fbpx
Wikipedia

Pedro Pablo Cazañas

Pedro Pablo Cazañas y Garcia (1902–1978) was a Cuban judge and politician.

Pedro Pablo Cazañas
Pedro Pablo Cazañas, Circa 1938
Born
Pedro Pablo Cazañas y García

(1902-12-05)December 5, 1902
DiedJune 28, 1978(1978-06-28) (aged 75)
NationalityCuban, Cuban-American
Other namesDoctor Pedro Cazañas
EducationUniversity of Havana (Doctorate of Law)
Occupation(s)Judge, politician

Early life edit

Pedro Pablo Cazañas y García was born December 5, 1902, in Matanzas, Cuba to Francisco E. Cazañas and Enriqueta García Martín.[1] His family was of considerable wealth and he was raised on their Buena Vista estate near Varadero.[2] Cazañas would remain in Cuba for much of his life before emigrating to the United States in the late 1960s as a result of the Cuban Revolution.

Career edit

Cazañas attended the University of Havana, earning a doctorate in law, after which Cazañas was often referred to as "Doctor Pedro (Pablo) Cazañas" in official documents, journals, and media.[3][4] Cazañas served as a traveling judge, holding court in various locations across Cuba that required a judge on a case-by-case basis before becoming an increasingly prominent politician in the Cuban judiciary as a municipal and then regional judge.[5]

In the 1930s Cazañas married Raquel María Díaz Teresa,[6] thereafter Raquel Díaz Cazañas.[7] The marriage was significant due to the Díaz family's importance in the San José de los Ramos area of Matanzas. Her father, José Lorenzo Díaz, was an administrator in the Cuban judicial system, working in the Juzgado de Primera Instancia (Court of First Instance) of the broader Colón area until his death in 1954.[8] The Díaz family was also regarded for replacing the small chapel in the town center with a grand church.[2] Raquel Díaz and Cazañas had three children - Raquel, Marta, and Eduardo - all born in Havana and raised in the Cazañas family's properties in Matanzas.[9][10]

After the coup d'état of 1952, Cazañas' stature in Cuba's judiciary rose further through the rest of the 1950s during the regime of Fulgencio Batista, with whom Cazañas had ties.[2] Batista had planned to attend and serve as a witness in the wedding of Cazañas’ eldest child, Raquel, to high-profile psychiatrist and Agrupación Católica Universitaria leader Rene de la Huerta, a friend of the Cazañas family.[11][12] However Batista was unable to attend due to his required presence in state visit abroad, therefore a top representative was sent to the ceremony in his place. Cazañas’ support of Batista would be a recurring source of generational tension with his children, each of whom were opposed to Batista.[2] By the end of the decade and Batista's rule, Cazañas would serve as a highly ranked Juez de Instrucción (Judge of Instruction).[13][14]

Later life edit

The Cazañas family opposed Fidel Castro and, following the Cuban Revolution, some were able to leave the island to take refuge in the United States and seek life in democracy there. The first of his children to leave Cuba was Eduardo, in 1959, who would later join the United States Armed Forces. Cazañas' younger daughter, Marta, was deeply involved in the counter-revolution against Castro and left to the United States with her future husband Jesús Permuy, a leader of the counter-revolution, via Venezuela following the failure of the 1961 Bay of Pigs Invasion.[2]

Cazañas, his wife, their eldest daughter, his siblings and several other relatives remained in Cuba and were unable to leave for much of the 1960s.[2] When his son Eduardo died in combat during the Vietnam War, the family sought to attend his funeral, however it was difficult for the remaining family in Cuba to participate due to diplomatic strains with the United States. Cazañas and his wife went to Mexico as a simpler way to reach the United States, however Cazañas contracted tuberculosis and was ultimately unable to attend the services and ceremonies.[15] The couple relocated permanently to Miami by 1968 and their eldest daughter's family joined them the following year.[2]

After emigrating to the United States, he lived out the rest of his life in retirement. He died in Miami on June 28, 1978, at the age of 75.[1][16]

