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Rare 1950's MARTHA BATISTA Autographed Dedicated Photo!

Manufacturer: N/A
SKU: 1712
Price: $1,250.00
This item is in stock
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SquareTrade Seal Member
SquareTrade Seal Member
SquareTrade © AP6.0
Rare 1950's
MARTHA BATISTA
Autographed Dedicated Photo
to
MANUEL
for Private Collection in
Original Cuban Frame!
The Miami Herald
August 17, 2000

 Salvaged papers shed light on former Cuban dictator

 Tabloid videographer digs items from trash

 BY ANA ACLE

 Out of a trash bin, at the edge of an office and storage complex in northern Palm
 Beach County, pieces of intriguing Cuban exile history have emerged -- checks,
 letters, photographs, even a shoe, that once belonged to former Cuban dictator
 Fulgencio Batista.

 The items, which also include newspaper clippings, a land deal and pet
 vaccinations, are in the hands of paparazzo Robert ``Bob'' Calvert, he of William
 Kennedy Smith fame, and the Batista family is claiming the papers were stolen
 out of a private, rented trash bin.

 The documents' value is questionable, mostly the minutiae of daily living:
 canceled checks, faded photographs, sentimental letters. The stuff is garbage,
 say the relatives of the former dictator, who say they have the historically
 significant documents locked away to be donated at a later date.

 Still, the dozens of boxes filled with items -- enough to fill a large trash bin --
 provide a glimpse into Batista's luxurious life in exile.

 Consider a Waldorf Astoria hotel receipt, $250 a night for two weeks in 1964;
 proof of vaccinations for two poodles traveling to Switzerland; a 1956 memo
 outlining a $20.16 million land deal with the East Havana Bay Land Co.
 Anonymous Society; a Jan. 5, 1972, Pan American Bank of Miami statement
 listing $28,000 in deposits and a Portugal address; and a list of cash-gift
 recipients on Christmas Eve 1968 that included customs agents, journalists,
 bodyguards and servants in Spain.

 ``I can visualize this like a movie,'' said Uva de Aragon, assistant director of the
 Cuban Research Institute at Florida International University. ``Who would be the
 guy doing this for Batista, who would put the money in envelopes, Batista giving it
 to his children on Christmas Eve.''

 Some Miami Cuban exiles believe Batista -- as many of his predecessors -- fled
 the island with a sizable loot, possibly millions of dollars, from the government.
 Batista's escape gave way to Fidel Castro's takeover in 1959. If Batista indeed
 took any money, he took the secret to his grave in 1973.

 ``Immediately, my image is what was the situation in Cuba when this deposed
 dictator was paying whatever money to take his poodles to Switzerland,'' de
 Aragon said. ``I find it interesting. It's a sense of history and all the things related
 to historical figures are interesting, especially if they involve money.''

 The revelation of the documents is stirring a controversy among Batista family
 members, who claim Calvert invaded their privacy. Calvert said he merely sifted
 through garbage -- nothing illegal.

 ``The family is not throwing away my father's [important] papers,'' said Batista's
 oldest son, Fulgencio Rubén Batista, 66, of Coral Gables. ``Those will one day go
 to an institution and they are well guarded and well protected.

 ``Apparently, the family sent someone to clean the warehouse and inadvertently,
 they threw out documents and photos with old newspapers, stuff that's not
 important and valueless,'' Rubén Batista said. Still, he's not happy they fell into
 the hands of a stranger.

 Shown several copies of the documents, the son said he recognized his father's
 signature on a check, and the bank statement bears his father's name. A few
 letters are addressed to his father and widow Martha Batista, who now lives in a
 7,700-square-foot home in Palm Beach. Records show the Palm Beach County
 warehouse, bought in 1979, belongs to Martha Batista, and trustee Rafael
 Saladrigas.

 Calvert, 51, of Indiantown, is a freelance videographer for television tabloids. He
 says he also works part time for Pretext Investigations doing surveillance
 photography and investigative work on celebrities in Palm Beach County.

 Some would call Calvert a paparazzo. Patricia Bowman, who accused William
 Kennedy Smith of raping her at the Kennedy Mansion in Palm Beach, said
 Calvert stalked her after the 1993 trial and she obtained a court order to keep him
 away.

 Calvert's picture-snapping has placed him at odds with the law before. He has
 been arrested in Florida for trespassing (like at the Kennedy Mansion), unlawful
 eavesdropping, possession of stolen property, impersonating a police officer and
 burglary. Most charges were dropped.

 Calvert recognized photos of Batista and salvaged them, believing they would be
 valuable. The private investigations office where he works is next to the Batistas'
 storage unit. He saw the trash being thrown away in May, dove in the Dumpster
 and recovered stuff that included an X-ray of Batista's foot, a shoe and some rugs.

 ``I knew the Batistas had a unit next door, but I hardly ever saw them,'' Calvert
 said. ``Then on the week of May 12, they brought a gondola and started throwing
 things out.''

 Calvert says he was smoking a cigarette when an office-complex employee pulled
 out a photo of Batista and asked: ``Hey, you know this guy?''

 ``Yeah, that's Batista,'' Calvert replied.

