Former names |
|
---|---|
Address | 2004 N 16th Street |
Location | Tampa, Florida, 33605 U.S. |
Coordinates | 27°57′43″N82°26′31″W / 27.961914°N 82.441902°W |
Type | Nightclub |
Genre(s) | Goth, industrial |
Construction | |
Built | 1930 |
Opened | September 1930 (as a clubhouse) |
Renovated | 1990s (as a bar and nightclub) |
Website | |
castleybor | |
Coordinates | 27°57′43″N82°26′31″W / 27.961914°N 82.441902°W |
NRHP reference No. | 74000641 [1] |
Added to NRHP | August 28, 1974 |
The Castle is a nightclub in Ybor City, Tampa, Florida, United States, associated largely with the goth subculture. [2] Located in the Ybor City Historic District, the building previously served as the second site of the Cooperative El Primero Progresso (officially the Agrupacion Benefica y Cultural del Centro Obrero), [3] or the Labor Temple, a place for Ybor City's cigar and restaurant workers to engage in union activities and organization. [2]
The Castle building was originally constructed in 1930 as a clubhouse for the Knights of the Golden Eagle, and was known as the Cristobal Colon castle. [4] [5] The building is a two-story structure faced with brown brick, featuring a turret. [4] It began its tenure as the second Agrupacion Benefica y Cultural del Centro Obrero building in 1968, when Ybor City's previous Labor Temple building, a nearby white-stuccoed structure built in 1925, was demolished. [4]
In 1992, the ground floor of the Castle building was bought by Alan Kahana and reopened as a saloon on Guavaween. [2] Kahana eventually purchased and remodeled the entire building. By the late 1990s, the Castle began catering to the goth subculture, [2] [6] and has since cemented itself as a popular nightclub for goth and industrial music. [2] The Tampa Bay Times has referred to the Castle as "a Tampa institution, every bit a part of Ybor City culture as cigars and trolleys", [6] as well as "Ybor's goth mecca". [2]
The Castle was built in 1930 in the Ybor City Historic District, located in the neighborhood of Ybor City in Tampa, Florida. [2] It originally served as a lodge for the Knights of the Golden Eagle, [4] and was known as the Cristobal Colon castle. [5] The clubhouse was constructed in 1930, opening in September of that year at 16th St and 9th Ave. [7] [8] In 1968, the Cigar Makers Union of Tampa and Local 104 AFL-CIO Hotel and Restaurant Employees and Bartenders Union purchased the building for $38,000 as a new site for their Labor Temple (officially the Agrupacion Benefica y Cultural del Centro Obrero), [3] a place for the area's cigar and restaurant union workers to organize and engage in union activities. [2] A different building—a two-story, white-stuccoed structure built in 1925 and located at 1614 8th Ave—had served as the Agrupacion Benefica y Cultural del Centro Obrero since 1928. [4] The previous Labor Temple building was sold to Urban Renewal for $48,000 in November 1967 and was demolished in 1968. [4]
By 1987, with Ybor City's cigar industry having declined over the previous few decades, Saturday nights at the Agrupacion Benefica y Cultural del Centro Obrero saw the building serve as a venue for Afro-Caribbean and reggae music, [9] though the building still engaged in union-related operations at other times during the week. [3]
In 1992, the downstairs floor of the building was bought by Tampa native Alan Kahana. [10] It opened as a saloon under the Castle name that year on Guavaween, [2] an annual Halloween celebration that took place in Ybor City on the last Saturday of October. The building underwent interior redesigns by designer Susan Johnson to more resemble a medieval castle. [10] Though the Castle now hosts DJs, music in the original Castle bar was provided by a jukebox. [2] Following a loss in earnings from the 1993 Guavaween celebration, the Ybor City Chamber of Commerce decided that it would not be hosting the Guavaween event in 1994; the Castle bar was one of two businesses, along with Tracks—a now-defunct [6] [11] gay nightclub [6] —to pledge funding for the event. [12]
Upon opening, the Castle operated on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday nights. [10] One night, former Castle manager John Landsman hosted a rave in the upstairs floor of the building, which was typically used as a space for union workers' birthday and retirement parties. [2] Kahana eventually purchased the entire building and remodeled the upstairs space, which now houses the Main Hall, the Castle's main dance floor. [2] An area on the ground floor that was previously used as offices for a cigar workers' union is now known as "the Dungeon", a dance and party space decorated in skulls and chains. [2] In the saloon area, Kahana installed the "moat bar", which featured a river that courses through the countertop of the bar. [2] According to Tom Gold, a founding resident DJ at the Castle, the flowing water feature was eventually removed due to clubgoers spilling drinks and vomiting into the moat. [13] During the 1990s, the Castle experimented with hosting acid jazz nights, swing revival nights, and gay dance nights, as well as live bands and house music. [2] After learning of a growing goth presence at a Bennigan's restaurant in St. Petersburg, where goths had begun renting out the patio area on Tuesday nights to gather and play pre-recorded music, Kahana and Landsman decided to try catering to the goth subculture at the Castle. [2] [6]