Family edit

Immediate ancestry edit

Both Pedro Pablo Cazañas’ ancestry and descendants have been a prominent force in Europe (especially Spain), the Caribbean, and the United States. In his immediate family, Cazañas’ grandfather, Francisco José Cazañas y Peraza (born 1840)[17] was directly descendant[18][19] of the Peraza and Bobadilla families that were influential in the Castilian royal court, ruled the Canary Islands, and participated in the conquest of the New World, including Cuba and Hispaniola.[2][1][20] It was this Peraza lineage of the family that traveled from Spain to Cuba and the United States in the nineteenth century.[20] Francisco J. Cazañas Peraza (sometimes written as Francis), would gain American citizenship, and was a landowner in New Rochelle, New York. Therefore, his son, Francisco Eduardo (Pedro Pablo's father), was born in New Rochelle, giving him dual citizenship with the United States and Cuba.[21] Several generations of the Cazañas family would maintain regular business travel to the United States and be educated there[22][23] before ultimately migrating back to the United States permanently following the Cuban Revolution. In Cuba the Cazañas family were significant landholders in Matanzas and owned several large estates, manor houses, and plantations, including the historic sugar plantation Dos Rosas, which was purchased in 1868 by Bartolomé Cazañas, great-grandfather of Pedro Pablo Cazañas.[24] The country 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 and their daughter, both named Rosa.[24]

Cazañas's mother, Enriqueta García y Martín, was heiress of the García family of Spain. At the age of sixteen, Enriqueta was the subject of a poem included in the 1878 Jardín Matancero ("Matanzas Garden").[25] The publication was a literary collection dedicated to the debutantes of the Matanzas region's most prominent families in which a flower-themed poem was dedicated to each emerging ("blossoming") socialite. As an adult she owned the vast finca Buena Vista overlooking Varadero, its champion horses, and yacht while her husband Francisco would manage the estate's staff and grounds.[2] The property was damaged in the Spanish–American War and became the center of the couple's high-profile claims to the Spanish Treaty Claims Commission.[26] The couple, which traveled frequently to the United States and would occasionally reside there, first filed their claims with the commission in 1902,[27] the year Pedro Pablo was born. It took six years to settle their claims, in which Francisco's legal background and US ties proved useful. Their claims were finally settled in 1908 when the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States awarded the couple total compensation of $13,138[28] ($9,738 to Enriqueta and $3,400 to Francisco), equivalent to over $360,000 in 2020, adjusted for inflation.[29] They received the second highest awards granted by the commission, and the highest among private citizens not representing a corporation.[28] Her brother (Pedro Pablo's uncle), Félix García y Martín, was a prominent doctor and insurrection figure during the Cuban War of Independence[30] who became the second highest-ranking doctor in the Matanzas province[31] and was later Chief Doctor of the Port of Matanzas and Head of Administration.[32]

Extended ancestry edit

Pedro Pablo Cazañas’ ancestry is noted for several prominent lines. In addition to the Perazas, Bobadillas, García's and Martín's, he is directly descended from several other ancient Spanish and other European (French, English) noble and royal families, including the GuzmánHaro, Lara, de Luna, Martel, and more distantly, the Plantagenets.[20] He is descendant of the line of the Martel family that migrated from Carolingian France to Spain by way of Aragon and then to Seville during the Reconquista era [33] and is descendant of the Plantagents through Eleanor of England.[34]

Progeny edit

His son, Eduardo Enrique Cazañas y Díaz, emigrated to the United States in 1959 and quickly embraced his adopted homeland. He settled in Rhode Island, attending university to become an agricultural engineer and married his girlfriend in 1965. Eduardo is most known for his military service. With the escalation of the Vietnam War in the mid-1960s, he voluntarily enlisted in the United States Army to serve his adopted country and received the rank of SP-4 as an Armor Reconnaissance Specialist.[35] He died in combat in 1967 at the age of 22, his death was covered in both Spanish and English[36] media, including the Diario Las Américas, which described him as the son of "Doctor Pedro Cazañas."[4] He received the Purple Heart for his actions in battle and is included in the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C.[35][37]