 ``Who is that guy?'' the worker asked.

 ``You never heard of Fulgencio Batista?'' Calvert said.

 Col. Batista took power in Cuba in 1935 when he lead a revolt against then
 President Carlos Manuel de Céspedes. In 1940, he was elected president for four
 years. In 1952, he staged a coup d'etat against President Carlos Prío and ruled
 the island with a heavy hand for the next seven years.

 With support dwindling, he fled Cuba on New Year's Eve 1959 and an emerging
 leader, Castro, seized control.

 Batista's memorabilia provide a look back at those times.

 Among the documents Calvert recovered was a two-inch thick notebook filled with
 political cartoons of Castro, dating as far back as 1962, and copies of Miami's
 Réplica Spanish newspaper, with the motto ``The paper of the Cuban truth.'' A
 Sept. 24, 1964, headline reads: Franco supports Castro.

 One letter mentioned the names of Batista allies who Castro allegedly ordered
 executed.

 Another was an endearing 1961 love letter from Batista to his wife, Martha --
 showing the softer side of the man whose tenure was marked by the bloody
 repression of opponents. In it, he writes to Martha, ``Don't forget that I live only for
 you and [the children],'' he wrote, mentioning her ``adorable hands'' and ``once
 contagious happiness.''

 Calvert said he may sell some of the things he found, donate others and keep
 some of the newspapers as souvenirs. ``I'm a newsman at heart,'' he said.

 Herald researcher Elisabeth Donovan contributed to this report.


http://www.palmbeachpost.com/pbccentral/content/local_news/epaper/2006/10/07/1007batista.html

Martha Batista was reminder of an 'elegant' Cuba

By John Lantigua

Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

Saturday, October 07, 2006

WEST PALM BEACH — For the funeral of Martha Fernandez Miranda de Batista mourners
came not just from far away but from long ago in another Cuba.

The widow of former Cuban dictator Fulgencio Batista died Monday in West Palm Beach.
Saturday family, friends and admirers out of the gloried past said goodbye to her
first at a viewing and then a funeral mass at St. Juliana Catholic Church. Burial
will be in Madrid, where her late husband is interred.

Among the mourners were descendants of Cuban sugar plantation owners, politicians
and military men of pre-Castro Cuba, and, as one Cuban exile put it, "some
regular Cubans too." Starting in 1952, Jorge Gavira, now 71, worked as the
receptionist and telephone operator on the third floor of the Cuban presidential
palace where the Batista family lived. He said the surroundings were "elegant."
"I announced quite a few famous people who arrived there to see them,"
recalls Gavira. "I remember announcing Vice President Richard Nixon when he
came in 1954 or '55." But Gavira didn't care to be an operator, he
wanted to sing opera.

"Mrs. Batista gave me a grant so I could go study in Italy," says Gavira,
who now lives in the U.S. "She changed my life." He sang professionally
for 30 years.

Macusa Saladrigas was related by marriage to Batista's vice president, Carlos
Saladrigas.

"We were in and out of that palace almost every day," she said. "It
was a majestic place, and she was a beautiful and elegant first lady." Many
of the mourners testified to Mrs. Batista's charitable works during her husband's
time in power, especially her efforts to establish hospitals and rural schools.
Jose Lopez Melis, 68, knew Mrs. Batista from the Cuban beach resort of Varadero,
where she and the president had a home.

"There was a hurricane one year, and I remember her in hip boots in the water
handing out food," he said.

Her tenure as first lady ended on New Year's night 1959 when her husband resigned
just hours before rebels led by Fidel Castro marched into Havana and took over.

Batista filled three planes with his family and close collaborators and flew into
exile forever.

"Three planes took off after midnight on New Year's morning," says
Ruben Batista, son of Batista from a first marriage, who was among the mourners."
Ours left at about 2:40 a.m." Mrs. Batista ended up living in exile with her
husband and children, largely in Madrid during the time of Spanish dictator Francisco
Franco, and at another home on the scenic Estoril Coast of Portugal. Critics and
the Castro government accused her husband of having absconded with as much as $700
million in art and money.

Florida Supreme Court Justice Raul Cantero, a grandson of General Batista from his
first marriage, recalled visiting them and how kind his "step-grandmother"
was to him.

"She always made sure she found friends for me to play with," says Cantero.

He says his grandfather never spoke to him about his political past.

"I was about 12 when he died," says Cantero. "When we were together
we played pingpong and practiced golf putting." General Batista died in 1973
and Mrs. Batista moved to Palm Beach. She involved herself in South Florida charitable
causes, but otherwise kept a low profile.

Among the mourners Saturday was Manolo Torrente, famed Cuban singer and entertainer,
who declared himself an "admirer of the Batistas ever since the 1950s."
"Cuba was the most wonderful place in the world during those years," says
Torrente, 81, who after going into exile worked for many years in Las Vegas. "I
performed at El Hotel Nacional in Havana and that was the Vegas of Cuba. Batista
made all that possible. Someday I'll go back there and sing again." Reporter
Mirta Luaces of La Palma contributed to this story.
Images copied from eBay: bccb_12_1481_2.JPG, bd32_12_1481_3.JPG, bfa1_12_1481_4.JPG

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