
Contents
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The Growth of Sugar in Havana: Geographic Expansion The Growth of Sugar in Havana: Geographic Expansion
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Mills in Havana and Matanzas between 1772 and 1815 Mills in Havana and Matanzas between 1772 and 1815
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The Traditional System of Cultivation The Traditional System of Cultivation
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Wood in the Ingenios Wood in the Ingenios
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Fuel: Forests into Firewood Fuel: Forests into Firewood
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Shipbuilding and the Royal Forest Reserves Shipbuilding and the Royal Forest Reserves
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Conflicts over the Granting of Woodcutting Licenses, 1772–1783 Conflicts over the Granting of Woodcutting Licenses, 1772–1783
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Control of the Dismantlement Process by the Navy, 1784–1791 Control of the Dismantlement Process by the Navy, 1784–1791
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2 Shipbuilding and the Sugar Industry, 1772–1791
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Published:March 2008
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Abstract
This chapter focuses on Cuba's shipbuilding and sugar industry in the period between 1772 and 1791. It begins by looking at the sugar boom in Havana after Spain reformed its colonial system following the signing of a peace treaty with Britain in 1763, as well as the geographic expansion necessary to accommodate this growth. Attention then turns to the construction of sugar mills in Havana and Matanzas between 1772 and 1815, the method of cultivation that had been practiced on the island since the beginning of the sugar industry, and the use of woods in the ingenios. The chapter also describes the growth of Havana shipbuilding that had begun in the 1730s and the role of the Royal Forest Reserves in the exploitation of forests to supply lumber to shipyards. Finally, it considers the conflict between the Navy Command and the Captaincy General over the granting of woodcutting licenses in 1772–1783 and over the dismantlement of wooded estates in 1784–1791.
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