[New York, New York, February 1, 1887.]
. . . . I came near
closing without answering the part of your letter most important. I certainly
do feel competent to advise about that contemplated trip. Go south via Richmond
to Atlanta, Savannah, Jacksonville, Florida, by the St. John's to Enterprise
and Sanford, visiting St. Augustine en route. At Sanford go by rail to Tampa,
and if the railroad is finished, to Charlotte Harbor on the Gulf side, whence a
steamer goes to Havana. Much of the interior of Cuba can be reached by rail,
Santa Rosa and Matanzas. The last-named is to me the finest place in Cuba.
March and April are good months there. May and June are too hot. You will meet
acquaintances everywhere. There are a great many beautiful places along the St.
John's River, with good boats, hotels, and accommodations of all sorts, and the
same in Cuba. I am sure that the railroad is finished to Charlotte Harbor, but
you can learn the best way to reach Cuba from the Post-Office Department. On
the Gulf side of Florida, you have the cluster of islands, leaving only the
ninety miles of open sea from Key West to Havana, made in a single daylight.
Havana is a very
interesting city, though for a week's stay I would prefer Matanzas and the
interior bay.
SOURCE: Rachel
Sherman Thorndike, Editor, The Sherman Letters: Correspondence Between
General and Senator Sherman from 1837 to 1891, p. 373-4
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