María Antonia Quintana Herrero Explained

Office1:Member of the House of Representatives
Term1:1936–1944
Term2:1955–1959
Constituency2:Santa Clara Province

María Antonia Quintana Herrero was a Cuban pedagogue and politician. She was elected to the House of Representatives in 1936 as one of the first group of women to enter Congress, serving until 1944, and again from 1955 to 1959.

Biography

A doctor of pedagogy,[1] she was a Republican Action candidate for the House of Representatives in Santa Clara Province in the 1936 general elections, the first in which women could vote. She was one of seven women elected.[2] She was re-elected in 1938 as a Democratic National Association candidate, and in 1942 as a Liberal Party candidate, serving until 1944.[3] She returned to the House of Representatives in 1955 after being elected for the Liberal Party in the 1954 elections, serving until 1959.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Colección histórica cubana y americana, volume 13, 1954, p74
  2. Velia Cecilia Bobes (2007) La nación inconclusa: (Re) constituciones de la ciudadanía y la identidad nacional en Cuba p236
  3. Julio César González Pagés (2003) En busca de un espacio--historia de mujeres en Cuba, p127
  4. http://www.latinamericanstudies.org/1955/DLM-12-14-1955-2-mujeres.pdf En Cuba sólo han sido Representates veinte mujeres, desde el 1936