Cuba: Enjoying the Hershey Train Ride

The train at Casa Blanca, Cuba. Branson Quenzer photos
The train at Casa Blanca, Cuba. Branson Quenzer photos

The Hershey Train of Cuba: Unreliable and nearly empty, the train goes to an abandoned factory

By Branson Quenzer

Engineer peers out the train's window.
Engineer peers out the train’s window.

In Cuba, there is always a backdrop to every story. That is both in its physical infrastructure and its systems and markets too. What was one way yesterday may be just the opposite the next.

With that in mind and multiple due to people telling me that the electric train is NOT the way to go as if you might not ever get there, I was in pursuit of the legacy that was Hershey.

And what is the fun in traveling if there is not a little glitch waiting to snag you upon? Well, mine wasn’t far off and it started from the get-go.

“The electric train is very undependable,” the “schedule is erratic,” and “the old thing always breaks down,” were the most commonly mentioned drawbacks to taking the train. But this train, at least the rails, were laid before the revolution by a company that every person born within North America has grown up with, The Hershey Chocolate Company.

What would camping be without S’mores and that square-cut chocolate breaks and fits so nicely between the crunchy crackers and the gooey marshmallows?

A Private Ride

Of course, there is the option of just renting a private ride which will take you out there by road, but as the only electric train and the only one with a legacy, the journey is more important than the destination.

The engineer offered to let the author drive the train.
The engineer offered to let the author drive the train.

Hailing a rust bucket of a cab which is a mix of car pieces and parts and often even boat motors as engines I decided for the early morning train which was supposed to leave at 8:30 am.

The cabbie said the same thing as most others suggesting that I might not even reach the city of Hershey, much less make it back. With each new opinion, it seemed like this train may not even exist. We drove in the tunnel, under the Canal Entrada, which brings you onto the other side of the bay. The train sets off from Havana Casablanca.

First Glimpse of the Rails

Sputtering up on the train station you get your first glimpse of the rails, the electric lines, and the cars that are backed up ready to head out. The cabbie said you go see if it is going today. He was confident that he was going to make a couple more dollars taking me back to the proper side of the bay. With a positive outlook, I strode over to the ticket window and clicking fake fingernails tapped at the ticket counter as I approached.

I asked for the 8:30 am train and pointing to the schedule board above she said that that train no longer exists. I got up extra early in the morning to catch the first train and it was canceled. The next train was in 4 hours and that meant my visit if it all would be in the sweltering sun.

I asked the window clerk for a ticket on the next train at 12:30 and she looked at me like I was crazy. She mentioned that I could just get it when I came back, yet I had no idea how many people would be on the next train. By her expression it was not many, but what the hell did I know, and information I could get was scarce. I said see you later as she snickered thinking the crazy guy wants to ride this busted train real bad.

The Revolutionary Museum

I headed back to the Revolutionary Museum as it was the closest site that I had not checked off my list. Getting an “official” sense of another perspective of history is always enlightening both about the place you are and the place where you came from. There are so many veins in history and which ones surface more predominately than others are telling.

Hershey station, the train's final stop.
Hershey station, the train’s final stop.

In Cuba, the revolution was and to some extent still is everything. So getting a little history before riding the pre-revolutionary and corporate tracks to the old sugar mill would give me some context.

The museum is worth the visit and a bust of Abraham Lincoln is prominently displayed on the inner staircase balcony of the central hall. A soda and hot dog from a stand outside the museum was a cheap meal before getting in a Russian Lada on my way back to the train depot.

I still had some time to kill and it was getting hot, so I went to the local shop to get some water for my upcoming train ride. And despite the two men sitting in there and the other Cubans trying to grab something for their ride, they refused to sell anything.

They opened the door more than once saying, we are closed. And that was it. They lit up their cigarettes and they were closed. Well as a little warning, there is no other shop within walking distance where you can get a bottle of water or a soda in Havana Casablanca.

The hand-written schedule on the wall of the station in Cuba.
The hand-written schedule on the wall of the station in Cuba.

I ended up knocking on a few doors of houses and asked if I could just have a drink of water. They drink water from the tap, that they keep cool in the fridge. From then on out in Cuba, I drank purely tap water, and never had a problem.

It was time for the train to leave and I get all excited and find a seat facing towards the direction of travel. I sat in a car with a couple of older Cuban men, one leaning out the window finishing his cigarette.

I thought they might provide for some good photography subjects on this historical ride. I know now why the ticketing agent was shaking her head at me.

The metal seats with wooden slats for butt and backrests were not even close to full. And is that not all the seats even had backrests I don’t think it fills up very often. That could soon change with the changing political environment.

Quick Trip

The 12:30 train pulls away and then breaks, 100 meters down the track. It went twice the length of itself and that is all she had. Seats are for what you would imagine were for prison guards from the 1950s, and tickets are 1000% the cost for foreigners compared to what the Cubans pay. So it really broke my daily allowance putting a whole dollar fifty dents in my pocket.

Within a few minutes, the engineers had got the current back and the train was rolling again. A train attendant asked me to follow him to the front for better photos. I had no idea that he actually meant inside the conductor’s booth. A hefty, black and shiny bald-headed man was the train’s captain, and with both doors open on either side of him he had the coolest seat on the train.

A gregarious man and curious too, we fall into something Cubans are very good at, intellectual and stimulating conversations. He told me the train was from Barcelona. It did have the Catalan language and he said it was imported in the late ’90s.

