
People had lived around the bay for thousands of years before any of that. The Tocobaga fished and built shell mounds along these shores, and Spanish expeditions — Narvaez in 1528, Hernando de Soto near the bay in 1539 — passed through with consequences that fell hard on Native nations. Permanent settlement came with the U.S. Army: Fort Brooke was planted at the mouth of the Hillsborough River in 1824, a frontier post that anchored the village that incorporated as Tampa in 1855.
Tampa is Cigar City — a Fort Brooke frontier post that immigrant tabaqueros turned into the cigar capital of the world, crowned with silver minarets and guarded, once a year, by pirates. Our Tampa designs gather that into wearable form. Wear Cigar City. Cigar City. Rolled by hand since 1885.
Why People Visit Tampa
Tampa draws travelers who want real heritage with Gulf sunshine — the brick-and-cigar history of Ybor's Latin Quarter, the fairy-tale minarets of Plant's hotel, the bay and the Riverwalk, and a pirate festival unlike anywhere else. It is a city that wears its immigrant, working-waterfront story openly, an easy gateway to the Gulf beaches just across the bay.