa in Harlem, which at the time also served as a meeting place for the city’s African American politicians. Castro said he felt at home among Harlem’s majority black population, and upon his arrival at the hotel, spent an evening giving exclusive interviews to African American newspapers and hosting activist Malcolm X in his suite. In addition to his scheduled visit to the U.N., Castro entertained poet Langston Hughes and Beat writer Allen Ginsberg in his rooms at the Theresa as well. The hotel is now an office building known as Theresa Towers, and a New York City landmark (PDF).

[Via NYTimes]

Editor’s Note: This article was orginally published on March 22, 2016

RELATED:

Explore NYC Virtually

Leave a reply

Your email address will not be published.

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *