Irene Aloha Wright was born on December 19, 1879, in
Lake City, Colorado, to parents Henry Edward Wright and Letitia O. Wright. After her father sold his interest in a gold mine, the family settled in
Ouray, Colorado. In 1888, Ed Wright built the
Wright Opera House in Ouray. When Wright was fifteen her father died and her mother sent her to school at the Virginia College for Young Ladies in
Roanoke, Virginia. Instead of returning to Roanoke for a second year of school, she traveled south to Mexico City where she found work as a governess for the vice-president of Mexico. She also gave English lessons and translated guidebooks for the local museums. She lived in Mexico for three years before returning home and finishing school at Roanoke in 1898. She then attended
Stanford University and graduated in 1904 with a
Bachelor of Arts in history. After graduation she took her mother with her to Cuba, where she worked as she was a writer for the
Havana Post from 1904 to 1905. When Wright left the
Post she became a city editor for the
Havana Telegraph, a position she held for three years. The next year, she purchased
The Cuba Magazine, a weekly politics and culture magazine for American readers which she owned until 1914. In 1910, Wright published her first book,
Cuba, a contemporary account of the island. In 1914, she moved to
Seville, gave up journalism, and focused instead on archival research at the
Archives of the Indies. She spent the next two decades in Spain where she translated and edited over 100,000 colonial documents. In 1916, she published
The Early History of Cuba, 1492–1586, the first modern history of the early Caribbean that relied almost entirely on primary sources. During her stay in Spain she published several additional books, including
Historia documentada de San Cristo, bal de la Habana en el siglo XVI (Documented History of Havana in the Sixteenth Century)(1927) and
Documents concerning English voyages to the Spanish main, 1569–1580 (1932). She also compiled a variety of reports on the early Dutch slave trade for the Dutch government. Spain and Britain also commissioned her to research and translate documents relating to their country's colonial history. The
John B. Stetson family hired her to create an archive of Spanish documents covering the settlement of Florida by Spanish conquistadors. This archive remains "the most important and frequently cited collection of papers regarding the Spanish occupation of Florida to this day outside of the archive in Seville." == Publications ==