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Máximo Gómez

Máximo Gómez y Báez (November 18, 1836 – June 17, 1905) was a Dominican Generalissimo in Cuba's War of Independence (1895–1898). He was known for his controversial scorched-earth policy, which entailed dynamiting passenger trains and torching the Spanish loyalists' property and sugar plantations—including many owned by Americans.[3] He greatly increased the efficacy of the attacks by torturing and killing not only Spanish soldiers, but also Spanish sympathizers.[4] By the time the Spanish–American War broke out in April 1898, Gómez had the Spanish forces on the ropes. He refused to join forces with the Spanish in fighting off the United States, and he retired to a villa outside of Havana after the war's end.

Máximo Gomez
Born(1836-11-18)November 18, 1836
Baní, Peravia, Dominican Republic
DiedJune 17, 1905(1905-06-17) (aged 68)
Havana, La Havana, Cuba
Allegiance Dominican Republic (1854–1861)
 Spain (1861–1865)
 Cuba (1868–1898)
Service/branchArmy
Years of service1852 – 1905
RankGeneralissimo[1]
Battles/warsDominican War of Independence

Dominican Restoration War
Ten Years' War

Cuban War of Independence

Early life

Gómez was born on November 18, 1836 in the town of Baní, in the province of Peravia, in what is now the Dominican Republic. During his teenage years, he joined in the battles against the frequent Haitian incursions of Faustin Soulouque in the 1850s.[1] He was later trained as an officer of the Spanish Army at the Zaragoza Military Academy (in Spanish) in Spain. He had arrived originally in Cuba as a cavalry officer, a captain, in the Spanish Army and fought alongside the Spanish forces in the Dominican Annexation War (1861–1865), earning promotion from captain to commander in a famous victory over the Dominican general, Pedro Florentino.[5]

In Cuba, he married Bernarda Toro, who accompanied him during the war.[6]

Changes allegiance

After the Spanish forces were defeated and fled the Dominican Republic in 1865 by the order of Queen Isabel II, many supporters of the Annexionist cause left with them, and Gómez moved his family to Cuba.

Gómez retired from the Spanish Army and soon took up the rebel cause in 1868, helping transform the Cuban Army's military tactics and strategy from the conventional approach, favored by Thomas Jordan and others. He gave the Cuban mambises their most feared tactic, the "machete charge."

Cuban War of Independence

 
Drawing of Máximo Gómez in 1868

On October 25, 1868, during the Battle of Pino de Baire, Gómez led a machete charge on foot, ambushing a Spanish column and obliterating it; the Spanish suffered 233 casualties. The Spanish Army was terrified of the charges because most were infantry troops, mainly conscripts, who were fearful of being cut down by the machetes. Because the Cuban Army always lacked sufficient munitions, the usual combat technique was to shoot once and then charge the Spanish.

In 1871, Gómez led a campaign to clear Guantánamo from forces loyal to Spain, particularly the rich coffee growers, who were mostly of French descent and whose ancestors had fled from Haiti after the Haitians had slaughtered the French. Gómez carried out a bloody but successful campaign, and most of his officers went on to become high-ranking officers, including Antonio and José Maceo, Adolfo Flor Crombet, Policarpo Pineda "Rustán."

After the death in combat of Major General Ignacio Agramonte y Loynáz in May 1873, Gómez assumed the command of the military district of the province of Camaguey and its famed Cavalry Corps. Upon first inspecting the corps, he concluded that they were the best trained and disciplined in the nascent indigenous Cuban Army, and they would significantly contribute to the war for independence.

On February 19, 1874, Gómez and 700 other rebels marched westward from their eastern base and defeated 2,000 Spanish troops at El Naranjo. The Spaniards lost 100 killed in action, 200 wounded in action; the rebels incurred 150 casualties.[7] A battalion of 500 Chinese fought under the command of Gómez in the Battle of Las Guasimas (March 1874). The battle cost the Spanish 1,037 casualties and the rebels 174 casualties.[7] However, the rebels had exhausted their resources: the unusual departure from guerrilla tactics had proved a costly enterprise.[8]

In early 1875, with fewer than 2,000 men, Gómez crossed the Trocha—a string of Spanish military fortifications—and burned 83 plantations around Sancti Spíritus and freed their slaves.[9] However, the conservative Revolutionary leaders feared the consequences of these actions and diverted troops away from Gómez' army, causing the campaign to fizzle.[9] In 1876, Gómez surrendered his command when he was told by General Carlos Roloff that the officers of Las Villas would no longer follow his orders since he was Dominican.[9]

