Don Eladio Sauza | |
Birth Date: | 16 June 1883 |
Birth Place: | Guadalajara, Mexico |
Death Place: | Guadalajara, Mexico |
Occupation: | Tequila Distiller |
Don Eladio Sauza (June 16, 1883 – July 22, 1946) ran the Sauza Tequila business from 1909 to 1946.
Eladio Sauza was born June 16, 1883, in the city of Tequila, Mexico to Don Cenobio Sauza (1842 - 1909) and Doña Margarita Madrigal Navarro. His father was the founder of the famous Sauza Tequila distillery.
At age 20 Eladio moved to Tecolotlan to take charge of his father's distillery, the Hacienda La Labor. There he learned the business of producing and selling tequila. Later he moved to Mazatlán in the Northeastern part of Mexico to establish a Sauza Tequila distribution center in order to increase exporting.
Eladio married Doña Silveria Mora Enriquez, with whom he had two children:
In 1909 Eladio returned to Guadalajara to mourn his father's death and to take control of the Sauza Tequila business. Shortly thereafter the Mexican Revolution threatened to expropriate Eladio's business and farmland. During the Revolution Eladio rallied patriotic sentiment and helped to establish tequila as the official spirit of Mexico.[1]
Eladio modernized and expanded the family business by opening branches in Monterrey and Mexico City, and a concession in Spain.[2]
Eladio's interests extended beyond the production of tequila, including:
Don Eladio Sauza died on July 22, 1946, at the age of 63. He left the Sauza Tequila business to his firstborn son, Francisco Javier Sauza.[1]