Federico Helguera, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

Federico Helguera

Argentinian businessperson and politician

Date of Birth: 13-Jun-1823

Place of Birth: Buenos Aires, Argentina

Date of Death: 17-Aug-1892

Profession: businessperson, politician

Nationality: Argentina

Zodiac Sign: Gemini


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About Federico Helguera

  • Juan Antonio Federico Helguera (13 June 1823 – 17 August 1892) was an Argentine businessman and politician who twice served as governor of Tucumán Province. He was the son of Crisanta Garmendia and Lieutenant Colonel Gerónimo Helguera, a veteran of the war of independence, and was baptized in Buenos Aires on 18 June 1823.
  • In 1836 his family was forced to relocate to Copiapó, Chile, after his father participated in a revolt against Alejandro Heredia.
  • He was educated in Santiago under the tutelage of his uncle, General Francisco Antonio Pinto, the former president of Chile.
  • In 1838, after the death of his father, he was forced to interrupt his studies and devote himself to business and mining.
  • In 1851 he spent a year in Tucumán, where his mother was living.
  • He lived in Chile until 1859, when he moved permanently to Tucumán Province. In 1864 he married Elvira Molina Cossio.
  • The union produced six children, of which three survived: Federico, Gerónimo, and María Elvira Josefa Helguera Molina.
  • He fathered another son out of wedlock, Aníbal Helguera Sánchez.
  • A member of the National Autonomist Party, Helguera was a provincial deputy during the periods 1868–69, 1870–71, 1875–76, 1879–80, and 1882–83; a provincial senator in 1886; a member of the Deliberative Council of the Government of the Federal Intervention in 1887; and governor of Tucumán Province in 1871–73 and 1877–78.
  • During his time in office he promoted public education and social services.
  • He made significant personal donations to the school that would later bear his name, and to improve the streets of San Miguel de Tucumán.
  • His personal connections enabled him to serve as a mediator in commercial interactions between northern Argentina and Chile.
  • Among other things, he was a pioneer in the export of tobacco, an industry which spurred the development of the city of Concepción and transformed it into an agricultural center.
  • In the course of his career, Helguera crossed the Andes more than thirty times.
  • His business interests were diverse and included foreign imports, cattle ranching, and real estate investments.He died on 17 August 1892 in San Miguel de Tucumán.

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