By 1997, Friday nights at the Castle were considered "an unofficial Goth night". [14] By 2003, the Castle held "retro '80s" nights on Mondays and Thursdays, with goth-themed nights on Fridays and Saturdays. [15] The Castle currently operates on Friday and Saturday nights. [16] The venue regularly hosts themed nights, with themes such as Star Wars and steampunk, as well as cosplay events and vampire-themed balls. [11] In 2017, Christopher Spata of the Tampa Bay Times described the Castle as an internationally renowned nightclub, and "one of the premiere dance clubs for goth and industrial music on earth." [2]
The recurring segment "Goth Talk" on the American sketch comedy television series Saturday Night Live —a segment set in the Tampa Bay area—was supposedly inspired in part by the Castle and the surrounding goth subculture in the region, though this is disputed. [2] [6]
The Castle has been used as a filming location for a Slim Jim commercial featuring the Canadian professional wrestler Edge; [2] an unused segment for the late-night talk show Conan that features a Chris Christie impersonator stripping; [2] [17] and the 2012 horror film Parasitic. [2]
Tampa is a city on the Gulf Coast of the U.S. state of Florida. The city's borders include the north shore of Tampa Bay and the east shore of Old Tampa Bay. Tampa is the largest city in the Tampa Bay area and the county seat of Hillsborough County. With an estimated population of 403,364 in 2023, Tampa is the 49th-most populous city in the country and the third-most populous city in Florida after Jacksonville and Miami.
A Cuban sandwich is a variation of a ham and cheese sandwich that likely originated in cafes catering to Cuban workers in Tampa or Key West, two early Cuban immigrant communities in Florida centered on the cigar industry. Later on, Cuban exiles and expatriates brought it to Miami, where it is also very popular. The sandwich is made with ham, (mojo) roasted pork, Swiss cheese, pickles, mustard, and sometimes salami on Cuban bread. Salami is included in Tampa, but is not usually included in South Florida.
Ybor City is a historic neighborhood just northeast of downtown Tampa, Florida, United States. It was founded in the 1880s by Vicente Martinez-Ybor and other cigar manufacturers and populated by thousands of immigrants, mainly from Cuba, Spain, and Italy. For the next 50 years, workers in Ybor City's cigar factories rolled hundreds of millions of cigars annually.
The Tampa Bay area is a major metropolitan area surrounding Tampa Bay on the Gulf Coast of Florida in the United States. It includes the main cities of Tampa, St. Petersburg, and Clearwater. It is the 17th-largest metropolitan area in the United States, with a population of 3,175,275 as of the 2020 U.S. Census.
Guavaween was an annual Latin-flavored Halloween celebration which took place on the last Saturday of October in the historic neighborhood of Ybor City on Tampa, Florida. It was named after Tampa's nickname, "The Big Guava".
West Tampa is one of the oldest neighborhoods within the city limits of Tampa, Florida, United States. It was an independently incorporated city from 1895 until 1925, when it was annexed by Tampa.
The modern history of Tampa, Florida, can be traced to the founding of Fort Brooke at the mouth of the Hillsborough River in today's downtown in 1824, soon after the United States had taken possession of Florida from Spain. The outpost brought a small population of civilians to the area, and the town of Tampa was first incorporated in 1855.
El Centro Español de Tampa is a historic building in the Ybor City neighborhood of Tampa, in the U.S. state of Florida. Built as an ethnic and cultural clubhouse in 1912, the red brick structure situated at 1526–1536 East 7th Avenue is today part of a shopping and entertainment complex. It remains one of the few surviving structures specific to Spanish immigration to the United States during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, a legacy which garnered the Centro Español building recognition as a U.S. National Historic Landmark (NHL) on June 3, 1988. El Centro Español de Tampa is one of two individual structures within Hillsborough County to be so designated.
