Vicente Aguilar Cubero (April 5, 1808 – April 26, 1861) was a Costa Rican politician.[1]
Biography
editVicente Aguilar Cubero was born on April 5, 1808, to José Alejo Aguilar and Joaquina Cubero Escalante.[2] Aguilar Cubero was identified as mulatto when he was baptized and was the great-grandchild of a mulatto slave woman.[1] He married on January 27, 1839 with Maria Dolores Salazar y Aguado.[2]
Cubero played an important role in the development of coffee production in Costa Rica on a commercial level in the country and in doing so became one of the richest men in the country. During several years he had a commercial society with Juan Rafael Mora Porras, President of the Republic from 1849 to 1859 and was one of the conspirators involved in the 1859 coup.[1]
During his political career he has several positions, among them Magistrate of the Supreme Court of Justice, Vice-president of the Republic and President of the Congress (September–October 1856), Minister of Property, War, and the Navy (1859–1860), Second in designation to the Presidency (1860–1861) and then Secretary of Property, War and the Navy (1860–1861).[1]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d Fernández Molina, José Antonio (2016). "Aguilar Cubero, Vicente (1808–1861), Costa Rican Business Leader and Vice President". In Knight, Franklin W.; Gates, Henry Louis (eds.). Dictionary of Caribbean and Afro-Latin American Biography. New York: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acref/9780195301731.013.50631. ISBN 9780199935796.
- ^ a b Lobo, Tatiana; Obando, Mauricio Meléndez (1997). Negros y Blancos: Todo Mezclado (in Spanish). Editorial de la Universidad de Costa Rica. p. 163. ISBN 978-9977-67-450-6.