Miguel de la Torre explained

Miguel de la Torre y Pando
Office:Governor of Puerto Rico
Order:
96th
Term Start:17 January 1822
Term End:1837
Order2:Captain General of Venezuela
Term Start2:1820
Term End2:1822
Predecessor2:Pablo Morillo
Successor2:Francisco Tomás Morales
Profession:General, Governor-General of Puerto Rico
Nationality:Spanish
Birth Date:13 December 1786
Birth Place:Bernales, Basque Country, Spain
Death Date:1843 (aged c. 56)
Death Place:Madrid, Spain
Branch:Spanish Army
Rank:General
Commands:Expeditionary Army of Costa Firme, La Victoria Infantry Regiment
Battles:

Miguel de la Torre y Pando, conde de Torrepando (13 December 1786, in Bernales – 1843, in Madrid) was a Spanish General, Governor and Captain General, who served in Spain, Venezuela, Colombia and Puerto Rico during the Spanish American wars of independence and afterwards.

Early career

At the age of fourteen he joined the Spanish Army as a soldier during the War of the Second Coalition and quickly distinguished himself and four years later he joined the Guardia de Corps. He fought well during the Spanish War of Independence, reaching the level of colonel by 1814.

Venezuela and New Granada

The following year he was assigned to the Expeditionary Army of Costa Firme which participated in a military expedition to South America led by Field Marshall Pablo Morillo. Within this expeditionary army he was given command of the "La Victoria" Infantry Regiment and participated in the Spanish reconquest of New Granada.[1]

Promoted to brigadier after New Granada was subdued, La Torre led a royalist army into the Colombian and Venezuelan Llanos. There he unsuccessfully defended Angostura against Manuel Piar in April 1817, and led the loyalist forces down the Orinoco River as they fought their way to the Atlantic Ocean. For the next three years he continued to serve in the Spanish army of Venezuela. During this period he married a Criolla, María de la Concepción Vegas y Rodríguez del Toro, a member of the powerful Rodríguez del Toro family and cousin once removed to Bolívar's late wife, Maria Teresa Rodríguez del Toro y Alayza, and fourth cousin to Bolívar himself.

After the restoration of the Spanish Constitution of 1812 in 1820, the government appointed him governor (jefe político superior) and captain-general of Venezuela, a post he held until 1822. He participated in the negotiations between Bolívar and Morillo and the later meeting in Santa Ana, where the two signed a six-month truce and a treaty regularizing the rules of engagement. After Morillo resigned and left Venezuela at the end of 1820, La Torre became the head of the royalist army, in addition to his other duties. As such he oversaw the loss suffered by royalist forces at the Battle of Carabobo on 24 June 1821, which effectively ended Spanish control of Venezuela. The following year he was replaced in his offices by Francisco Tomás Morales.

Puerto Rico

In 1822, the government appointed him captain general of Puerto Rico, arriving on the island in December 1823. The following year he was also appointed governor of the island. In collaboration with his intendant, Dr. José Domingo Díaz, whom he knew from his days in Venezuela, La Torre's main concern was preventing a rebellion on the island. Carefully controlling the government, he instituted a policy which he called "dance, drink and dice" (baile, botella y baraja, similar to the Romans "bread and circuses"), implying that a well entertained population will not think about revolution. Despite La Torre's wariness of the island's liberal tendencies, his long administration was key to the development of large-scale sugar production on the island, something which had been created decades earlier in Cuba. He also continued supporting from Puerto Rico the few royalist guerrilla bands that existed in Venezuela. Under his watch, roads, homes, bridges, and Spanish fortifications were constructed.[2]

As governor and captain general, he oversaw the temporary restoration of the Spanish Constitution of 1812 in 1836, while a new constitution was written. He was also made the Count of Torrepando for his services. The following year he retired from public life and settled in Madrid.

Legacy

In Ponce, Puerto Rico there is a street, Calle Simon de la Torre (aka, Calle Torre), leading to Panteón Nacional Román Baldorioty de Castro which is named after him.

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Book: Cartagena de Indias en la Independencia . 2011 . Banco de la República . 2011 . 978-958-664-238-5 . Calvo Stevenson . Haroldo . 1. . Cartagena . July 1, 2011 . 349 . es . El Ejército Expedicionario de Tierra Firme . Meisel Roca . Adolfo.
  2. Web site: Relacion circunstanciada de todas las obras publicas emprendidas en la isla de Puerto-Rico en el año de 1827. : Por disposicion del Escmo. Sr. D. Miguel de la Torre, su gobernador y capitan general, é igualmente los gastos que han causado en los diversos ramos á que corresponden : Puerto Rico. Internet Archive . 23 October 2016 . es . 20 July 2019.