The Centro Asturiano is a historic site in Ybor City, Tampa, Florida, United States. Designed by Tampa-based architect M. Leo Elliott and located at 1913 Nebraska Avenue, the building served as a social club for immigrants and descendants of immigrants from Asturias, Spain. On July 24, 1974, it was added to the US National Register of Historic Places.
Vicente Martinez Ybor was a Spanish entrepreneur who first became a noted industrialist and cigar manufacturer in Cuba, then Key West, and finally Tampa, Florida.
Ybor City is a historic neighborhood that includes the Ybor City Historic District in Tampa, Florida. It is located just northeast of downtown Tampa and north of Port Tampa Bay. The neighborhood has distinct architectural, culinary, cultural, and historical legacy that reflects its multi-ethnic composition. It was unique in the American South as a prosperous manufacturing community built and populated almost entirely by immigrants.
Gary is an industrial section located in the southeastern part of Tampa, Florida, mainly in the vicinity of Adamo Drive east of Downtown Tampa.
Tampa Bay History Center is a history museum in Tampa, Florida, United States. It is a Smithsonian Affiliate and has been accredited by the American Alliance of Museums since 2015. Exhibits include coverage of the Tampa Bay area's first native inhabitants, Spanish conquistadors, and historical figures who shaped the area's history, as well as a reproduction of a 1920s cigar store. The museum is on the waterfront at 801 Water Street in Tampa's Channelside District. It opened on January 17, 2009. The History Center building is 60,000 square feet (5,600 m2) with 25,000 square feet (2,300 m2) of exhibit space.
The Big Guava is a nickname for Tampa, Florida, United States. It was coined in the 1970s by Steve Otto, long-time newspaper columnist for the Tampa Tribune and Tampa Times.
The Tampa Smokers was a name used between 1919 and 1954 by a series of minor league baseball teams based in Tampa, Florida. The nickname was a nod to the local cigar industry, which was the most important industry in Tampa during the years in which the Smokers were active. During periods in which the name was not used by a professional team, various local semi-pro and amateur teams took up the Smokers name.
The Tampa Riverwalk is a 2.6-mile-long (4.2 km) open space and pedestrian trail along the Hillsborough River in Tampa, Florida. The Riverwalk extends along most of the downtown Tampa waterfront from the Channelside District on the eastern terminus to the mouth of the Hillsborough River and then north along the riverside to Tampa Heights, forming a continuous path that connects a multitude of parks, attractions, public spaces, and hotels. Among the notable points of interest along the Riverwalk are the Tampa Bay History Center, Amalie Arena, the Tampa Convention Center, Rivergate Tower, Curtis Hixon Waterfront Park, Water Works Park, and the Waterfront Arts District which includes the Tampa Museum of Art, Florida Museum of Photographic Arts, Glazer Children's Museum, and the Straz Center for the Performing Arts. Locations along the Riverwalk play host to many community events, most notably the numerous festivals held at Curtis Hixon Park and the arrival of the "pirate ship" Jose Gasparilla, which moors at the Riverwalk behind the Convention Center during the Gasparilla Pirate Festival.
Gavino Gutierrez, a Spanish immigrant to the United States, was an importer, architect, civil engineer, and surveyor. He was responsible for bringing Vincente M. Ybor to Tampa, Florida, and for designing Ybor City.
The Ybor cigar makers' strike of 1931 took place in Ybor City, Tampa, Florida, starting on November 26 and ended in December. Some strikers were jailed, "Lectors" were banned and there was a lockout. Following legal intervention, some workers returned to work at previous wage levels but others were not re-employed. Lectors had by tradition been elected by the workers and, as well as reading aloud newspaper articles, often from left-wing radical publications, they recited and acted more generally, including from classic works – effectively they provided a form of education for illiterate workers. The most significant effect of the strike in the longer term was that the lector culture was brought to an end.
The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Tampa in Hillsborough County, Florida, United States.
La Unión Martí-Maceo is a historic social club in Ybor City, Florida, established by Afro-Cubans. It was founded in 1900. It is a site on the Florida Black Heritage Trail and Tampa's Soulwalk. It is at 1226 East 7th Avenue. The ornate clubhouse was demolished during an urban renewal redevelopment program in the 1960s, and its headquarters was proposed for sale to address financial difficulties in 2018.