The original was American he said, as he explained his understanding of the Hershey train and Cuban history. He had been driving the train for 15 years. We talked about politics, the USA, and its sugar company, then how Russia supported the sugar refinery. The USSR paid good prices for Cuban sugar he lamented. The train runs on 1200V and he motions “game over” if you touched the electric lines.

The skeleton of the former Hershey chocolate factory.
The skeleton of the former Hershey chocolate factory.

Tooting the Horn

Coming around a corner he toots the train’s horn. I ask if I can do that. He smiles and gets up out of his chair as we are rolling through the Cuban countryside and says, hell you can drive.

I sit in the conductor’s seat and give the train a good blasting whistle. I handed off my camera and let him snap away at me sitting proudly in his seat. Honestly, I really didn’t do much more than making the train whistle but then again I probably shouldn’t be twisting and pushing knobs and buttons on a train anyway, especially one with a rusty reputation.

The decrepit factory.
The decrepit factory.

A handshake, a friendly salute from me and it was back to my seat. At some point, while I was driving the train a nice elderly couple sat in the seats across from mine. There was more talk about the US, USSR, Cuba, and sugar.

They informed me that I could actually still walk around in the factory. The one-hour ride turned into more than two, and the older gentleman who lived still another hour passed where I was getting off pointed to some smokestacks in the distance on the hill and said, that is the factory. I had reached Hershey.

The factory was not so much a factory as a wasteland with a skeleton of steel and 1920’s machinery rusting out, bending and collapsing on itself. The gaping hole in the chain-link fence with a sign saying “peligroso” or “danger” and don’t enter had a well-worn path leading right through it and so why can’t I go too?

Nonsense sign… And after all that clanking on the train, I thought a dead factory would be eerily quiet. Yet there were wrenching sounds of metal bending and breaking. Sugar it was not making but something was going on. It was not in the “building” and behind me a worker noticed me heading through the fence. He said nothing, but I didn’t want to take chances with another foreman or security guard who might just care.

So quickly skirting through the rubble and crude oil I found a set of stairs that were busted right out and rusted through. I have seen worse and climbed worse… no sign of fire so I figured if I treaded lightly then it will hold, at least one more time. Making my way towards the noise on the second level I see steel being cut. Sparks, green gas cylinders, and men with torches were cutting through steel amidst the mess of broken concrete, metal, bricks, etc.

They were demolishing and dismantling the factory. Heavy machines would claw at the building breaking away the cement and tearing down the steal. Then it was manually cut with blowtorches.

Exploring the Factory

The factory had identical sides for its original intention of sugar production. It was horizontally symmetric. The furnaces, conveyor belts, gears, shafts, stacked 6 or 8 stories high and across stretched the length of the building.

Inside the train.
Inside the train.

Exploring and keeping careful watch of each step I got to the next to the highest level before it all became all janky ladders and just a little too sketchy to get any higher. The machines are all stamped with production labels from the US’s industrial cities one being Birmingham Alabama of all places. What each machine did I am not sure but they are currently rusting and being scrapped. All eight stories of them.

A worker with a torch cutting up the steel that was once the factory.
A worker with a torch cutting up the steel that was once the factory.

“No Pictures”

Heading out in the yard amongst the welders I see a man sitting off in the shade. As it turns out he was security and told me “no pictures.” A little late for that as I had already filled up one memory card.

But he did clue me in to what the adjacent factory remains were. It was a particleboard factory. The Hershey Co. was using the waste of the sugar cane and creating particle board with it. An environmentally sweet tooth I suppose. Except I don’t really think the concept of environmentalism was around yet. It was all about money!

What is left of the factory I had seen and it was time for some food and drink. I spotted a limping worker and tracked him down as he was headed out the back of the demolition area. He was being released because of an injury.

I asked if there was any food around and he said, of course, follow me. And what do you know the nearest watering hole was a pizza joint. The gentleman even bought me a soda despite my insistence to buy him one.

Again no bottled water and I slugged down a few glasses from tap water kept in the fridge. I ordered a pizza and enjoyed it with my soda in the shade in what once was a thriving town.

Back at the train station a there was a gentleman selling drinks and sandwiches. We started up a chat and he was born before the revolution. He also did some fighting and military service which he said was mandatory when he was young.

He spent three years in Angola, and was an electrical engineer for the military. The guy knew some cool stories about world affairs and Cuban history. And of course, because of the Russian influence, he spent the time in what is present-day Ukraine.

We both, simultaneously in Russian said, “I don’t understand Russian” and had a good laugh. He had been to the US and loved Fort Meyers FL and hated Miami. He has daughters there and goes to the US from time to time. He feels sad that his village and hometown of Hersey has gone through tough times after the factory closed. He said the younger generation must leave to find work.

Cuba is full of fascinating people, places, and stories. The pre-revolution stories, the revolutionary times and the post-revolution are all coming to a head with the next new wave of evolution.

That is the US’s new and changing relationship. Maybe an new Hersey will be built. Maybe it will remain just a legacy. Today it is a graveyard of steel and crushed cement. One thing that is for certain, the people of Hersey will find a way as they have for the past 100 years to deal with change.

Branson Quezner

 

Branson Quenzer has spent the last decade in East Asia using his background in economics to interact with his environment through a lens that sees the emergence and decay of traditions in a modernizing world. Sadly, he passed away in 2017.

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