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Enriqueta García Martín

Enriqueta García y Martín de Cazañas (1862-1930) was a prominent Cuban socialite, landowner, and agricultural businesswoman.

Enriqueta García Martín
Enriqueta García Martín Portrait Photograph, Circa 1900
Born
Enriqueta García y Martín

1862
Diedc. 1930
Cardenas, Cuba
NationalityCuban, American
Other namesEnriqueta García Martín y Cazañas, Enriqueta García Cazañas, Enriqueta Cazañas
OccupationLandowner
Known forOwner of the Buena Vista Estate, farms, and sugar plantation
RelativesPedro Pablo Cazañas (son)

Life edit

Family and early life edit

Enriqueta García y Martín was born on November 3, 1862, in Matanzas, Cuba to the wealthy García family of Spain and was noted for her distinctly European features of fair skin and blonde hair.[1] Their family was of considerable prominence in the broader Matanzas province. Her brother, Félix García y Martín (sometimes misprinted as Telix), was a doctor and a regional insurgent leader in Matanzas during the Cuban War of Independence.[2] After the war, he continued to be an active medical figure in the region and assisted American forces stationed there during the ensuing period following the conclusion of the Spanish–American War.[3] Dr. García then became second highest-ranking doctor in the Matanzas province and was later promoted to Chief Doctor of the Port of Matanzas, Head of Administration.[4]

As her brother focused his efforts and attention to his medical, political, and administrative career, Enriqueta became heiress to the García estate and administrator of its properties and financial holdings.[5] At sixteen she was the subject of a poem included in the 1878 literary collection Jardín Matancero ("Matanzas Garden").[6] The publication was dedicated to the debutantes of the Matanzas region in which a flower-themed poem was dedicated to each "blossoming" socialite.

García resided in historic Camarioca, in close proximity to the famed Varadero resort town, now incorporated into the nearby region of Cárdenas.[7] She was molded by her upbringing in the broader Cárdenas community, which was founded by old Spanish aristocracy in 1828[8] and housed many elite European families. By García's lifetime, the area had a distinct Southern American influence and was known as the "Charleston of the Caribbean" due to its unique design that broke with the traditional central-plaza Spanish layout found in much of Latin America, instead using a North American grid pattern modeled on the city of Charleston.[9] Its unique character, complete with straight and narrow streets and horse-drawn carriages, attracted an influx of European families from Spain, France, Italy, and the United Kingdom, such as the Garcías and the Martins.[10][11][12] These factors would influence her later travel and the upbringing of her children.[13][14]

Marriage edit

While residing in Cárdenas as an adult, García would meet lawyer and landowner Francisco E. Cazañas, of another prominent Matanzas family who owned many landholdings and agricultural industry interests. Cazañas inherited a large Cárdenas property in 1890,[15] and met García upon his relocation to the area from New York. The couple wed on April 30, 1894[16] and, in accordance with Spanish naming customs, after their marriage García was known as Enriqueta García Martín de Cazañas, or, more simply, Enriqueta García Cazañas. The marriage was significant due to Cazañas, having been born in New Rochelle, New York,[17] holding dual citizenship with the United States and Cuba, and being descendant of the Castilian Peraza family[5] through his father, Francisco José Cazañas y Peraza (sometimes recorded as Francis),[18] an agriculture estate landowner in New Rochelle.[2] García herself received American citizenship after her marriage to Cazañas and would subsequently travel with an American passport.[19][20]

The couple became moderately significant figures during the Spanish-American War following the destruction of several of their plantations in Santa Clara, Cuba by Spanish troops. They had been under suspicion from the Spanish armed forces due to each of their respective family ties to various independence figures, with García's brother being Insurgent leader Félix García y Martín and Cazañas's relation to the pro-Independence branch of the Peraza family based in Cuba.[2][21] One of their properties in Sagua was destroyed by the Spanish in March 1896.[22] Francisco Cazañas was subsequently arrested on February 13, 1897, by Spanish troops and held for over three weeks[23] while their other properties were searched and damaged with five being burned.[21][2] This sparked an international diplomatic incident between Washington D.C. and Madrid due to the couple's American citizenship and social status, resulting in wide coverage by American media including the Los Angeles Express,[21] The Cedar Rapids Gazette,[23] The Evening Journal,[22] The Baltimore Sun,[24] The Boston Globe,[25] and The New York Times.[26] This arrest as well as the damage to the Cazañas-García properties would result in the couple's postwar claims to the Spanish Treaty Claims Commission.[2]