Both his daughters, Raquel and Marta, would have high-profile marriages to Cuban leaders. Raquel married Rene de la Huerta, a noted psychiatrist, writer, and a leader of the Agrupación Católica Universitaria in Cuba, Spain, and the United States.[11] Cazañas' younger daughter, Marta Cazañas, was married to Cuban architect, community leader, and human rights advocate Jesús Permuy. The couple met in and were both prominent figures of the Anti-Castro Counter-Revolution and relocated to the United States following the Bay of Pigs Invasion.[2] In the United States Marta became an influential fine art dealer, curator, promoter, and collector.[38] She managed and co-founded the historic Permuy Gallery in Coral Gables, Florida, one of the first Cuban fine art galleries established in South Florida and credited with helping establish the early Miami Latin art market.[39] Her children and grandchildren have in turn become prominent figures in art, architecture, politics, and finance. Marta's second son, Pedro Pablo Permuy, was named after Cazañas and served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense (DASD) in the Clinton Administration[40] and later as President of the US-Spain Council, where he would host and organize events with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and King Felipe VI of Spain.[41]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Pedro Pablo Cazañas y García". geni_family_tree. 5 December 1902.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Marta Cazañas Permuy - Obituary". Legacy.com. 29 May 2020.
  3. ^ Aires, Club Universitario de Buenos (November 24, 1951). "Gaceta Oficial" – via Google Books.
  4. ^ a b "EXILIADO CUBANO MUERTO EN VIETNAM". Diario Las Americas. January 1967.
  5. ^ Cuba (July 26, 1931). "Gaceta oficial de la República de Cuba" – via Google Books.
  6. ^ "Ancestry - Sign In". www.ancestry.com.
  7. ^ "Ancestry - Sign In". www.ancestry.com.
  8. ^ "José Lorenzo Díaz". 26 August 1954.
  9. ^ "Ancestry - Sign In". www.ancestry.com.
  10. ^ "Ancestry - Sign In". www.ancestry.com.
  11. ^ a b 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 9788499209982 – via Google Books.
  12. ^ "Rene de la Huerta". geni_family_tree. 3 October 1920.
  13. ^ "Gaceta Oficial". 1957.
  14. ^ "Gaceta Oficial". 28 January 1957.
  15. ^ Invi Vivienda df.gob.mx
  16. ^ "Matches for Pedro Pablo Cazañas y García - MyHeritage". www.myheritage.com.
  17. ^ My Heritage [user-generated source]
  18. ^ "Ancestry - Sign In". www.ancestry.com.
  19. ^ Micaela Davila My Heritage [user-generated source]
  20. ^ a b c "Pedro Pablo Cazañas Garcia - Ancestry.com". www.ancestry.com.
  21. ^ "Ancestry - Sign In". www.ancestry.com.
  22. ^ Francisco Eduardo Cazanas (Report). Lehi, UT, USA: National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), U.S. Passport Applications, 1795–1925. 5 September 1919. p. Certificate Number 117007. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA); Washington D.C.; Volume 009: Cuba – via Ancestry.com.
  23. ^ Francisco Eduardo Cazanas in the U.S., Consular Registration Applications, 1916–1925 (Report). Provo, UT, USA: Department of State, Division of Passport Control Consular Registration Applications. 19 Feb 1918. Roll #: 32734_649063_0241 – via Ancestry.com [database on-line].
  24. ^ a b Ballester, Alberto Perret (2007). Dos Rosas. Editorial de Ciencias Sociales. ISBN 9789590610356.
  25. ^ Léon, José E. Ponce de (July 26, 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.
  26. ^ "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. July 26, 1902 – via Google Books.
  27. ^ "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. July 26, 1902 – via Google Books.
  28. ^ a b "Serial set (no.5001-5799)". July 26, 1908 – via Google Books.
  29. ^ "$13,138 in 1908 → 2020 | Inflation Calculator". www.in2013dollars.com.
  30. ^ Huston, E.S. (February 15, 2012). Francisco E. Cazañas and Enriqueta Garcia, His Wife, v. The United States. Gale, Making of Modern Law. ISBN 978-1275100978.
  31. ^ "Informe, mensual sanitario y demográfico de la República de Cuba". 1903.
  32. ^ Cuba (1928). "Colección legislativa".
  33. ^ Clavijo, José de Viera y (July 26, 1776). "Noticias de la historia general de las islas de Canaria" – via Google Books.
  34. ^ "Ancestry - Sign In". www.ancestry.com.
  35. ^ a b "The Wall of Faces". Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund.
  36. ^ Obituary vvmf.org
  37. ^ "Edwardo Enrique Cazanas-Diaz : Specialist Four from Rhode Island, Vietnam War Casualty". www.honorstates.org.
  38. ^ Bosch, Lynette (2004). Cuban-American Art in Miami: Exile, Identity and the Neo-Baroque. Ashgate Publishing. ISBN 0853319073.
  39. ^ Releases, Community News (January 20, 2020). "Gables architecture firm combines holiday party with art exhibition". Miami's Community News.
  40. ^ "Revolving Door: Pedro Pablo Permuy Employment Summary | OpenSecrets". www.opensecrets.org.
  41. ^ Agenda spainusa.org

