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Carlos García Vélez

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Carlos García Vélez
Birth nameCarlos García y Vélez
BornApril 29, 1867
Santa Rita, Jiguaní, Oriente Province, Captaincy General of Cuba, Spanish Empire
DiedNovember 6, 1963 (aged 95)
Havana, Cuba
Allegiance Cuba
Service/branchCuban Liberation Army
RankBrigadier general
Battles/wars
RelationsCalixto García (father)

Carlos García Vélez (April 29, 1867 - November 6, 1963) was a Cuban dental surgeon and army general during the Cuban War of Independence and Spanish–American War.

Early history

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Carlos García y Vélez was born in Santa Rita, Jiguaní, Oriente Province (now Granma Province), Spanish Cuba on April 29, 1867. He was the son of Cuban General Calixto García and Isabel Vélez Cabrera.[1] In his early years, he migrated to the United States.

He studied dentistry in the United States and graduated from Penn Dental.[2] By 1893, he worked as a dental surgeon in Madrid, Spain, and was noted in a medical paper for his use of anesthetic.[3] García Vélez was the director of The Madrid Stomatological Journal (Spanish: La Revista Estomatológica de Madrid) in 1894.[4] In 1895, he served as the recording secretary of the Spanish Society of Dentistry (Spanish: Sociedad Odontologica Española) formed in Madrid, to enact reform in dental education.[5]

Carlos García Vélez

During the War of 1895 and Spanish-American War in 1898, he was colonel in the ranks of the Cuban Liberation Army.[6] He was later promoted to Brigadier general.[7]

In 1898, his father Maj. Gen. Calixto García died in Washington, D.C.

He was among the founding members of the Cuban National League in March 1899.

On January 18, 1900, Military Governor of Cuba Leonard Wood created the office of General Inspector of Prisons of Cuba, appointing García Vélez.[8] He held the position of Inspector General of Prisons until 1902, working to clear the prison abuses that characterized Cuban prisons.[9]

In 1906, liberal military and political leaders including García Vélez advocated the creation of a regular military force to replace the Cuban Rural Guard.[10]

During the José Miguel Gómez administration, Gen. Carlos García Vélez was named the Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of the Republic of Cuba in the United States.[11] He attended the 1909 Wright Brothers Homecoming Celebration medals ceremony held on June 18, 1909, at the Montgomery County Fairgrounds in Dayton, Ohio.[12]

As a delegate of Cuba, he travelled to Buenos Aires for the 4th Pan-American Conference. The delegates were duly authorized to approve the recommendations, resolutions, conventions, and treaties which they might deem advantageous to the interests of the American republics.[13] Standing committees were appointed and García Vélez was assigned president of the first committee with the topic of 'Rules and Credentials'. He also participated in the fourth committee which included one member for each delegation.[14] On August 11, 1910, he attended the Pan-American Copyright Convention for the Republic of Cuba.[15] He attended the Pan-American Trademark Convention of 1910 on August 20.[16]

As plenipotentiary, he represented Cuba at Christiania, Paris, Chile, and Madrid. In 1913, he retained his place as a Cuban diplomat under the new administration of Mario García Menocal.[17]

In 1914, the Cuban Minister to the England who had been in Cuba on leave of absence, arrived in New York. Germans held the Cuban envoy's son in prison in October 1914. The Cuban Government withdrew its consuls from Germany and ordered its legation in Berlin closed.[18]

At the 5th International Conference of American States held at Santiago, Chile, March 25 to May 3, 1923, he served on the first committee known as the Political Committee with Manuel Márquez Sterling as delegates of Cuba.[19] He was the dean of the Cuban diplomatic corps and Cuban Minister to Great Britain in 1923.[20]

García Vélez was also the president of the Supreme Council of the Veterans' and Patriots' Association. From 1923 to 1924, he led the movement in opposition to the Alfredo Zayas y Alfonso administration's nonpayment of military retirement benefits.[21][22] In August 1923, at the Martí Theater in Havana, veterans led by García Vélez met to draft a list of demands for President Zayas.[23] He threatened violence if Congress passed specific railroad and port legislation, leading to the movement losing the support of El Heraldo de Cuba.[24] The Cuban junta, dedicated to overthrowing the current Zayas Administration, was covertly active in New York, where García Vélez arrived on March 20, 1924.[25] By the summer of 1924, the majority of leaders were either imprisoned or in exile, with some accepting Zayas' offer of amnesty.