The couple frequently traveled to the United States and would resided in their New York property during the duration of the war following Cazañas' release.[2][26] There are surviving records of visits to New York City (1892, 1897) and New Orleans (1898).[27][28][13] The couple had three sons, the eldest of which, Enrique, they would arrange to have educated in the United States and reside in Nashville[14] and Winter Park.[16]

Buena Vista edit

García notably owned the Buena Vista estate in Camarioca and its vast grounds. The Buena Vista property, sometimes written as Buenavista, was renown for its immensity and held its own main roads,[29] stream, hills, prize horses, cattle, ox, as well as full staff and yacht for its proximity to Varadero.[5] The couple resided there and, per the US Consulate records,[16] her husband managed the property's sprawling farmlands and major sugar plantation, often known collectively as "Finca Buena Vista," which were significant agricultural businesses in the Matanzas province.[30]

The property was damaged during the Battle of Cárdenas in the Spanish–American War and became the center of the couple's high-profile claims case to the Spanish Treaty Claims Commission.[31] The couple first filed their claims with the commission in 1902.[7] It took six years to settle their claims, during which Francisco's legal background and US ties and citizenship proved useful as their claims were settled in 1908 with the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States awarding the couple total compensation of $13,138[32] ($9,738 to Enriqueta and $3,400 to Francisco), over $375,000 in 2021, after inflation.[33] They received the second highest awards granted by the commission, and the highest among private citizens not representing a corporation.[32] Their legal case was the subject of a book published in 2012, Francisco E. Cazañas and Enriqueta Garcia v. The United States.[2]

While the couple also owned other property, the manor house would remain the Cazañas family's main residence until the Cuban Revolution, after which it was nationalized and made into a village (subdivision) of Cardenas.[5]

Other properties and businesses edit

Their filings with the Spanish Treaty Claims Commission offered other rare glimpses into the Cazañas-García property holdings. They describe the family's "extensive landed estates" that were each "elaborately and expensively furnished."[2] Other estates mentioned in addition to Buena Vista included Dos Rosas, Pura y Limpia, Dolores, Rosario, and others, all of which sustained at least some damage during the Cuban War of Independence. Some were adjacent to each other and some were on the coast described in court documents as "Situated on a sort of promontory extending out into the ocean between the Bay of Cárdenas and Bay of Matanzas" within "a strategic area to combatants," likely Varadero.[2] Many of these functioned as sugar estates, plantations, and stock farms throughout the Matanzas province in the towns and districts of Camarioca, Santana, and Cárdenas. A Peraza relative of Cazañas testified to the commission "I witnessed the destruction of some splendid houses [Francisco] Cazañas had on Santana."[2] The couple made the Pura y Limpia estate their main residence during the extent of the battles, during which Spanish forces viewed them with suspicion due to the prominent role of García's brother, Dr. Félix García Martín, in the insurgency, causing the couple to relocate temporarily to the United States as the Spanish American War progressed.[2]

While many of their properties had originally belonged to the García family, it is known that the historic Dos Rosas sugar plantation estate was already in the ownership of the Cazañas family, having been purchased in 1868 by Bartolomé Cazañas, a grandfather of Francisco E. Cazañas. The vast estate was originally named "San Francisco de Paula-Riverol" and Bartolomé Cazañas renamed it that year to "Dos Rosas" (Spanish for "Two Roses") in honor of his Italian wife, Rosa Cambiaggi, and their daughter.[34] The Cazañas-García family also owned properties in Santa Clara, Sagua la Grande, and Havana.[7][5] As with Buena Vista, all of these estates, plantations, and mills were dismantled[35] or nationalized after the Cuban Revolution and many, including Dos Rosas and Pura y Limpia, were made into small towns and villages.[36][37]

Later life and progeny edit

Death edit

Enriqueta García's health declined later in life as she suffered from brain cancer, eventually succumbing to the disease by the mid-1930s.

