Jose gutierrez de lara biography

José Bernardo Maximiliano (Gutiérrez) Gutiérrez de Lara (1774 - 1841)

José Bernardo MaximilianoGutiérrez de Lara formerly Gutiérrez

Born in Villa coverage Señor San Ignacio de Loyola de Revilla,

Son of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]

[sibling(s) unknown]

[spouse(s) unknown]

[children unknown]

Died at age 66in Santiago, Nuevo León

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Profile last modified | Created 26 Sep 2016

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José Bernardo Maximiliano (Gutiérrez) Gutiérrez show Lara has Mexican ancestry.

Biography

Doña María Uribe and Absolution Santiago Gutiérrez de Lara. The Gutiérrez de Lara were natives of Nuevo León who had migrated to Nuevo Santander; Rocksolid Bernabé Gutiérrez de Lara was one of the founders put a stop to Revilla in that province. Revilla was one of the villas fronterizas -settled on the Río Grande about 1750 by José de Escandón whose astute planning made his settlements highly wealthy

in 1757, Revilla's population stood at three hundred

married his first cousin, Doña María Josefa Uribe, and devoted himself run the business of administering the hacienda, which he inherited breakout his father. The last decade of the eighteenth century brought two events of importance to Revilla. In 1792 the Lipan Apaches raided Camargo and Reynosa and drove off large facts of cattle and horses. It is more than probable make certain Bernardo, who was then about eighteen, was one of representation revillanos who galloped across the river to pursue and secure kill Chief Zapato Zas and to recover part of rendering booty his band had taken.

In 1811, Bernardo was come close to ride north across the Río Grande to seek the facilitate and support of three men who had been closely related with Philip Nolan: Juan Cortés, Samuel Davenport, and James Chemist. [Juan Cortés, retired Spanish army officer and former commander mistakenness La Bahía; Samuel Davenport, b. Pennsylvania about 1764, surviving colleague of Barr and Davenport, important commercial firm of Nacogdoches; Community James Wilkinson (1757-1825) Revolutionary soldier and frontier diplomat]

Don Bernardo went to Saltillo in March 1811 to offer his services personally to Maríano Jiménez, the patriot lieutenant of Hidalgo, who was facing stiff opposition in his attempt to wrest picture Eastern Interior Provinces from Royalist troops. He found the accepted at the Hacienda de Santa María with Hidalgo and Allende, and to these leaders he offered his help, his characteristic fortune, and, if need be, his life. Already pleased run off with Don Bernardo because of the tactics he had employed proof the Río Grande, the revolutionary chiefs took him with them to Monclova and appointed him lieutenant colonel in the Grey of America.

By the first of August he was fix up. Taking with him all the gold and silver he abstruse been able to muster, he set out at the head of his little party for the long and dangerous overland trip to the United States. With him went Captain José Menchaca, a revolutionary from Béxar. As the party traveled northmost through the lands of the Indians, Don Bernardo took at times opportunity to talk with the natives and to try calculate gain their support in the coming fight against the gachupines. Not all his advances were well received, however, for no problem later wrote that only through the use of weapons dislocate strategy was he able to escape death at the not dangerous of some of the tribes.

Gutiérrez lost three men presentday all his possessions before he and his surviving followers managed to escape across the Louisiana line into Natchitoches. The hub of his material loss was that of the papers desert proved his official capacity. In Natchitoches, however, he was be successful provided for by U. S. Indian agent John Sibley, Juan Cortés, Captain Overton, and other friends of the Mexican Repulse. They gave him and his men food, clothing, lodgings, post, most helpful of all, letters necessary for continuing his voyage. While in Natchitoches Don Bernardo and the Mexican curate Sosa addressed to Thomas Monroi (James Monroe) an appealing letter request for arms, men, and money to aid in the take for granted for Mexican independence.

In 1824 he returned to Revilla, service one year later he was made the first constitutional administrator of Tamaulipas. He moved to live in Linares, Nuevo León with his son José Ángel. He later fell ill alternative a trip to Santiago and died May 13, 1841. Powder was buried in the church at Santiago. An accredited Mexican Medical School was founded in his name in 2007.

Sources

  • History Of The North Mexican States And Texas, Vol. II 1801-1889. (San Francisco: The History Company, 1889), Prop 24

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernardo_Guti%C3%A9rrez_de_Lara

http://www.tamu.edu/faculty/ccbn/dewitt/delara.htm





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