Federico Fernández Cavada’s eldest brother, Emilio, has …
Years: 1871 - 1871
July
Federico Fernández Cavada’s eldest brother, Emilio, has remained in Philadelphia, where he is an active fundraiser for the Cuban insurrection, relaying the news that he receives from his brothers to the exiled strategists and other Cuban exiles in Philadelphia and New York.
The funds he raises are funneled together with arms and munitions to the insurgent forces in the island.
Fernández Cavada has taken charge of the military division in Camagüey and, together with fellow rebel Bernabé de Varona, has planned an armed invasion on the western coast of Cuba.
The Cuban Liberation Army had approved a resolution to permit Fernández Cavada to travel to the United States, where he had intended to seek support among his military contacts for the cause of Cuban independence.
He had traveled to "Cayo Cruz" in the northern coast of Camagüey to wait for his transportation, but had been captured by the Spanish gunboat Neptuno and taken to Puerto Principe, and had then been transferred to the town of Nuevitas.
Tried by the Spanish authorities, he is sentenced to die by firing squad.
Generals George Gordon Meade, Daniel Sickles and Ulysses S. Grant, his military compatriots in the United States, attempt in vain to obtain his release.
Fernández Cavada is executed in July 1871.
His last words are "Adios Cuba, para siempre" (Goodbye Cuba, forever).
Locations
People
- Carlos Manuel de Céspedes
- Daniel Sickles
- Federico Fernández Cavada
- George Gordon Meade
- Ulysses S. Grant
