José Molina (mayor) explained

José Molina
Order1:19th
Office1:Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico
Term Start1:1822
Term End1:1822
Predecessor1:José Casimiro Ortíz de la Renta
Successor1:José Mercado
Birth Date:c. 1782[1]
Birth Place:Cataluña, Spain
Death Date:c. 1862
Death Place:Ponce, Puerto Rico
Nationality:Spaniard
Occupation:Farmer;[2] Hacendado[3]

José Molina (a.k.a. José Molinas) was Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico in 1822.[1]

Biography

Molina was born in Cataluña, Spain, around 1782. In 1827 he was a landowner and slave owner, and owned an hacienda. He lived in Ponce's Barrio Oeste (now [2018] known as Barrio Segundo). He married Petrona Villar, from Ponce, and had seven children: Maria Socorro (ca. 1813), Carmen (ca. 1821), Felicita (ca. 1823), Rita (ca. 1825), Margarita (ca. 1826), Jose Maria (ca. 1828), and Dolores (ca. 1829).[1]

Molina is best remembered for heading a collection of funds to be donated by well-to-do residents in Barrio Playa for the construction of a watch tower on the east side of Barrio Playa, at Point Peñoncillo, in order to add to the security of the Port of Ponce which, at the time, was being threatened by pirates. This collection was in response to concerns from military commander Ramon Gonzalez.[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Eli D. Oquendo-Rodriguez. Pablo L. Crespo-Vargas, editor. A Orillas del Mar Caribe: Boceto histórico de la Playa de Ponce – Desde sus primeros habitantes hasta principios del siglo XX. First edition. June 2017. Editorial Akelarre. Centro de Estudios e Investigaciones del Sur Oeste de Puerto Rico (CEISCO). Lajas, Puerto Rico. Page 25.
  2. Eduardo Neumann Gandía. Verdadera y Auténtica Historia de la Ciudad de Ponce. 1913. San Juan, Puerto Rico: Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña. p. 14.
  3. Francisco Antonio Scarano. Sugar and slavery in Puerto Rico: the municipality of Ponce, 1815-1849. Appendix A: "On the National Origin of the Hacendados." page 443. Ph.D. Thesis. Columbia University. 1978. (Citing Archivo General de Puerto Rico, Protocolos Notariales-Ponce, 1817-19, Alexandro Ordoñez, 181, ff. 110-111, 1820-22, Matias Vidal, 1821, ff. 291-297.)