Progeny edit

García is also noted for her descendants. García and her husband had three sons: successful Havana businessman Enrique Cazañas, the prominent judge Pedro Pablo Cazañas, and Eduardo, the youngest.

Her granddaughters by Pedro Pablo Cazañas, Raquel and Marta, would have high-profile marriages to Cuban leaders Rene de la Huerta (a psychiatrist and leader of the Agrupación Católica Universitaria)[38] and Jesús Permuy, respectively. Her grandson by Pedro Pablo, Eduardo Cazañas y Díaz, voluntarily enlisted in the United States Army with the rank of SP-4 as an Armor Reconnaissance Specialist.[39] He died in combat in 1967 during the Vietnam War and his death was covered in both English[40] and Spanish media, including the Diario Las Americas.[41] He received the Purple Heart for his actions in battle, was interred in Lauderdale Memorial Park, and is included in the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington D.C.[42]

Her great-grandchildren would include further noted figures such as the author and spiritual leader Christian de la Huerta and former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense (DASD) and United States-Spain Council President, Pedro Pablo Permuy.[43]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Enriqueta García". geni_family_tree.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Huston, E.S. (February 15, 2012). Francisco E. Cazañas and Enriqueta Garcia, His Wife, v. The United States. Gale, Making of Modern Law. ISBN 978-1-275-10097-8.
  3. ^ "Public Health Reports". 1899.
  4. ^ Cuba (1928). "Colección legislativa".
  5. ^ a b c d e "Marta Cazañas Permuy – Obituary". Legacy.com.
  6. ^ Léon, José E. Ponce de (June 20, 1878). "Jardín Matancero: colección de composiciones poéticas en que aparecen cantadas sesenta y una señoritas de las más distinguidas de Matanzas". Impr. "Aurora del Yumuri" – via Google Books.
  7. ^ a b c "Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury: Transmitting Letter from the Surgeon-General of the Marine-Hospital Service Presenting a Report Relating to the Origin and Prevalence of Leprosy in the United States". U.S. Government Printing Office. June 20, 1902 – via Google Books.
  8. ^ "Cárdenas | Cuba". Encyclopedia Britannica.
  9. ^ "More than History – God's Unfolding Mission in Cárdenas, Cuba". The Outreach Foundation.
  10. ^ "Cardenas Cuba". www.cuba-junky.com.
  11. ^ "Municipio de Cárdenas, Matanzas, Cuba". www.guije.com.
  12. ^ "Letter from Cuba 1851". July 8, 2014.
  13. ^ a b "Passenger Lists of Vessels Arriving at New Orleans, Louisiana, 1820–1902". Ancestry. July 25, 1898.
  14. ^ a b "Francisco Eduardo Cazanas in the U.S. Passport Applications, 1795–1925". Ancestry. September 5, 1919.
  15. ^ "Francisco Eduardo Cazanas in the U.S., Consular Registration Certificates, 1907–1918". Ancestry. September 1, 1908.
  16. ^ a b c "Francisco Eduardo Cazanas in the U.S., Consular Registration Applications, 1916–1925". Ancestry. February 19, 1918.