pedro, pablo, cazañas, garcia, 1902, 1978, cuban, judge, politician, circa, 1938born, garcía, 1902, december, 1902matanzas, cubadiedjune, 1978, 1978, aged, miami, floridanationalitycuban, cuban, americanother, namesdoctor, pedro, cazañaseducationuniversity, ha. Pedro Pablo Cazanas y Garcia 1902 1978 was a Cuban judge and politician Pedro Pablo CazanasPedro Pablo Cazanas Circa 1938BornPedro Pablo Cazanas y Garcia 1902 12 05 December 5 1902Matanzas CubaDiedJune 28 1978 1978 06 28 aged 75 Miami FloridaNationalityCuban Cuban AmericanOther namesDoctor Pedro CazanasEducationUniversity of Havana Doctorate of Law Occupation s Judge politician Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Later life 4 Family 4 1 Immediate ancestry 4 2 Extended ancestry 4 3 Progeny 5 See also 6 ReferencesEarly life editPedro Pablo Cazanas y Garcia was born December 5 1902 in Matanzas Cuba to Francisco E Cazanas and Enriqueta Garcia Martin 1 His family was of considerable wealth and he was raised on their Buena Vista estate near Varadero 2 Cazanas would remain in Cuba for much of his life before emigrating to the United States in the late 1960s as a result of the Cuban Revolution Career editCazanas attended the University of Havana earning a doctorate in law after which Cazanas was often referred to as Doctor Pedro Pablo Cazanas in official documents journals and media 3 4 Cazanas served as a traveling judge holding court in various locations across Cuba that required a judge on a case by case basis before becoming an increasingly prominent politician in the Cuban judiciary as a municipal and then regional judge 5 In the 1930s Cazanas married Raquel Maria Diaz Teresa 6 thereafter Raquel Diaz Cazanas 7 The marriage was significant due to the Diaz family s importance in the San Jose de los Ramos area of Matanzas Her father Jose Lorenzo Diaz was an administrator in the Cuban judicial system working in the Juzgado de Primera Instancia Court of First Instance of the broader Colon area until his death in 1954 8 The Diaz family was also regarded for replacing the small chapel in the town center with a grand church 2 Raquel Diaz and Cazanas had three children Raquel Marta and Eduardo all born in Havana and raised in the Cazanas family s properties in Matanzas 9 10 After the coup d etat of 1952 Cazanas stature in Cuba s judiciary rose further through the rest of the 1950s during the regime of Fulgencio Batista with whom Cazanas had ties 2 Batista had planned to attend and serve as a witness in the wedding of Cazanas eldest child Raquel to high profile psychiatrist and Agrupacion Catolica Universitaria leader Rene de la Huerta a friend of the Cazanas family 11 12 However Batista was unable to attend due to his required presence in state visit abroad therefore a top representative was sent to the ceremony in his place Cazanas support of Batista would be a recurring source of generational tension with his children each of whom were opposed to Batista 2 By the end of the decade and Batista s rule Cazanas would serve as a highly ranked Juez de Instruccion Judge of Instruction 13 14 Later life editThe Cazanas family opposed Fidel Castro and following the Cuban Revolution some were able to leave the island to take refuge in the United States and seek life in democracy there The first of his children to leave Cuba was Eduardo in 1959 who would later join the United States Armed Forces Cazanas younger daughter Marta was deeply involved in the counter revolution against Castro and left to the United States with her future husband Jesus Permuy a leader of the counter revolution via Venezuela following the failure of the 1961 Bay of Pigs Invasion 2 Cazanas his wife their eldest daughter his siblings and several other relatives remained in Cuba and were unable to leave for much of the 1960s 2 When his son Eduardo died in combat during the Vietnam War the family sought to attend his funeral however it was difficult for the remaining family in Cuba to participate due to diplomatic strains with the United States Cazanas and his wife went to Mexico as a simpler way to reach the United States however Cazanas contracted tuberculosis and was ultimately unable to attend the services and ceremonies 15 The couple relocated permanently to Miami by 1968 and their eldest daughter s family joined them the following year 2 After emigrating to the United States he lived out the rest of his life in retirement He died in Miami on June 28 1978 at the age of 75 1 16 Family editImmediate ancestry