Puerto Rican conflict

In the interlude between the two Cuban independence wars, Gómez held odd jobs in Jamaica and Panama (among them, he supervised a laborers' brigade during the construction of the Panama Canal), but he remained as an active player for the cause of Cuban independence as well as that for the rest of the Antilles. For example, when Puerto Rico experienced a period of severe political repression in 1887 by the Spanish governor, Romualdo Palacio, which led to the arrest of many local political leaders, including Román Baldorioty de Castro, Gómez offered his services to Ramón Emeterio Betances, the previous instigator of the island's first pro-independence revolution, the Grito de Lares, who was then exiled in Paris.[citation needed] Gómez sold most of his personal belongings to finance a revolt in Puerto Rico and volunteered to lead any Puerto Rican troops if any such revolt occurred.[citation needed] The revolt was deemed unnecessary later that year, when the Spanish government recalled Palacio from office to investigate charges of abuse of power from his part, but Gómez and Betances established a friendship and logistical relationship that lasted until Betances's death, in 1898.[citation needed]

Promotion to general

Gómez rose to the rank of Generalíssimo[1] of the Cuban Army, a rank akin to that of Captain General or General of the Army, because of his superior military leadership.

He adapted and formalized the improvised military tactics that had first been used by Spanish guerrillas against Napoleon Bonaparte's armies into a cohesive and comprehensive system, at both the tactical and the strategic levels. The concept of insurrection and insurgency and the asymmetric nature thereof can be traced intellectually to him.

 
Maximo Gomez at age 45

He was shot in the neck in 1875 while he was crossing the fortified line or Trocha from Júcaro in the south to Morón, in the north; he was leading the failed attempt to invade Western Cuba. He then always wore a kerchief around his neck to cover the bullet hole, which remained open after it healed (he usually plugged it with a wad of cotton). His second and last wound came in 1896 while he was fighting in the rural areas outside Havana and completing a successful invasion of Western Cuba.

Fabian strategy

He was wounded only twice during 15 years of guerrilla warfare against an enemy far superior in manpower and logistics. In contrast, his most trusted officer and second-in-command, Lieutenant General Antonio Maceo y Grajales, was shot 27 times in the same span of time, with the 26th being the mortal wound. Gómez's son and Maceo's aide-de-camp, Francisco Gómez y Toro, nicknamed "Panchito," was killed while he was trying to recover Maceo's dead body in combat on December 7, 1896.

Soon afterward, Gómez implemented another warfare technique that proved to be very successful in crippling Spanish economic interests in Cuba: torching sugar cane haciendas and other strategic agricultural assets. He personally abhorred the idea of "setting to fire the product of our laborers' work over more than 200 years in a few hours" but countered that the state of misery most of the laborers still experienced, if that was the price to pay to redeem them from the economic system that enslaved them ¡Bendita sea la tea! ("Blessed be the torch!")

Proposal to join Spanish–American War

On March 5, 1898, the Captain-General of Cuba, Ramón Blanco y Erenas, proposed for Gómez and his Cuban troops to join him and the Spanish Army in repelling the United States in the face of the Spanish–American War. Blanco appealed to the shared heritage of the Cubans and Spanish and promised the island's autonomy if the Cubans would help fight the Americans. Blanco had declared, "As Spaniards and Cubans we find ourselves opposed to foreigners of a different race, who are of a grasping nature.... The supreme moment has come in which we should forget past differences and, with Spaniards and Cubans united for the sake of their own defense, repel the invader. Spain will not forget the noble help of its Cuban sons, and once the foreign enemy is expelled from the island, she will, like an affectionate mother, embrace in her arms a new daughter amongst the nations of the New World, who speaks the same language, practices the same faith, and feels the same noble Spanish blood run through her veins."[10] Gómez refused to adhere to Blanco's plan.[11]

Retirement

 
Gómez depicted on the artist/progress proof designed by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing for Cuban silver certificates (1936).

At the end of the Cuban Independence War in 1898, he retired to a villa outside of Havana. He refused the presidential nomination that was offered to him in 1901, which he was expected to win unopposed, mainly because he always disliked politics. Also, after 40 years of living in Cuba, he still felt that being Dominican-born, he should not become the civil leader of Cuba.

He died in his villa in 1905 and was interred in the Colón Cemetery, Havana.

