HISPANIC
HERITAGE MONTH (9/15 to 10/15)
HISPANICS IN GRAY AND BLUE
This fact sheet is prepared by the Education Committee of the Sons of Confederate Veterans for distribution by its members to professors, teachers, librarians, principals, superintendents, ethnic leaders, city officials, members of the press, and other groups interested in promoting an understanding of Hispanic contributions to United States history. The SCV hopes this information will enrich the celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month. This sheet may be freely copied and distributed without permission or notice; if republished in part or whole, please credit the Sons of Confederate Veterans.
Confederate:
• The Cuban patriot Narciso López
approached Mexican War heroes Jefferson Davis and Robert E. Lee in 1848 with the
request to head a liberation army to free Cuba from Spain -- Lee seriously
considered the offer, but turned it down.
• José Agustín Quintero, a Cuban poet and revolutionary, ably served
Confederate President Jefferson Davis as the C.S. Commissioner to Northern
Mexico, ensuring critical supplies from Europe flowed through Mexican ports to
the CSA.
• Santiago Vidaurri, governor of the border states of Coahuila and Nuevo León,
offered to secede northern Mexico and join the Confederacy; Jefferson Davis
declined, afraid the valuable "neutral" Mexican ports would be then
blockaded.
• The Spanish inventor Narciso Monturiol offered the Confederacy his advanced
submarine Ictineo to smash the Federal blockade. Never purchased, Jules Verne
apparently based the Nautilus on this, the world's most advanced vessel of the
day.
• Ambrosio José González, a famous Cuban revolutionary, served Confederate
general P.G.T. Beauregard as his artillery officer in Charleston; earlier, in
New York, he helped design the modern Cuban and (inversed) Puerto Rican flags.
• The Mexican Santos Benavides, a former Texas ranger, commanded the
Confederate 33rd Texas Cavalry, a Mexican- American unit which defeated the
Union in the 1864 Battle of Laredo, Texas. He became the only Mexican C.S.
colonel.
• Thomas Jordan, a Confederate general responsible for early codes used in
spying on Washington, after the war led the Cuban revolutionary army as
Commander-in-Chief, training its generals and in 1870 routing the Spaniards at
two-to-one odds.
• Lola Sanchez, of a Cuban family living near St. Augustine, had her sisters
serve dinner to visiting Federals, while she raced out at night and warned the
nearest Confederate camp. The Yankees thus lost a general, his unit and a
gunboat the next day.
• Loretta Janeta Velazquez, a Cuban woman, claimed to have fought in the war
disguised as a Confederate soldier, Lt. Harry Buford. She chronicled her amazing
and harrowing adventures in an account called The Woman in Battle.
• James Hamilton Tomb, a Confederate engineer on the innovative semi-submarine
ship David, accepted a post-war offer from the Brazilian emperor as technical
expert on torpedoes (submarine mines) in the Paraguayan War of 1865-1870.
• Hunter Davidson, a Confederate torpedo (submarine mine) scientist, assumed
the head of the Argentine Torpedo and Hydrographic Bureau for some years,
training its leadership, and retired to Asunción, Paraguay, where he is buried.
• John Randolph Tucker, head of the Charleston Confederate Naval Squadron,
accepted a post-war position as Vice-Admiral heading the combined
Peruvian-Chilean fleets in a Pacific conflict against Spanish coastal
incursions.
• John Newland Maffitt, who before the war captured illegal slave-trading
ships, served the Confederacy as the CSS Florida's commander. Afterwards,
he served in the Paraguayan war and commanded the Cuban gun-runner Hornet.
• Thomas Jefferson Page, a Confederate naval commander who learned of the
war's end in Cuba after sailing the ironclad CSS Stonewall from Spain,
settled in Argentina, his son becoming an Argentine naval commander, his
grandson an admiral.
• Mexican service influenced Confederate general Stonewall Jackson; he often
spoke Spanish endearments to his wife, Anna. • After the war, many prominent
governors and other Confederates established a colony, Carlotta, in Mexico.
Union:
• Admiral David G. Farragut, a
Southerner, was also Hispanic, his father Jorge Ferragut being from Spain.
Fluent in Spanish, the admiral served the Union navy and is remembered for
saying "Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead."
• Federico Fernández Cavada, a Cuban, served the Union army with distinction
at Gettysburg, and later wrote his famous Libby Life, describing Confederate
prison. After the war, he led the Cuban revolution, but was captured and
executed.
• Julio P. Garesché du Rocher, a promising Cuban of French extraction,
designed Washington's defenses and served General William Rosecrans as chief of
staff. At Stone's River (Tenn.), a cannon ball decapitated Garesché, ending a
brilliant career.
Revolution:
• Bernardo de Gálvez, Governor of
Spanish Louisiana, defeated the British during the American Revolution at Baton
Rouge, Mobile, Pensacola, St. Louis and in Michigan, diverting away thousands of
British troops as America's forgotten ally.
More Info? Check Out These Fine Books
Books:
• Richard H. Bradford, The
Virginius Affair, 1980
• Light Townsend Cummins, Spanish Observers and the American Revolution,
1775-1783, 1991
• James W. Daddysman, The Matamoros Trade: Confederate Commerce, Diplomacy
and Intrigue, 1984
• Ella Lonn, Foreigners in the Confederacy, 1965 (reprint, 1940
edition)
• Andrew Rolle, The Lost Cause: The Confederate Exodus to Mexico, 1965
• Ronnie C. Tyler, Santiago Vidaurri and the Southern Confederacy, 1973
• Frank de Varona (ed.), Hispanic Presence in the United States: Historical
Beginnings, 1993
• David Werlich, Admiral of the Amazon: John Randolph Tucker - His
Confederate Colleagues and Peru, 1990
• John O'Donnell-Rosales, Hispanic Confederates, list of several
thousand who served the Confederacy, 8 1/2 x 11, 90 pp., paper, (1997), reprint
1998. cost is $18.00. order: item #9362, Clearfield Publishing Co., 200 E. Eager
St., BAltimore, MD 21202