  17. ^ My heritage [user-generated source]
  18. ^ "Francisco José Cazañas y Peraza Ancestry". Ancestry.com.
  19. ^ "Enriquita Garcia Cazañas in the U.S. Passport Applications, 1795–1925". Ancestry. June 11, 1918.
  20. ^ "Enriquita Garcia Cazañas in the U.S. Passport Applications, 1795–1925". Ancestry. February 3, 1921.
  21. ^ a b c Gay, W. W. (July 16, 1896). "War On Americans: Spanish Bands Rob And Burn Their Homes In Cuba". Los Angeles Express. p. 8.
  22. ^ a b Staff (March 9, 1897). "The Arrest of Cazanas: An American Citizen Unlawfully Held by Spaniards". The Evening Journal. p. 3.
  23. ^ a b Staff (March 10, 1897). "Another American Taken on a Trivial Charge: Under Military Arrest". The Gazette. Cedar Rapids, Iowa. p. 2.
  24. ^ Staff (March 23, 1897). "National Affairs". The Baltimore Sun. p. 1.
  25. ^ Staff (March 23, 1897). "American Citizen Released". The Boston Globe. p. 5.
  26. ^ a b Staff (March 23, 1897). "Another American Released: Frank Cazanas Freed from Prison at Sagua la Grande". The New York Times. p. 2.
  27. ^ "E Garcia in the New York, Passenger and Crew Lists (including Castle Garden and Ellis Island), 1820–1957". Ancestry. August 1, 1892.
  28. ^ "Enriqueta Garcia in the New York, Passenger and Crew Lists (including Castle Garden and Ellis Island), 1820–1957". Ancestry. May 5, 1897.
  29. ^ Curran, Frank Bernard (June 20, 1925). "Motor Roads in Latin America". U.S. Government Printing Office – via Google Books.
  30. ^ Wood, Leonard (1902). Annual Reports of the War Department for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1900: Report of the Military Governor of Cuba on Civil Affairs. U.S. Government Printing Office – via Google Books.
  31. ^ "Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury: Transmitting Letter from the Surgeon-General of the Marine-Hospital Service Presenting a Report Relating to the Origin and Prevalence of Leprosy in the United States". U.S. Government Printing Office. June 20, 1902 – via Google Books.
  32. ^ a b "Serial set (no.5001-5799)". June 20, 1908 – via Google Books.
  33. ^ "US Currency Inflation Calculator". www.in2013dollars.com. Alioth Finance.
  34. ^ Ballester, Alberto Perret (2007). Dos Rosas. ISBN 978-959-06-1035-6.
  35. ^ "Cuban Sugar MIlls".
  36. ^ "Dos Rosas Town Matanzas Cuba, Location and Coordinates".
  37. ^ "Place not found".
  38. ^ Rodríguez, Ignacio Uría (July 1, 2012). Iglesia y revolución en Cuba: Enrique Pérez Serantes (1883–1968), el obispo que salvó a Fidel Castro. Encuentro. ISBN 978-84-9920-998-2 – via Google Books.
  39. ^ "THE WALL OF FACES". Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund.
  40. ^ Obituary vvmf.org
  41. ^ "EXILIADO CUBANO MUERTO EN VIETNAM". Diario Las Americas. January 1967.
  42. ^ "Edwardo Enrique Cazanas-Diaz: Specialist Four from Rhode Island, Vietnam War Casualty". www.honorstates.org.
  43. ^ "Revolving Door: Pedro Pablo Permuy Employment Summary | OpenSecrets". www.opensecrets.org.

