Caribbean Sea Migration

Materials related to Cuban, Dominican and Haitian maritime migration from 1965-1996, including camps at the U.S. Naval Station, Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, 1991-1996. More »

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U.S. Coast Guard photographs of Haitians at sea, 1981 csmep03156
View the highlight item: Attention! Attention! Is Anybody Listening?...
Attention! Attention! Is Anybody Listening?... csmep02113
View the highlight item: Sa K'pase, edition 27, 1992 February 13
Sa K'pase, edition 27, 1992 February 13 csmep02060
View the highlight item: Small Haitian boys are given a medical exam...
Small Haitian boys are given a medical exam... csmep03164
View the highlight item: El Bravo, edition 1, 1995 October 2
El Bravo, edition 1, 1995 October 2 csmep02026

About the Digital Collection »

Between 1982 and 2012, the United States Coast Guard interdicted 222,315 persons on the Caribbean Sea or the adjacent Florida Straits and Mona Passage. This number includes 69,355 Cubans; 36,536 Dominicans and 116,424 Haitians. Tens of thousands more reached Florida or Puerto Rico without being intercepted. Add to that the tens of thousands who died en route.

Since the early 1960s these sea farers have been setting out in a slow trickle that sometimes becomes a surging wave when political conditions in their home countries grow violent or unusually unstable. They travel in boats that are dangerously overloaded, poorly equipped and unfit for travel on the high seas.

When large numbers of Cubans were permitted by their government to set out in 1965 and 1980, they were brought directly to the United States. Following that, in the 1990s, tens of thousands of Haitians and Cubans were detained in three separate incidents at the United States Naval Station, Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.

The Caribbean Sea Migration Collection documents the history of these mariners. The David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library wishes to thank the individuals who have donated materials to the Collection including Holly Ackerman, Stephen Brown, Dr. Elizabeth Campisi, Siro del Castillo, Guarioné Díaz, Mariela Ferrer Jewett, and Lourdes Zayas-Bazán.

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