Fulgencio Batista had already been Cuban President once, from 1940 to 1944. Following his divorce from his first wife in October 1945, he married Marta Fernández Miranda on November 28, 1945. The couple met when Marta was 20 years old and riding a bicycle through a Havana neighborhood and Batista's motorcade accidentally forced her off the road. Impressed by her beauty, Batista took her as a mistress but later decided to leave his first wife and marry Marta. They moved to the United States during the 1940s after Batista's choice for his successor lost the presidential election in 1944. They had originally wanted to live in
Palm Beach, Florida, but were shunned by the Palm Beach community. They rented a car and began driving north on
U.S. Route 1 along the Florida coast. After arriving in
Daytona Beach at the end of the day, they liked the reception they received there. They hired a
real estate agent the next day and purchased a large riverfront house, where they lived on and off while continuing to influence Cuban politics. Batista ran for and won a seat in the Cuban Senate
in absentia in 1948. On March 10, 1952, Batista staged his second coup and once again became president of Cuba. This made Marta Fernández de Batista the new First Lady of the country. Marta Fernández de Batista became an important matron of the Cuban arts as First Lady. She convinced her husband to have the National Gallery built, which is now known as the
Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes de La Habana (National Museum of Fine Arts of Havana). The couple started acquiring colonial era Cuban and modern paintings for the Gallery. ==Exile==