enriqueta, garcía, martín, enriqueta, garcía, martín, cazañas, 1862, 1930, prominent, cuban, socialite, landowner, agricultural, businesswoman, portrait, photograph, circa, 1900bornenriqueta, garcía, martín1862matanzas, cubadiedc, 1930cardenas, cubanationality. Enriqueta Garcia y Martin de Cazanas 1862 1930 was a prominent Cuban socialite landowner and agricultural businesswoman Enriqueta Garcia MartinEnriqueta Garcia Martin Portrait Photograph Circa 1900BornEnriqueta Garcia y Martin1862Matanzas CubaDiedc 1930Cardenas CubaNationalityCuban AmericanOther namesEnriqueta Garcia Martin y Cazanas Enriqueta Garcia Cazanas Enriqueta CazanasOccupationLandownerKnown forOwner of the Buena Vista Estate farms and sugar plantationRelativesPedro Pablo Cazanas son Contents 1 Life 1 1 Family and early life 1 2 Marriage 2 Buena Vista 2 1 Other properties and businesses 3 Later life and progeny 3 1 Death 3 2 Progeny 4 See also 5 ReferencesLife editFamily and early life edit Enriqueta Garcia y Martin was born on November 3 1862 in Matanzas Cuba to the wealthy Garcia family of Spain and was noted for her distinctly European features of fair skin and blonde hair 1 Their family was of considerable prominence in the broader Matanzas province Her brother Felix Garcia y Martin sometimes misprinted as Telix was a doctor and a regional insurgent leader in Matanzas during the Cuban War of Independence 2 After the war he continued to be an active medical figure in the region and assisted American forces stationed there during the ensuing period following the conclusion of the Spanish American War 3 Dr Garcia then became second highest ranking doctor in the Matanzas province and was later promoted to Chief Doctor of the Port of Matanzas Head of Administration 4 As her brother focused his efforts and attention to his medical political and administrative career Enriqueta became heiress to the Garcia estate and administrator of its properties and financial holdings 5 At sixteen she was the subject of a poem included in the 1878 literary collection Jardin Matancero Matanzas Garden 6 The publication was dedicated to the debutantes of the Matanzas region in which a flower themed poem was dedicated to each blossoming socialite Garcia resided in historic Camarioca in close proximity to the famed Varadero resort town now incorporated into the nearby region of Cardenas 7 She was molded by her upbringing in the broader Cardenas community which was founded by old Spanish aristocracy in 1828 8 and housed many elite European families By Garcia s lifetime the area had a distinct Southern American influence and was known as the Charleston of the Caribbean due to its unique design that broke with the traditional central plaza Spanish layout found in much of Latin America instead using a North American grid pattern modeled on the city of Charleston 9 Its unique character complete with straight and narrow streets and horse drawn carriages attracted an influx of European families from Spain France Italy and the United Kingdom such as the Garcias and the Martins 10 11 12 These factors would influence her later travel and the upbringing of her children 13 14 Marriage edit While residing in Cardenas as an adult Garcia would meet lawyer and landowner Francisco E Cazanas of another prominent Matanzas family who owned many landholdings and agricultural industry interests Cazanas inherited a large Cardenas property in 1890 15 and met Garcia upon his relocation to the area from New York The couple wed on April 30 1894 16 and in accordance with Spanish naming customs after their marriage Garcia was known as Enriqueta Garcia Martin de Cazanas or more simply Enriqueta Garcia Cazanas The marriage was significant due to Cazanas having been born in New Rochelle New York 17 holding dual citizenship with the United States and Cuba and being descendant of the Castilian Peraza family 5 through his father Francisco Jose Cazanas y Peraza sometimes recorded as Francis 18 an agriculture estate landowner in New Rochelle 2 Garcia herself received American citizenship after her marriage to Cazanas and would subsequently travel with an American passport 19 20 The couple became moderately significant figures during the Spanish American War following the destruction of several of their plantations in Santa Clara Cuba by Spanish troops They had been under suspicion from the Spanish armed forces due to each of their respective family ties to various independence figures with Garcia s brother being Insurgent leader Felix Garcia y Martin and Cazanas s relation to the pro Independence branch of the Peraza family based in Cuba 2 21 One of their properties in Sagua was destroyed by the Spanish in March 1896 22 Francisco Cazanas was subsequently arrested on February 13 1897 by Spanish troops and held for over three weeks 23 while their other properties were searched and damaged with five being burned 21 2 This sparked an international diplomatic incident between Washington D C and Madrid due to the couple s American citizenship and social status resulting in wide coverage by American media including the Los Angeles