edit Both Pedro Pablo Cazanas ancestry and descendants have been a prominent force in Europe especially Spain the Caribbean and the United States In his immediate family Cazanas grandfather Francisco Jose Cazanas y Peraza born 1840 17 was directly descendant 18 19 of the Peraza and Bobadilla families that were influential in the Castilian royal court ruled the Canary Islands and participated in the conquest of the New World including Cuba and Hispaniola 2 1 20 It was this Peraza lineage of the family that traveled from Spain to Cuba and the United States in the nineteenth century 20 Francisco J Cazanas Peraza sometimes written as Francis would gain American citizenship and was a landowner in New Rochelle New York Therefore his son Francisco Eduardo Pedro Pablo s father was born in New Rochelle giving him dual citizenship with the United States and Cuba 21 Several generations of the Cazanas family would maintain regular business travel to the United States and be educated there 22 23 before ultimately migrating back to the United States permanently following the Cuban Revolution In Cuba the Cazanas family were significant landholders in Matanzas and owned several large estates manor houses and plantations including the historic sugar plantation Dos Rosas which was purchased in 1868 by Bartolome Cazanas great grandfather of Pedro Pablo Cazanas 24 The country 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 and their daughter both named Rosa 24 Cazanas s mother Enriqueta Garcia y Martin was heiress of the Garcia family of Spain At the age of sixteen Enriqueta was the subject of a poem included in the 1878 Jardin Matancero Matanzas Garden 25 The publication was a literary collection dedicated to the debutantes of the Matanzas region s most prominent families in which a flower themed poem was dedicated to each emerging blossoming socialite As an adult she owned the vast finca Buena Vista overlooking Varadero its champion horses and yacht while her husband Francisco would manage the estate s staff and grounds 2 The property was damaged in the Spanish American War and became the center of the couple s high profile claims to the Spanish Treaty Claims Commission 26 The couple which traveled frequently to the United States and would occasionally reside there first filed their claims with the commission in 1902 27 the year Pedro Pablo was born It took six years to settle their claims in which Francisco s legal background and US ties proved useful Their claims were finally settled in 1908 when the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States awarded the couple total compensation of 13 138 28 9 738 to Enriqueta and 3 400 to Francisco equivalent to over 360 000 in 2020 adjusted for inflation 29 They received the second highest awards granted by the commission and the highest among private citizens not representing a corporation 28 Her brother Pedro Pablo s uncle Felix Garcia y Martin was a prominent doctor and insurrection figure during the Cuban War of Independence 30 who became the second highest ranking doctor in the Matanzas province 31 and was later Chief Doctor of the Port of Matanzas and Head of Administration 32 Extended ancestry edit Pedro Pablo Cazanas ancestry is noted for several prominent lines In addition to the Perazas Bobadillas Garcia s and Martin s he is directly descended from several other ancient Spanish and other European French English noble and royal families including the Guzman Haro Lara de Luna Martel and more distantly the Plantagenets 20 He is descendant of the line of the Martel family that migrated from Carolingian France to Spain by way of Aragon and then to Seville during the Reconquista era 33 and is descendant of the Plantagents through Eleanor of England 34 Progeny edit His son Eduardo Enrique Cazanas y Diaz emigrated to the United States in 1959 and quickly embraced his adopted homeland He settled in Rhode Island attending university to become an agricultural engineer and married his girlfriend in 1965 Eduardo is most known for his military service With the escalation of the Vietnam War in the mid 1960s he voluntarily enlisted in the United States Army to serve his adopted country and received the rank of SP 4 as an Armor Reconnaissance Specialist 35 He died in combat in 1967 at the age of 22 his death was covered in both Spanish and English 36 media including the Diario Las Americas which described him as the son of Doctor Pedro Cazanas 4 He received the Purple Heart for his actions in