Honors

  • Gómez's portrait is portrayed on Cuban currency on the 10 peso bill.
  • A major avenue in the city of Santo Domingo, in the Dominican Republic, is named after him.
  • A secondary school is named after him in his hometown of Baní, Dominican Republic.
  • A provincial university was named in his honor: Universidad Máximo Gómez Báez de Ciego de Ávila, in Cuba[1].
  • The current Dominican Senator for Peravia Province, Wilton Guerrero, has proposed changing the name of the province to "Máximo Gómez Province."[12]
  • A statue is in the front of the Instituto Preuniversitario in Camaguey, Cuba; he is seen on a horse with his scarf galloping while he is armed as if leading a machete charge.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c . cubagob.cu. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2013-10-03.
  2. ^ Roorda, Eric Paul (2016). Historical Dictionary of the Dominican Republic. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9780810879065.
  3. ^ Jones, Howard (2009). Crucible of Power: A History of American Foreign Relations to 1913. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 270.
  4. ^ Ledbetter, Mark David. America's Forgotten History. Part Three: A Progressive Empire. p. 398.
  5. ^ Tone, John Lawrence (2006). War and Genocide in Cuba, 1895-1898. Univ of North Carolina Press. p. 61.
  6. ^ Stoner, K. Lynn (1991-04-30). From the House to the Streets: The Cuban Woman's Movement for Legal Reform, 1898-1940. Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-1149-2.
  7. ^ a b Clodfelter, Micheal (2017). Warfare and Armed Conflicts: A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures, 1492-2015, 4th ed. McFarland. p. 306. ISBN 978-0786474707.
  8. ^ Simons, Geoff. Cuba: From Conquistador to Castro. Springer. p. 148.
  9. ^ a b c Scheina, Robert L. (2003). Latin America's Wars: Volume 1. Potomac Books.
  10. ^ "Proposicion del Capitan General Ramon Blanco Erenas". autentico.org.
  11. ^ "Ramón Blanco y Erenas". Library of Congress.
  12. ^ Listin Diario. "Wilton apoya Peravia sea provincia Máximo Gómez". listindiario.com.

External links

  • Horas de Tregua by Máximo Gómez and Néstor Carbonell in the Digital Library of the Caribbean

