Francisco García-Escámez | |
Birth Name: | Francisco García-Escámez e Iniesta |
Birth Date: | 1 March 1893 |
Birth Place: | Cádiz |
Death Place: | Santa Cruz de Tenerife |
Placeofburial: | , Santa Cruz de Tenerife |
Placeofburial Coordinates: | 28.4556°N -16.2731°W |
Rank: | General |
Unit: | Spanish Legion |
Commands: | Captaincy General of the Canary Islands |
Battles: | Rif War Spanish Civil War |
Awards: | Laureate Cross of Saint Ferdinand Grand Cross (with White Decoration) of Military Merit (1943) Grand Cross of the Order of Beneficence (1947) (1951) |
Spouse: | Isabel García-Ramos de la Corte |
Children: | 3 (Francisco, Antonio and Carmen) |
Francisco García-Escámez e Iniesta, 1st Marquess of Somosierra (Cádiz, 1 March 1893 – Santa Cruz de Tenerife, 12 June 1951) was a Spanish military officer who participated in the coup d'état against the government of the Second Republic, and then fought for the Nationalist faction in the Civil War.
As an infantry soldier, he obtained the Laureate Cross of Saint Ferdinand for his actions in the Rif War. Stationed in Navarre, with the rank of colonel, he collaborated with General Emilio Mola in the preparation of the uprising.
Once the Civil War began in July 1936, he commanded a Nationalist column composed of about a thousand men, mostly Falangist and Requeté volunteers, with which he left Pamplona in the direction of Madrid, overcoming strong Republican resistance in Alfaro; with his column he came to occupy Logroño on 20 July, arresting General, military commander, accusing him of indecision. The next day he passed through Soria and reached the outskirts of Guadalajara without taking it. On 23 July he arrived in Aranda de Duero, taking command of all the forces in the area and forming two groups – one of them commanded by Colonel Bartolomé Rada. (For a few months this group was called "Division of Soria", receiving the number 53 to later become 72nd and now, definitively, 73rd.) On 10 October he conquered Sigüenza, and subsequently commanded troops on the Somosierra fronts, and in the Battle of Jarama in February 1937, as well as later in the Battle of the Ebro. He was promoted to brigadier general in 1938. As a general, in the Aragon Offensive he commanded one of the four divisions of the under Yagüe, occupying Caspe on 17 March.
He was military governor of Barcelona after the Civil War.[1] On 13 April 1942, he was appointed military governor of Seville. At that time he was major general.[2]
Subsequently, on 2 March 1943, he was appointed Captain General of the Canary Islands,[3] As military commander of the Canary Islands, he carried out certain work of economic, social and cultural development that allowed overcoming the precarious conditions imposed by the isolation of the archipelago, caused by the Civil War and World War II.[4]
On 30 September 1943, he was awarded the Grand Cross (with White Decoration) of Military Merit.[5] After his death, Francisco Franco granted him the title of .[6] Currently, García-Escámez is buried in the, in the of the city of Santa Cruz de Tenerife.