battle and is included in the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington D C 35 37 Both his daughters Raquel and Marta would have high profile marriages to Cuban leaders Raquel married Rene de la Huerta a noted psychiatrist writer and a leader of the Agrupacion Catolica Universitaria in Cuba Spain and the United States 11 Cazanas younger daughter Marta Cazanas was married to Cuban architect community leader and human rights advocate Jesus Permuy The couple met in and were both prominent figures of the Anti Castro Counter Revolution and relocated to the United States following the Bay of Pigs Invasion 2 In the United States Marta became an influential fine art dealer curator promoter and collector 38 She managed and co founded the historic Permuy Gallery in Coral Gables Florida one of the first Cuban fine art galleries established in South Florida and credited with helping establish the early Miami Latin art market 39 Her children and grandchildren have in turn become prominent figures in art architecture politics and finance Marta s second son Pedro Pablo Permuy was named after Cazanas and served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense DASD in the Clinton Administration 40 and later as President of the US Spain Council where he would host and organize events with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and King Felipe VI of Spain 41 See also editJudicial system of Cuba Enriqueta Garcia y Martin Peraza familyReferences edit a b c Pedro Pablo Cazanas y Garcia geni family tree 5 December 1902 a b c d e f g h i j Marta Cazanas Permuy Obituary Legacy com 29 May 2020 Aires Club Universitario de Buenos November 24 1951 Gaceta Oficial via Google Books a b EXILIADO CUBANO MUERTO EN VIETNAM Diario Las Americas January 1967 Cuba July 26 1931 Gaceta oficial de la Republica de Cuba via Google Books Ancestry Sign In www ancestry com Ancestry Sign In www ancestry com Jose Lorenzo Diaz 26 August 1954 Ancestry Sign In www ancestry com Ancestry Sign In www ancestry com a b 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 9788499209982 via Google Books Rene de la Huerta geni family tree 3 October 1920 Gaceta Oficial 1957 Gaceta Oficial 28 January 1957 Invi Vivienda df gob mx Matches for Pedro Pablo Cazanas y Garcia MyHeritage www myheritage com My Heritage user generated source Ancestry Sign In www ancestry com Micaela Davila My Heritage user generated source a b c Pedro Pablo Cazanas Garcia Ancestry com www ancestry com Ancestry Sign In www ancestry com Francisco Eduardo Cazanas Report Lehi UT USA National Archives and Records Administration NARA U S Passport Applications 1795 1925 5 September 1919 p Certificate Number 117007 National Archives and Records Administration NARA Washington D C Volume 009 Cuba via Ancestry com Francisco Eduardo Cazanas in the U S Consular Registration Applications 1916 1925 Report Provo UT USA Department of State Division of Passport Control Consular Registration Applications 19 Feb 1918 Roll 32734 649063 0241 via Ancestry com database on line a b Ballester Alberto Perret 2007 Dos Rosas Editorial de Ciencias Sociales ISBN 9789590610356 Leon Jose E Ponce de July 26 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 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 July 26 1902 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 July 26 1902 via Google Books a b Serial set no 5001 5799 July 26 1908 via Google Books 13 138 in 1908 2020 Inflation Calculator www in2013dollars com 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 1275100978 Informe mensual sanitario y demografico de la Republica de Cuba 1903 Cuba 1928 Coleccion legislativa Clavijo Jose de Viera y July 26 1776 Noticias de la historia general de las islas de Canaria via Google Books Ancestry Sign In www ancestry com a b The Wall of Faces Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund Obituary vvmf org Edwardo Enrique Cazanas Diaz Specialist Four from Rhode Island Vietnam War Casualty www honorstates org Bosch Lynette 2004 Cuban American Art in Miami Exile Identity and the Neo Baroque Ashgate Publishing ISBN 0853319073 Releases Community News January 20 2020 Gables architecture firm combines holiday party with art exhibition Miami s Community News Revolving Door Pedro Pablo Permuy Employment Summary OpenSecrets www opensecrets org Agenda spainusa org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pedro Pablo Cazanas amp oldid 1190944671, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.