Large Hard Cover Book
569 Pages 8"X11"X1.25"
...close to 3 pounds
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GRANNY'S TREASURE ISLAND
Great research book with hundreds of military photographs and dozens of charts including several pull outs.
Too many pages and images to show here so I display the images of the table of contents to
give you a better picture of this awesome reference material.
The entire book and spine are in perfect well kept condition!
General:
This is a brief biography of the life of Cuban Major General Calixto
Ramón García Iñiguez.
Introduction:
General
Garcia’s struggles against Spanish tyranny lasted from 1868 to 1898.
When he died General Garcia was first buried in Arlington National Cemetery
with full U.S. military honors. Archbishop Ireland spoke highly of
him in his funeral mass. The Masons erected a bronze tablet where
he died at the Raleigh Hotel in Washington. The Cuban general was
very large, strong, educated, hot tempered man but always logical in battle
he is known as the strategist. He was descended from a well known
Spanish family with a warrior tradition. His grandfather Calixto
Garcia de Luna e Izquierdo, had fought with the Spanish in the critical
Battle of Carabobo in what is now Venezuela (1821) and losing one hand
was one of a small number of Spanish survivors. His grandfather,
who dropped the aristocratic de Luna part when he took refuge in Cuba,
was jailed for demanding emancipation for the slaves, constitutional freedom
for all, and it is reported trying to hang a priest who opposed this, on
March 18, 1837.
.There is a semi-mythical report that General Calixto Garcia Iñiguez
was descended from King Calixto Garcia-Iñiguez through his mother
Lucia Iñiguez Landon. This king was the son of Iñigo
Arista (and hence Iñiguez) founder of the Arista (named from the
oak and meaning strong in battle) dynasty of Pamplona. King Calixto
Garcia Iñiguez is recorded as captured and ransomed by the Vikings
in 852. There is no complete English language biography of General Calixto
Garcia. Even the books in Spanish cited in the biography only tell
selected parts of his life and long military career. A summary (some
corrections from sources cited at end of article are included within brackets)
of the general’s life is found in his obituary in Harper’s Weekly
(December 24, 1898 p. 1263):
“Destiny, as we all know, is a sarcastic creature, and it happens
often that folks die just when it seems to observers that they have got
ready to live. It was certainly so with General Calixto Garcia, who died
of pneumonia, in Washington, on December 11 (1898). It is only a
few weeks since he came from Cuba at the head of the special Cuban commission
which was empowered to communicate the views of the Cuban leaders to our
government.
General Garcia was fifty-eight (59) years old, and for more than
half his life his chief concern had been the overthrow of Spanish rule
in Cuba. He was born in Holguin, in 1840 (August 4, 1839), and was
one of the instigators of the Cuban rebellion of 1868. For five years
he was active and successful in fights and forays against the Spaniards,
but in September 1873 (September 6, 1974) he was surprised with twenty
(16) men by 500 (sic). Seeing that there was no chance to get away,
and unwilling to be captured alive, he put the muzzle of his (0.45 caliber)
pistol in his mouth and pulled the trigger. The ball, instead of
going through his brain, came out of his forehead between his eyes, and
he recovered. He was sent to Spain and held prisoner until the peace
of Zanjon was signed in 1877 (1878). Then he went to Paris, and hence
to New York and back to Cuba, and presently took part with Maceo in what
was called “the little war” (1879-1880). Captured again, his life
was spared, and he was sent back to Spain, where he lived for seventeen
(15) years under police supervision in Madrid. There he supported
his family, which grew large, by teaching.”
“When the last revolution broke, out in 1894, he grew restless again,
and finally slipped away from Madrid and reached New York in November,
1895. He commanded the Hawkings filbustering expedition which came
to grief, but after two more unsuccessful attempt reached Cuba in March
1896. His record as Cuban leader after that is a matter of general
knowledge. His cooperation with the American Forces in the Capture
of Santiago fairly brought him in at the death of the Spanish rule that
he fought so long.”
“Of the three Cuban generals of greatest note in the last revolution
(Antonio Maceo and Máximo Gómez)
only Gomez now survives.”
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