The railroad put Cuba, Mo. on the map in 1857. But long before that Native
Americans, and later trappers and settlers, traveled nearby along the Osage
Trail. Eventually historic Route 66 would wind along that ancient trail and
through town, only to be rendered obsolete years later by Interstate Highway 44.
Cuba touts itself as "a small town with big ideas." A push for economic
development, with support from a local bank, helped Cuba reinvent itself
beginning in the 1980s. Now the community is home to more than 20 small
manufacturing companies, no small feat for a town of only 3,300.
A mural project spruced up downtown and now historic Route 66 attracts nostalgic
tourists from across the world. So locals weren't surprised when 46 folks
arrived from 15 different states and 10 foreign countries the last week of
September. The cameras they carried didn't even draw much attention; all
tourists tote them. But this group of photographers was different. In town
for the 68th annual Missouri Photo Workshop, they set out to visually explore
Cuba, finding stories like the barrel factory that was a large part of the
economic revival; or a local taxidermist who had a dream to somehow honor
the Osage Indians who ruled this part of Missouri for centuries; or young
Mennonite single women coming of age in a community within a community;
or Cowboy Colt, a seven-year-old who dreams of riding the range.