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Carlito Fuente Jr with Ricardo Guadalupe

Fuente - First Family of New World Cigars

A devotion to Cuban cigars should never prevent a smoker from trying brands from other nations as well.  Cubans may well be the best, but that does not mean no others are good – to overlook any cigar not shipped from Havana would be akin to turning down a Porsche because it isn’t a Ferrari.  Plenty of cigars made elsewhere in the Caribbean are of an excellent standard, and for more than 100 years an enormous number of them have borne the now legendary name of one family: Fuente.

While the modern incarnation of Arturo Fuente y Compañía may ship upwards of 30,000,000 cigars each year, the beginnings of this magnificent brand are humble and rooted in Cuba.  Arturo Fuente was born just outside Havana in 1887.  His travels brough him to Tampa, Florida by 1910, where he settled and began to build a life with his wife, Doña Hilda Fuente.  In 1912 he started the company which still bears his name, rolling cigars by hand in a factory in Tampa, using tobacco imported from his native land.  After just 2 short years, disaster struck: the factory was destroyed by fire and production ground to a halt.  Arturo refused to give up on his dream, rolling cigars in his kitchen and selling them through the neighbourhood to maintain his business’ presence in the market.

If Arturo’s self-belief and sheer will were what allowed his company to stay alive in those early days, it was the courage and innovation of his son, Carlos Fuente Sr., which allowed it to flourish in the subsequent years.  Carlos began enacting practices never before employed by cigar businesses, such as consigning sticks on credit to retailers, and grew the brand through Florida and into the lucrative New York City market.  This success came at a price, with the whole family pitching in to ensure demand for their cigars was met, but allowed the name of Fuente to become more and more established in the market.  In 1962, Carlos’ courage came to the fore again, as the effects of global politics began to change the cigar industry for ever.

Arturo Fuente Cigars

A selection of aged Fuente Opus X cigars.  Main image: Carlito Fuente shows Ricardo Guadalupe, Hublot CEO, around an ageing room.

Carlos Fuente was visiting family in Cuba when rumours began to fly around of an impending trade embargo by the United States. He decided to gamble on these rumours being true, buying Cuban tobacco at any farm he could get to and building up a 3-year stockpile.  As El Bloqueo began to wreak havoc on other companies suddenly finding themselves short of raw materials, Arturo Fuente & Company were thriving.  Thousands of dollars were offered for a share in the supply of Cuban tobacco, but Carlos held firm – using the time he had bought the company to establish the name Fuente as being a sign of quality and craftsmanship.  That association remains strong today.

The reputation Carlos built was invaluable in 1966, when the family released their first cigar to be handmade with non-Cuban tobacco – the Flor de Orlando.  Customers were happy to take the leap with Fuente as they trusted the name so much, and sales were strong.  The 1970’s began with Carlos experimenting in the field of tobacco production, growing crops in Nicaragua, Honduras, Dominican Republic and Mexico.  Factories were established at the beginning of the decade in Honduras and Nicaragua; Nicaragua’s own revolution and an “accidental” fire in Honduras meant they were closed by the end of the decade.

If the 1970s had seen turmoil and pain – Arturo himself passed away in 1973, though his own blend of tobacco was used to create the Flor Fina 8-5-8 in 1975 to honour him – the 1980s saw a return to good fortune for the Fuente family.  Factories were established in Dominican Republic which saw production resume to a level which met demand, and the Hemingway line was launched, reviving the figurado format and becoming a top-seller.  Carlito Fuente became the third generation of the family to take a role in running the business and began to stamp his own ideas on its legacy.

Carlito’s major success was in overseeing the successful growth of Dominican wrapper leaves and allowing the company to produce its first Dominican puro – the Fuente Fuente OpusX.  These full-bodied cigars quickly became hunted by aficionados and are now regarded as the Fuente gold standard.  The OpusX line is known throughout the world, instantly recognisable thanks to its elaborate band and a sure sign of quality.

Chateau de la Fuente

The legendary Chateau de la Fuente

The centenary of this venerable New World cigar brand was marked in 2012.  Rather than rest on the laurels of such an impressive history in the industry, the family continued to push forward.  Quality tobacco, craftsmanship and investing the proper amount of time to get things right are their pillars, and today’s 4th-generation Fuentes pay close attention to all three in order to safeguard the good name which was so passionately established.

Innovation and expansion are still key to Carlito’s plans for the future of Fuente.  A return to Nicaragua in 2018, with the establishment of a factory in Esteli as well as an expansion of the Cigar Family Charitable Foundation to cover Nicaragua along with Dominican Republic, allows for greater production and a new range of flavours to be added to the offering.  The latest new collection, Rare Pinks, was released in 2020 as an homage to all things 1960s, while an impressive partnership with Hublot goes from strength to strength, demonstrating the power of the Fuente name as a sign of quality and luxury.

The Hublot Big Bang Ceramic released in honour of Carlos Fuente Senior

The Hublot Big Bang Ceramic Limited Edition created to honour Carlos Fuente Senior.

Hublot and Fuente first collaborated on a watch in 2012, the year of the Fuente centenary.  The latest release to bear both brands’ signatures was a limited edition of 100 pieces which commemorates the life of Carlos Sr.  Each watch is adorned with the company logo – the “AR” initials of the founder momentarily replaced by “CR”, to honour his son – and the Roman numerals on the face are taken from the clock on the Fuente family crest.  At 9 o’clock we see a crowned lion, indicating that the family once produced cigars for the Spanish Royal Court as well as honouring Carlos Sr. himself.  Each piece is presented in a black lacquered box which, naturally, will also function as a humidor.  Hublot’s own reputation for innovative design and revolutionary use of materials makes them the ideal horological partner for Arturo Fuente, and the strength of the bond between the 2 companies shows the esteem in which Fuente is held worldwide.

Whatever the next 100 years have in store for the Fuente family, and however the next generation of Fuentes choose to develop the brand, one thing will always be certain: cigars which carry their name will be unsurpassed for quality and flavour.  While many may attempt to imitate them, none will quite match up to the standards developed over the years.  Only Fuente is Fuente.

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