Ramón Grau

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Ramón Grau
Ramón Grau

In office
10 September 1933 – 15 January 1934
Vice President None
Preceded by Carlos Manuel de Céspedes y Quesada
Succeeded by Carlos Hevia

In office
10 October 1944 – 10 October 1948
Vice President Raul de Cardenas Echarte
Preceded by Fulgencio Batista
Succeeded by Carlos Prío

Born 13 September 1887
La Palma, Pinar del Rio Cuba
Died 28 July 1969
Havana, Cuba
Nationality Flag of Cuba Cuban
Political party Cuban Revolutionary Party
Other political
affiliations
PRC-A
Occupation Medical Doctor

Dr. Ramón Grau San Martin (September 13, 1887 in La Palma, Pinar del Rio, Cuba - July 28, 1969 in Havana, Cuba) was a Cuban physician and the 7th and 15th President of Cuba (1933-34, 1944-48).

Contents

[edit] Youth

His father, a rich tobacco grower, wanted him to continue in his footsteps, but he wanted to be a doctor. He studied at the University of Havana and graduated in 1908 with a degree of Doctor of Medicine. He then lived in Europe to expand his medical knowledge and returned to Cuba in 1921 and became a professor of physiology at the University of Havana.

[edit] Activism and the Revolution of 1933

In the 1920's he was involved with the student protests against then-president Gerardo Machado, and in 1931 he was jailed. Upon his release he went into exile in the United States.

Though he initially became President, he was eventually marginalized by army chief of staff Fulgencio Batista, who distanced the military from other elements of the revolution and became de facto leader of Cuba behind the scenes. Batista forced Grau's resignation in 1934. That same year he went on to found the Partido Auténtico.

[edit] Constitution of 1940

Grau was instrumental in passing the 1940 Cuban constitution. For much of the Constitutional Convention, he served as the presiding officer (even after his coalition was pushed into the minority after the defection of one of the parties that formed it). He would eventually come to be replaced by Carlos Márquez Sterling.

In 1940 Grau ran in the presidential election and lost to Fulgencio Batista. Most independent observers at the time qualified the 1940 election as free and fair elections.

[edit] Election of 1944

In 1944 Grau won the popular vote in the presidential election and served until 1948. Despite his initial popularity in 1933, accusations of corruption tainted his administration's image, and a sizable number of Cubans began to distrust him.

After turning over the presidency to his protégé, Carlos Prío, in 1948, Grau virtually withdrew from public life. He emerged again in 1952 to oppose Batista's coup d'etat. Grau ran for president in the 1954 and 1958 Batista-sponsored elections but withdrew just prior to each election day, claiming government fraud. After the Cuban revolution and the rise of Fidel Castro in 1959, Grau retired to his home in Havana, where he died on July 28, 1969.

[edit] References

  • Otero, Juan Joaquin (1954). Libro De Cuba, Una Enciclopedia Ilustrada Que Abarca Las Artes, Las Letras, Las Ciencias, La Economia, La Politica, La Historia, La Docencia, Y ElProgreso General De La Nacion Cubana - Edicion Conmemorative del Cincuentenario de la Republica de Cuba, 1902-1952.  (Spanish)
  • Argote-Freyre, Frank. Fulgencio Batista: Volume 1, From Revolutionary to Strongman. Rutgers University Press, Rutgers, New Jersey. ISBN 0-8135-3701-0. 2006.
Preceded by
Gerardo Machado
President of Cuba
10 September 1933-15 January 1934
Succeeded by
Carlos Hevia
Preceded by
Fulgencio Batista
President of Cuba
1944-1948
Succeeded by
Carlos Prío