máximo, gómez, cuban, town, cuba, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, gómez, second, maternal, family, name, báez, báez, november, 1836, june, 1905, dominican, generalissimo, cuba, independence, 1895, 1898, known, controversial, scorched, earth, pol. For the Cuban town see Maximo Gomez Cuba In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Gomez and the second or maternal family name is Baez Maximo Gomez y Baez November 18 1836 June 17 1905 was a Dominican Generalissimo in Cuba s War of Independence 1895 1898 He was known for his controversial scorched earth policy which entailed dynamiting passenger trains and torching the Spanish loyalists property and sugar plantations including many owned by Americans 3 He greatly increased the efficacy of the attacks by torturing and killing not only Spanish soldiers but also Spanish sympathizers 4 By the time the Spanish American War broke out in April 1898 Gomez had the Spanish forces on the ropes He refused to join forces with the Spanish in fighting off the United States and he retired to a villa outside of Havana after the war s end Maximo GomezBorn 1836 11 18 November 18 1836Bani Peravia Dominican RepublicDiedJune 17 1905 1905 06 17 aged 68 Havana La Havana CubaAllegiance Dominican Republic 1854 1861 Spain 1861 1865 Cuba 1868 1898 Service wbr branchArmyYears of service1852 1905RankGeneralissimo 1 Battles warsDominican War of Independence Battle of Santome 2 Dominican Restoration WarTen Years War Battle of Las GuasimasCuban War of Independence Contents 1 Early life 2 Changes allegiance 3 Cuban War of Independence 3 1 Puerto Rican conflict 3 2 Promotion to general 3 3 Fabian strategy 3 4 Proposal to join Spanish American War 4 Retirement 5 Honors 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEarly life EditGomez was born on November 18 1836 in the town of Bani in the province of Peravia in what is now the Dominican Republic During his teenage years he joined in the battles against the frequent Haitian incursions of Faustin Soulouque in the 1850s 1 He was later trained as an officer of the Spanish Army at the Zaragoza Military Academy in Spanish in Spain He had arrived originally in Cuba as a cavalry officer a captain in the Spanish Army and fought alongside the Spanish forces in the Dominican Annexation War 1861 1865 earning promotion from captain to commander in a famous victory over the Dominican general Pedro Florentino 5 In Cuba he married Bernarda Toro who accompanied him during the war 6 Changes allegiance EditAfter the Spanish forces were defeated and fled the Dominican Republic in 1865 by the order of Queen Isabel II many supporters of the Annexionist cause left with them and Gomez moved his family to Cuba Gomez retired from the Spanish Army and soon took up the rebel cause in 1868 helping transform the Cuban Army s military tactics and strategy from the conventional approach favored by Thomas Jordan and others He gave the Cuban mambises their most feared tactic the machete charge Cuban War of Independence Edit Drawing of Maximo Gomez in 1868 On October 25 1868 during the Battle of Pino de Baire Gomez led a machete charge on foot ambushing a Spanish column and obliterating it the Spanish suffered 233 casualties The Spanish Army was terrified of the charges because most were infantry troops mainly conscripts who were fearful of being cut down by the machetes Because the Cuban Army always lacked sufficient munitions the usual combat technique was to shoot once and then charge the Spanish In 1871 Gomez led a campaign to clear Guantanamo from forces loyal to Spain particularly the rich coffee growers who were mostly of French descent and whose ancestors had fled from Haiti after the Haitians had slaughtered the French Gomez carried out a bloody but successful campaign and most of his officers went on to become high ranking officers including Antonio and Jose Maceo Adolfo Flor Crombet Policarpo Pineda Rustan After the death in combat of Major General Ignacio Agramonte y Loynaz in May 1873 Gomez assumed the command of the military district of the province of Camaguey and its famed Cavalry Corps Upon first inspecting the corps he concluded that they were the best trained and disciplined in the nascent indigenous Cuban Army and they would significantly contribute to the war for independence On February 19 1874 Gomez and 700 other rebels marched westward from their eastern base and defeated 2 000 Spanish troops at El Naranjo The Spaniards lost 100 killed in action 200 wounded in action the rebels incurred 150 casualties 7 A battalion of 500 Chinese fought under the command of Gomez in the Battle of Las Guasimas March 1874 The battle cost the Spanish 1 037 casualties and the rebels 174 casualties 7 However the rebels had exhausted their resources the unusual departure from guerrilla tactics had proved a costly enterprise 8 In early 1875 with fewer than 2 000 men Gomez crossed the Trocha a string of Spanish military fortifications and burned 83 plantations around Sancti Spiritus and freed their slaves 9 However the conservative Revolutionary leaders feared the consequences of these actions and diverted troops away from Gomez army causing the campaign to fizzle 9 In 1876 Gomez surrendered his command when he was told by General Carlos Roloff that the officers of Las Villas would no longer follow his orders since he was Dominican 9 Puerto Rican conflict Edit In the interlude between the two Cuban independence wars Gomez held odd jobs in Jamaica and Panama among them he supervised a laborers brigade during the construction of the Panama Canal but he remained as an active player for the cause of Cuban independence as well as that for the rest of the Antilles For example when Puerto Rico experienced a period of severe political repression in 1887 by the Spanish governor Romualdo Palacio which led to the arrest of many local political leaders including Roman Baldorioty de Castro Gomez offered his services to Ramon Emeterio Betances the previous instigator of the island s first pro independence revolution the Grito de Lares who was then exiled in Paris citation needed Gomez sold most of his personal belongings to finance a revolt in Puerto Rico and volunteered to lead any Puerto Rican troops if any such revolt occurred citation needed The revolt was deemed unnecessary later that year when the Spanish government recalled Palacio from office to investigate charges of abuse of power from his part but