Perfecto Lacoste

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Succeeded byAlejandro Rodríguez y Velazco
ConstituencyRepublic of Cuba
Perfecto Lacoste
Mayor of Havana
In office
January 14, 1899  July 1, 1900
Preceded byPedro Esteban y González-Larrinaga, Marquis de Esteban[1]
Succeeded byAlejandro Rodríguez y Velazco
ConstituencyRepublic of Cuba
Cuban Secretary of Agriculture, Commerce and Industry
In office
May 1, 1900  1902
Preceded byJuan Ríus Rivera
Succeeded byManuel Luciano Díaz
ConstituencyRepublic of Cuba
Personal details
BornPerfecto Lacoste y Grave de Peralta
1861
DiedMay 5 1905
SpouseLucia Lacoste[2]

Perfecto Lacoste was the first Mayor of Havana elected under American occupation and later Secretary of Agriculture of Cuba.[3]

Perfecto Lacoste y Grave de Peralta was born in Holguín, Cuba in the early 1860s. His uncle was Cuban General Julio Grave de Peralta.[4] The Ten Years' War caused his family to flee Cuba when he was 13 years old.[5]

He attended university in the United States, went into business in Cincinnati, and later obtained American citizenship.[6]

Preceding the Spanish-American War, he returned to Cuba. Lacoste became a well-known planter, establishing the Lacoste sugar plantations in Pinar del Río Province.[7] During the war, damages were sustained on his sugar plantation through the acts of both insurgent and Spanish forces. Forces of Máximo Gómez and Antonio Maceo encamped on the plantation on January 6, 1896.[8]

Politics

Mayor

At the time of Spanish evacuation, he was appointed by American military authorities, succeeding Pedro Esteban González-Larrinaga, Marquis de Esteban. Lacoste took up his post on January 1, 1899, serving as the Mayor of the City of Havana.[9][10]

Secretary of Agriculture

When the Cuban Secretary of Agriculture Juan Ríus Rivera resigned on May 1, 1900, Lacoste assumed the position.[11] Lacoste was appointed the Secretary of the Department of Agriculture, Commerce, and Industry by Military Governor of Cuba Leonard Wood and resigned as Mayor of Havana.[12]

Following the 1901 Cuban general election, he was replaced by Manuel Luciano Díaz under the Palma government.[13]

In 1902, he released a report titled Opportunities in Cuba, published by Lewis, Scribner, & Co.[14]

Cuban sugar producers, led by Lacoste, influenced the Bliss-Palma protocol's sugar tariff provisions in the proposed 1903 treaty with the U.S.[15]

Ventures

Death

References

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