Express 21 The Cedar Rapids Gazette 23 The Evening Journal 22 The Baltimore Sun 24 The Boston Globe 25 and The New York Times 26 This arrest as well as the damage to the Cazanas Garcia properties would result in the couple s postwar claims to the Spanish Treaty Claims Commission 2 The couple frequently traveled to the United States and would resided in their New York property during the duration of the war following Cazanas release 2 26 There are surviving records of visits to New York City 1892 1897 and New Orleans 1898 27 28 13 The couple had three sons the eldest of which Enrique they would arrange to have educated in the United States and reside in Nashville 14 and Winter Park 16 Buena Vista editGarcia notably owned the Buena Vista estate in Camarioca and its vast grounds The Buena Vista property sometimes written as Buenavista was renown for its immensity and held its own main roads 29 stream hills prize horses cattle ox as well as full staff and yacht for its proximity to Varadero 5 The couple resided there and per the US Consulate records 16 her husband managed the property s sprawling farmlands and major sugar plantation often known collectively as Finca Buena Vista which were significant agricultural businesses in the Matanzas province 30 The property was damaged during the Battle of Cardenas in the Spanish American War and became the center of the couple s high profile claims case to the Spanish Treaty Claims Commission 31 The couple first filed their claims with the commission in 1902 7 It took six years to settle their claims during which Francisco s legal background and US ties and citizenship proved useful as their claims were settled in 1908 with the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States awarding the couple total compensation of 13 138 32 9 738 to Enriqueta and 3 400 to Francisco over 375 000 in 2021 after inflation 33 They received the second highest awards granted by the commission and the highest among private citizens not representing a corporation 32 Their legal case was the subject of a book published in 2012 Francisco E Cazanas and Enriqueta Garcia v The United States 2 While the couple also owned other property the manor house would remain the Cazanas family s main residence until the Cuban Revolution after which it was nationalized and made into a village subdivision of Cardenas 5 Other properties and businesses edit Their filings with the Spanish Treaty Claims Commission offered other rare glimpses into the Cazanas Garcia property holdings They describe the family s extensive landed estates that were each elaborately and expensively furnished 2 Other estates mentioned in addition to Buena Vista included Dos Rosas Pura y Limpia Dolores Rosario and others all of which sustained at least some damage during the Cuban War of Independence Some were adjacent to each other and some were on the coast described in court documents as Situated on a sort of promontory extending out into the ocean between the Bay of Cardenas and Bay of Matanzas within a strategic area to combatants likely Varadero 2 Many of these functioned as sugar estates plantations and stock farms throughout the Matanzas province in the towns and districts of Camarioca Santana and Cardenas A Peraza relative of Cazanas testified to the commission I witnessed the destruction of some splendid houses Francisco Cazanas had on Santana 2 The couple made the Pura y Limpia estate their main residence during the extent of the battles during which Spanish forces viewed them with suspicion due to the prominent role of Garcia s brother Dr Felix Garcia Martin in the insurgency causing the couple to relocate temporarily to the United States as the Spanish American War progressed 2 While many of their properties had originally belonged to the Garcia family it is known that the historic Dos Rosas sugar plantation estate was already in the ownership of the Cazanas family having been purchased in 1868 by Bartolome Cazanas a grandfather of Francisco E Cazanas The vast estate was originally named San Francisco de Paula Riverol and Bartolome Cazanas renamed it that year to Dos Rosas Spanish for Two Roses in honor of his Italian wife Rosa Cambiaggi and their daughter 34 The Cazanas Garcia family also owned properties in Santa Clara Sagua la Grande and Havana 7 5 As with Buena Vista all of these estates plantations and mills were dismantled 35 or nationalized after the Cuban Revolution and many including Dos Rosas and Pura y Limpia were made into small towns and villages 36 37 Later life and progeny editDeath edit Enriqueta Garcia s health declined later in life as she suffered from brain cancer eventually succumbing to the disease by the mid 1930s Progeny edit Garcia is also noted for her descendants Garcia and her husband had three sons successful Havana businessman Enrique Cazanas the prominent judge Pedro Pablo Cazanas and Eduardo the youngest Her granddaughters by Pedro Pablo Cazanas Raquel and Marta would have high profile marriages to Cuban leaders Rene de la Huerta a psychiatrist and leader of the Agrupacion Catolica Universitaria 38 and