Augusto Arango

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Augusto Arango
Birth nameAugusto Arango y Agüero
BornMarch 18, 1830
Puerto Príncipe, Captaincy General of Cuba, Spanish Empire
DiedJanuary 26, 1869
Puerto Príncipe, Captaincy General of Cuba, Spanish Empire
Buried
Allegiance Cuba
Service / branchCuban Liberation Army
RankGeneral
CommandsCamagüey Province
Battles / wars
RelationsNapoleón Arango

Augusto Arango (March 18, 1830 – January 26, 1869) was a Cuban revolutionary[1] and mambí General who was assassinated by Spanish authorities in Cuba during the Ten Years' War.

Augusto Arango y Agüero was born in Puerto Príncipe (now Camagüey Province), Spanish Cuba on March 18, 1830.

He was a physician who dedicated much of his time to revolutionary activities. He participated in the independence uprising led by his relative, Joaquín de Agüero, on July 4, 1851, in Camagüey.[2]

He relocated and lived in Greenwich Village in New York in the 1860s.[3]

In 1866, he joined, along with many other notable Camagüeyans including Salvador Cisneros Betancourt, Ignacio Agramonte, and Bernabé Varona, the "Tínima" Masonic lodge.[4] As early as July 1868, the Masonic Order of Tínima deliberated on revolutionary activities in the Cuban province. Carlos Manuel de Céspedes coordinated various Revolutionary committees and groups to convene for an insurrection. In August 1868, the conspirators, including Arango, first assembled at San Miguel del Rompe, a Las Tunas farm property in Oriente.[5]

Ten Years' War

Death

References

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