Havana Riviera* Leandro Neumann Ciuffo, CC BY 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons |
By Jane Feehan
Social and political pressure nearly shut down casino gambling
in Dade and Broward counties during the late 1940s and early 50s. Organized
crime figure Meyer Lansky ran the Colonial Inn, a posh casino in Hallandale
Beach, for three short years until the government closed it in 1948. The
high-profile Kefauver Crime Committee hearings, which arose out of concern about the growth of syndicated crime after World War II, ramped up scrutiny of illegal gambling operations in Florida and around the country. It was time for Lansky and friends to look for a more hospitable environment.
high-profile Kefauver Crime Committee hearings, which arose out of concern about the growth of syndicated crime after World War II, ramped up scrutiny of illegal gambling operations in Florida and around the country. It was time for Lansky and friends to look for a more hospitable environment.
That place was Cuba, where exiled mobster and Lansky
associate Lucky Luciano held court under the cooperative eye of Cuba dictator
Fulgencio Batista, an old Lansky friend. Gambling brought tourists, so the Batista
regime granted state loans to cover 50 percent of a hotel/casino valued at
least $1 million. Honors went to Meyer Lansky who built the lavish 19-story, 354-room
Hotel Havana Riviera along the waterfront. Seventeen other casinos were also partially financed by Batista.
Lansky had gambling interests in Las Vegas, where state law
prohibited operators of gambling concessions from simultaneously running
another casino. That included Havana, so Lansky tapped others, including businessmen Harry and Ben Smith, as owners/stockholders. A cadre of
individuals listed as operators of the Havana Riviera was surreptitiously headed
by Lansky.
Valued between $12
and $15 million, Hotel Havana Riviera was the first large hotel and casino to
be constructed since the Gran Casino Nacional
27 years prior. With gold-plated slot machines and other amenities, the hotel opened
December 10, 1957 with a floor show that included Ginger Rogers and an audience
comprised of American press, and television and Hollywood celebs. On Jan. 19, 1958 TV personality Steve Allen broadcast
(NBC) from the Riviera with transmission made possible with new technology, the
“over-the-horizon microwave system.”
It wasn’t long before the Cuban tide of fortune changed for
Lansky and his associates. A violent storm that shattered windows and flooded the
lobby of Hotel Havana Riviera on Jan. 4, 1958 foreshadowed the downturn. The
growing July 26 movement, launched by
lawyer and rebel Fidel Castro in 1953, was gaining momentum. By 1958 U.S.
support for Batista waned after his army was routed by rebels. The breakdown
of Cuba’s air force soon followed as did Castro’s repatriation from Mexico,
Jan. 1, 1959. Batista, purse heavy with state money, left quickly for the
Dominican Republic.
The casino at the Riviera, looted as others were during the coup, was
closed by Castro within days. Lansky arrived in Miami from Cuba on
Jan. 7, hopeful that the new leader would soon change his mind. He told
reporters that hotel employees were about to ask the government to reopen the
casinos to save their jobs. Lansky returned and Castro reopened casinos (only
to non-Cubans) on Jan. 18, welcoming U.S. tourists to his “beautiful land of
happy people.”
Summary trials and executions by firing squads were the
order of the day with support of many. In late January, a group of mothers
whose sons had reportedly been killed by Batista met with 300 members of the
international press in the lobby of the Riviera. Trials and executions
continued, people fled to Florida and relations with the U.S. deteriorated. In
May, Lansky’s brother Jake and colleague Dino Cellino who also worked at the
casino, were detained 25 days in the Tiscornia Emigration Station. They were
released, according to the Cubans, when they had word the two were not wanted
by the U.S. government.
Hotel Havana Riviera
lost an estimated $7 million by the time Castro seized the hotel and outlawed
all casinos in 1960. Cuba anticipated a U.S. invasion. A bomb went off at the
Hotel Havana Riviera Oct. 31, 1960, destroying a room and furnishings on the 12th
floor. The hotel was nationalized, the mob left, and gambling prospered in Las
Vegas, the real land of happy people.
Today, Havana Riviera remains a popular, if not luxurious
hotel, with rooms selling for less than $100 (in 2015). It is recommended to business travelers
and honeymooners, an odd juxtaposition of guests.
Photo of Havana Riviera:
<a title="Leandro Neumann Ciuffo, CC BY 2.0 <https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0>, via Wikimedia Commons" href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hotel_Riviera_(525406392).jpg"><img width="512" alt="Hotel Riviera (525406392)" src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/0f/Hotel_Riviera_%28525406392%29.jpg/512px-Hotel_Riviera_%28525406392%29.jpg"></a>
Copyright © 2015. All rights reserved. Jane Feehan.
Sources:
Miami News, Jul.
21, 1957
Miami News, Dec.
1, 1957
Milwaukee Sentinel,
Dec. 12, 1957
The New York Times, Jan.
4, 1958
The New York Times, Jan.
2, 1959
Ocala Star Banner,
Jan. 8, 1959
The New York Times, Jan.
18, 1959
The New York Times, Jan.
25, 1959
The New York Times,
May 31, 1959
The New York Times, Oct.
31, 1960
Iberostar