Jesus Permuy respectively Her grandson by Pedro Pablo Eduardo Cazanas y Diaz voluntarily enlisted in the United States Army with the rank of SP 4 as an Armor Reconnaissance Specialist 39 He died in combat in 1967 during the Vietnam War and his death was covered in both English 40 and Spanish media including the Diario Las Americas 41 He received the Purple Heart for his actions in battle was interred in Lauderdale Memorial Park and is included in the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington D C 42 Her great grandchildren would include further noted figures such as the author and spiritual leader Christian de la Huerta and former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense DASD and United States Spain Council President Pedro Pablo Permuy 43 See also editSpanish nobility in Cuba Cuban sugar economy Battle of Cardenas Pedro Pablo CazanasReferences edit Enriqueta Garcia geni family tree a b c d e f g h i j k Huston E S February 15 2012 Francisco E Cazanas and Enriqueta Garcia His Wife v The United States Gale Making of Modern Law ISBN 978 1 275 10097 8 Public Health Reports 1899 Cuba 1928 Coleccion legislativa a b c d e Marta Cazanas Permuy Obituary Legacy com Leon Jose E Ponce de June 20 1878 Jardin Matancero coleccion de composiciones poeticas en que aparecen cantadas sesenta y una senoritas de las mas distinguidas de Matanzas Impr Aurora del Yumuri via Google Books a b c Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury Transmitting Letter from the Surgeon General of the Marine Hospital Service Presenting a Report Relating to the Origin and Prevalence of Leprosy in the United States U S Government Printing Office June 20 1902 via Google Books Cardenas Cuba Encyclopedia Britannica More than History God s Unfolding Mission in Cardenas Cuba The Outreach Foundation Cardenas Cuba www cuba junky com Municipio de Cardenas Matanzas Cuba www guije com Letter from Cuba 1851 July 8 2014 a b Passenger Lists of Vessels Arriving at New Orleans Louisiana 1820 1902 Ancestry July 25 1898 a b Francisco Eduardo Cazanas in the U S Passport Applications 1795 1925 Ancestry September 5 1919 Francisco Eduardo Cazanas in the U S Consular Registration Certificates 1907 1918 Ancestry September 1 1908 a b c Francisco Eduardo Cazanas in the U S Consular Registration Applications 1916 1925 Ancestry February 19 1918 My heritage user generated source Francisco Jose Cazanas y Peraza Ancestry Ancestry com Enriquita Garcia Cazanas in the U S Passport Applications 1795 1925 Ancestry June 11 1918 Enriquita Garcia Cazanas in the U S Passport Applications 1795 1925 Ancestry February 3 1921 a b c Gay W W July 16 1896 War On Americans Spanish Bands Rob And Burn Their Homes In Cuba Los Angeles Express p 8 a b Staff March 9 1897 The Arrest of Cazanas An American Citizen Unlawfully Held by Spaniards The Evening Journal p 3 a b Staff March 10 1897 Another American Taken on a Trivial Charge Under Military Arrest The Gazette Cedar Rapids Iowa p 2 Staff March 23 1897 National Affairs The Baltimore Sun p 1 Staff March 23 1897 American Citizen Released The Boston Globe p 5 a b Staff March 23 1897 Another American Released Frank Cazanas Freed from Prison at Sagua la Grande The New York Times p 2 E Garcia in the New York Passenger and Crew Lists including Castle Garden and Ellis Island 1820 1957 Ancestry August 1 1892 Enriqueta Garcia in the New York Passenger and Crew Lists including Castle Garden and Ellis Island 1820 1957 Ancestry May 5 1897 Curran Frank Bernard June 20 1925 Motor Roads in Latin America U S Government Printing Office via Google Books Wood Leonard 1902 Annual Reports of the War Department for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30 1900 Report of the Military Governor of Cuba on Civil Affairs U S Government Printing Office via Google Books Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury Transmitting Letter from the Surgeon General of the Marine Hospital Service Presenting a Report Relating to the Origin and Prevalence of Leprosy in the United States U S Government Printing Office June 20 1902 via Google Books a b Serial set no 5001 5799 June 20 1908 via Google Books US Currency Inflation Calculator www in2013dollars com Alioth Finance Ballester Alberto Perret 2007 Dos Rosas ISBN 978 959 06 1035 6 Cuban Sugar MIlls Dos Rosas Town Matanzas Cuba Location and Coordinates Place not found Rodriguez Ignacio Uria July 1 2012 Iglesia y revolucion en Cuba Enrique Perez Serantes 1883 1968 el obispo que salvo a Fidel Castro Encuentro ISBN 978 84 9920 998 2 via Google Books THE WALL OF FACES Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund Obituary vvmf org EXILIADO CUBANO MUERTO EN VIETNAM Diario Las Americas January 1967 Edwardo Enrique Cazanas Diaz Specialist Four from Rhode Island Vietnam War Casualty www honorstates org Revolving Door Pedro Pablo Permuy Employment Summary OpenSecrets www opensecrets org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Enriqueta Garcia Martin amp oldid 1207962597, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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