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| Image courtesy of the National Archives and Records Administration |
DEGETAU, Federico, a Resident Commissioner from Puerto Rico; born in Ponce, P.R.,
December 5, 1862; attended the common schools and Central College of Ponce;
completed an academic course at Barcelona, Spain, and was graduated from the
law department of Central University of Madrid; was admitted to the bar and
commenced practice in Madrid, Spain; returned to Puerto Rico; one of the four
commissioners sent by Puerto Rico to ask Spain for autonomy; settled in San
Juan and continued the practice of law; member of the municipal council of San
Juan in 1897; mayor of San Juan in 1898; deputy to the Spanish Cortes of 1898;
appointed by General Henry secretary of the interior of the first American
cabinet that was formed in Puerto Rico in 1899; appointed by General Davis a
member of the insular board of charities; writer and author; first vice
president of the municipal council of San Juan in 1899 and 1900; president of
the board of education of San Juan in 1900 and 1901; elected as a Puerto Rican
Republican a Resident Commissioner to the United States in 1900; reelected in
1902, and served from March 4, 1901, until March 3, 1905; was not a candidate
for renomination in 1904; resumed the practice of law; died in Santurce, Puerto
Rico, January 20, 1914; interment in the Cemetery of San Juan.
BibliographyDegetau y Gonzalez, Federico.
The Political Status of Porto Rico. Washington, Globe Printing
Company, 1902; Mergal Llera, Angel M. Federico Degetau, Un Orientador De Su
Pueblo. Ph. D. Diss., Columbia University, 1945.
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