Death

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Carlos García y Vélez died on November 6, 1963, in Havana, Cuba.[26]

References

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  1. ^ Survey of American Foreign Relations. (1929). United Kingdom: Council on Foreign Relations.
  2. ^ Pérez, L. A. (2012). On Becoming Cuban: Identity, Nationality, and Culture. United States: University of North Carolina Press.
  3. ^ The Medical Bulletin: A Monthly Journal of Medicine and Surgery. (1893). United States: F. A. Davis.
  4. ^ Anales de la Sociedad Dental de Bogotá. (1894). Colombia: La Luz.
  5. ^ The Dental Cosmos. (1895). United States: S. S. White Dental Manufacturing Company.
  6. ^ Dollero, A. (1916). Cuban Culture. Cuba: Impr. "El Siglo XX" de A. Miranda.
  7. ^ The American-Spanish War;: A History. (1899). United Kingdom: C.C. Haskell & son.
  8. ^ Fitzgibbon, R. H. (1964). Cuba and the United States, 1900-1935. United States: Russell & Russell.
  9. ^ Wood, L. (1902). Civil report of Brig. Gen. Leonard Wood. Report of Lieut. Frank R. McCoy, aid-de-camp. Report on a geological reconnaissance of Cuba, by C. Willard Hayes, T. Wayland Vaughan and Arthur C. Spencer [of the U.S. Geological Survey. Cuba: (n.p.).
  10. ^ Perez, L. A. J. (1976). Army Politics in Cuba, 1898-1958. United States: University of Pittsburgh Press.
  11. ^ Bulletin. (1909). United States: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  12. ^ "Andrew S. Iddings Wright Brothers Homecoming Celebration Collection (MS-192) | Wright State University". corescholar.libraries.wright.edu. Retrieved 2024-08-30.
  13. ^ Official Gazette of the United States Patent Office. (1911). United States: The Office.
  14. ^ Bulletin of the International Bureau of the American Republics. (1910). United States: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  15. ^ United States Statutes at Large: 1913-1915. (1915). United States: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  16. ^ The Statutes at Large, the United States from .... (1917). United States: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  17. ^ The Cuba Review and Bulletin. (1913). United States: Munson Steamship Line.
  18. ^ "GERMANS HOLD CUBAN ENVOY'S SON IN PRISON; Republic Sends Gen. Velez with $30,000 to Rescue Senor Quesada's Family. WILL CLOSE ITS LEGATION Attache Was Also Arrested as Russian Spy, but Released After Three Days. MINISTER BEGGED FOR AID Cuba Will Withdraw All Her Consuls from Germany and Ask Spain to Represent Her. - The New York Times". nytimes.com. Retrieved 2024-08-29.
  19. ^ Report of the Delegates of the United States of America to the Fifth International Conference of American States Held at Santiago, Chile, March 25 to May 3, 1923. (1924). United States: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  20. ^ South American Handbook. (1924). United Kingdom: Trade & Travel Publications Limited.
  21. ^ Whitney, R. (2017). State and Revolution in Cuba: Mass Mobilization and Political Change, 1920-1940. United States: University of North Carolina Press.
  22. ^ Lockmiller, D. A. (1955). Enoch H. Crowder: Soldier, Lawyer, and Statesman. United States: University of Missouri Studies.
  23. ^ Fermoselle, R. (1987). The Evolution of the Cuban Military, 1492-1986. United States: Ediciones Universal.
  24. ^ Schwartz, R. (1977). The Displaced and the Disappointed: Cultural Nationalists and Black Activists in Cuba in the 1920s. United Kingdom: University of California, San Diego.
  25. ^ "CUBAN JUNTA HERE PLANS OVERTHROW OF PRESIDENT ZAYAS; General Garcia-Velez Makes Many Charges Against the Present Government. - The New York Times". nytimes.com. Retrieved 2024-08-29.
  26. ^ Mena Serra, C. A. (1984). Historia de la odontología en Cuba. United States: Ediciones Universal.