Tomás Collazo Tejada Explained

Tomás Collazo
Birth Name:Tomás Collazo y Tejada
Birth Date:August 15, 1866
Death Date:March 30, 1924
Birth Place:Santiago de Cuba, Captaincy General of Cuba, Spanish Empire
Death Place:Havana, Cuba
Branch:Cuban Liberation Army
Rank:Colonel
Battles:
Relations:Enrique Collazo Tejada
Guillermo Collazo Tejada

Tomás Collazo Tejada (August 15, 1866 - March 30, 1924) was a Cuban statesman, mambí Colonel, and veteran of the Cuban War of Independence.

Early history

Tomás Collazo y Tejada was born in Santiago de Cuba in Santiago de Cuba Province on August 15, 1866.

He was the youngest of three brothers including Enrique Collazo Tejada and Guillermo Collazo Tejada.[1]

Cuban Liberation Army

He joined the ranks of the Cuban Liberation Army. In September 1895, Gen. Tomas and Enrique Collazo led an expedition that was reported by the Spanish consuls in Florida.[2] Returning to Cuba on the Horsa Expedition, they landed on the southern coast of Santiago de Cuba in November 1895. He was quickly incorporated into Gen. José Maceo's mambí force.[3]

Tomás Collazo Tejada held the position of Colonel and Chief of Staff of the Eastern Department in 1896.[4]

Political career

In 1910, the appointment of General Tomás Collazo as Extraordinary Envoy and Minister Plenipotentiary of the Republic in Paris was submitted for Senate approval. He was soon assigned as the Envoy Extradordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the President of France.[5] In February 1911, he attended United States Ambassador to France Hon. Robert Bacon's luncheon at the Embassy in Paris as the Minister of Cuba.[6] He held the position until his resignation in 1913.[7] [8]

Death

Tomás Collazo y Tejada died in Havana, Cuba on March 30, 1924.

Notes and References

  1. The Chicago Chronicle. (July 7, 1895). Cuba. Collazo's Expedition Plans.; 1895. Newspapers.com. Retrieved June 2, 2024, from https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-chicago-chronicle-cuba-collazos-ex/148542541/
  2. Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States. (1896). United States: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  3. Riera Hernández, M. (1985). Ejército Libertador de Cuba, 1895-1898: antecedentes históricos, fotos y biografías de mayores generales y generales de división y brigadas, anexos informativos. United States: EE.UU..
  4. Presno Bastiony, J. A. (1955). Universidad de La Habana. Cuba: Departamento de Intercambio Universitario.
  5. The Public Statutes at Large of the United States of America. (1923). United States: U.S. Government Printing Office.
  6. Bulletin of the Pan American Union. (1911). United States: The Union.
  7. The Cuba Review and Bulletin. (1913). United States: Munson Steamship Line.
  8. France-Amérique magazine: revue des nations américaines. (1914). France: (n.p.).