Gomez and Betances established a friendship and logistical relationship that lasted until Betances s death in 1898 citation needed Promotion to general Edit Gomez rose to the rank of Generalissimo 1 of the Cuban Army a rank akin to that of Captain General or General of the Army because of his superior military leadership He adapted and formalized the improvised military tactics that had first been used by Spanish guerrillas against Napoleon Bonaparte s armies into a cohesive and comprehensive system at both the tactical and the strategic levels The concept of insurrection and insurgency and the asymmetric nature thereof can be traced intellectually to him Maximo Gomez at age 45 He was shot in the neck in 1875 while he was crossing the fortified line or Trocha from Jucaro in the south to Moron in the north he was leading the failed attempt to invade Western Cuba He then always wore a kerchief around his neck to cover the bullet hole which remained open after it healed he usually plugged it with a wad of cotton His second and last wound came in 1896 while he was fighting in the rural areas outside Havana and completing a successful invasion of Western Cuba Fabian strategy Edit He was wounded only twice during 15 years of guerrilla warfare against an enemy far superior in manpower and logistics In contrast his most trusted officer and second in command Lieutenant General Antonio Maceo y Grajales was shot 27 times in the same span of time with the 26th being the mortal wound Gomez s son and Maceo s aide de camp Francisco Gomez y Toro nicknamed Panchito was killed while he was trying to recover Maceo s dead body in combat on December 7 1896 Soon afterward Gomez implemented another warfare technique that proved to be very successful in crippling Spanish economic interests in Cuba torching sugar cane haciendas and other strategic agricultural assets He personally abhorred the idea of setting to fire the product of our laborers work over more than 200 years in a few hours but countered that the state of misery most of the laborers still experienced if that was the price to pay to redeem them from the economic system that enslaved them Bendita sea la tea Blessed be the torch Proposal to join Spanish American War Edit On March 5 1898 the Captain General of Cuba Ramon Blanco y Erenas proposed for Gomez and his Cuban troops to join him and the Spanish Army in repelling the United States in the face of the Spanish American War Blanco appealed to the shared heritage of the Cubans and Spanish and promised the island s autonomy if the Cubans would help fight the Americans Blanco had declared As Spaniards and Cubans we find ourselves opposed to foreigners of a different race who are of a grasping nature The supreme moment has come in which we should forget past differences and with Spaniards and Cubans united for the sake of their own defense repel the invader Spain will not forget the noble help of its Cuban sons and once the foreign enemy is expelled from the island she will like an affectionate mother embrace in her arms a new daughter amongst the nations of the New World who speaks the same language practices the same faith and feels the same noble Spanish blood run through her veins 10 Gomez refused to adhere to Blanco s plan 11 Retirement Edit Gomez depicted on the artist progress proof designed by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing for Cuban silver certificates 1936 At the end of the Cuban Independence War in 1898 he retired to a villa outside of Havana He refused the presidential nomination that was offered to him in 1901 which he was expected to win unopposed mainly because he always disliked politics Also after 40 years of living in Cuba he still felt that being Dominican born he should not become the civil leader of Cuba He died in his villa in 1905 and was interred in the Colon Cemetery Havana Honors EditMaximo Gomez Command Academy an educational institution of the Cuban Revolutionary Armed Forces Maximo Gomez Park a park in Miami Florida United States better known as Domino Park was named in his honor citation needed Gomez s portrait is portrayed on Cuban currency on the 10 peso bill The British alternative rock band Maximo Park named itself after a park in Florida which had been named in his honor A major avenue in the city of Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic is named after him A secondary school is named after him in his hometown of Bani Dominican Republic A provincial university was named in his honor Universidad Maximo Gomez Baez de Ciego de Avila in Cuba 1 The current Dominican Senator for Peravia Province Wilton Guerrero has proposed changing the name of the province to Maximo Gomez Province 12 A statue is in the front of the Instituto Preuniversitario in Camaguey Cuba he is seen on a horse with his scarf galloping while he is armed as if leading a machete charge See also EditLuis Marcano Modesto DiazReferences Edit a b c MAJOR GENERAL MAXIMO GoMEZ BAEZ cubagob cu Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2013 10 03 Roorda Eric Paul 2016 Historical Dictionary of the Dominican Republic Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9780810879065 Jones Howard 2009 Crucible of Power A History of American Foreign Relations to 1913 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 270 Ledbetter Mark David America s Forgotten History Part Three A Progressive Empire p 398 Tone John Lawrence 2006 War and Genocide in Cuba 1895 1898 Univ of North Carolina Press p 61 Stoner K Lynn 1991 04 30 From the House to the Streets The Cuban Woman s Movement for Legal Reform 1898 1940 Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 1149 2 a b Clodfelter Micheal 2017 Warfare and Armed Conflicts A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures 1492 2015 4th ed McFarland p 306 ISBN 978 0786474707 Simons Geoff Cuba From Conquistador to Castro Springer p 148 a b c Scheina Robert L 2003 Latin America s Wars Volume 1 Potomac Books Proposicion del Capitan General Ramon Blanco Erenas autentico org Ramon Blanco y Erenas Library of Congress Listin Diario Wilton apoya Peravia sea provincia Maximo Gomez listindiario com External links EditHoras de Tregua by Maximo Gomez and Nestor Carbonell in the Digital Library of the Caribbean Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maximo Gomez amp oldid 1139448316, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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