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Luis Alberto Ferré Aguayo (February 17,
1904 – October 21, 2003) was a Puerto Rican engineer, industrialist, politician, philanthropist, and
a patron of the arts. He was the
third Governor of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico
from 1969 to 1973, and the founding father of the New Progressive
Party which advocates for Puerto Rico becoming a state of the United States of
America. He is a recipient of the Presidential Medal of
Freedom.
Early
life
Luis Alberto Ferré Aguayo was born in the southern city of Ponce, Puerto
Rico on February 17, 1904. Ferré's grandfather was a French
engineer that was involved in the construction of the Panama Canal before
settling in a residence in Cuba.[1]
Ferre's father, Antonio Ferré, was born in Cuba and immigrated to
Puerto Rico where he founded the company Puerto Rico Iron Works, in
Barrio Playa de Ponce, Ponce, Puerto Rico.[1][2] In
Puerto Rico Antonio met Maria Aguayo Casals, who was a cousin of Spanish cellist Pablo Casals.[1]
Antonio and Maria had four sons, Luis, Jose, Carlos and Herman
Ferré, and two daughters, Rosario and Isolina Ferré (a Roman Catholic nun).[1]
He studied Civil Engineering
at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, obtaining his bachelor's degree in
1924 and masters degree in 1925, and music at the New
England Conservatory of Music.[3] During
this time, while living in Boston, Ferré developed an admiration for the
"American way of democracy".[4]
Industrialist
Upon his return to Puerto Rico, Ferré helped transform his
father's company into a successful business which earned him a
fortune. In 1948, he acquired "El Día" a fledgling newspaper,
converting it to El Nuevo Día, the newspaper with the
largest circulation in Puerto Rico. "Empresas Ferré" would later
acquire in the 1950s Puerto Rico Cement and Ponce Cement, which
capitalized in the economic boom which Puerto Rico experienced at
the time as the result of the ambitious industrialization projects
which came with Operation Bootstrap. Luis' brother
Jose had moved to Miami and his son Maurice (see Maurice Ferre)
expanded a successful business in Miami, Florida selling bagged
pre-mixed cement under the name Mezcla Lista. Maurice also became
Mayor of Miami.
Political
life
Ferré became active in politics in the 1940s. He unsuccessfully
ran for mayor of Ponce in 1940 and Resident Commissioner
of Puerto Rico in 1948.
Representative
In 1948, Puerto Ricans were allowed to elect their governor. Luis
Muñoz Marín was elected governor of Puerto Rico, and a movement
began which aimed to adopt a commonwealth
relationship with the United States of America. In 1951, a referendum was held to
decided to whether to approve or not the option granted by the United States Congress to draft
Puerto Rico's first constitution. Ferré abstained from
participating in the process in which the pro-statehood party to
which he belonged favored the 1951 referendum. He believed that the process
would mean "an acceptance of a colony and condemn the people to a
perpetual condition of second class citizenship". Still, Ferré
would later participate in the constitutional assembly created by
the referendum which
would draft the constitution.[5]
In 1952 the Constitution of Puerto Rico
was adopted, creating the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. He was a
member of the Constitutional Assembly.
That same year Ferré was elected representative in the Puerto Rico House of
Representatives. Ferré ran under the Republican Statehood Party
("Partido Estadista Republicano) and officially assumed his duties
as representative on January 11, 1953.
Governor
and Senator
In 1967, a plebiscite was held to decide if the people
of Puerto Rico
desired to become an independent nation, a state of the United States of
America or continue the commonwealth relation
established in 1952. The majority of Puerto Ricans opted for the Commonwealth option
(see Puerto
Rican status referendums). Disagreement among the current
pro-statehood party led by Miguel A. García Méndez led
Ferré and others to found the New Progressive
Party or PNP.
In the following general election in 1968 Ferré ran for Governor and defeated Luis
Negrón Lopez, the candidate of the Popular Democratic
Party (PPD) by a slight margin, ending Luis
Muñoz Marín's PPD's hold on the governor's seat which lasted 20
years.
During his administration Puerto Rico was in an economic boom at
7% Gdp Growth and the unemployment at 10% the lowest until 1999.
His work as governor of Puerto Rico included defending the federal
minimum wage and granting workers a Christmas bonus. He visited Puerto Rican troops in
Vietnam. In 1970 his first
wife, Lorencita, died at La Fortaleza after being bed-ridden for
years. Their daughter, Rosario Ferré is an acclaimed novelist
and writer.
During his governorship, he paid special attention to youth
affairs and bringing young Puerto Ricans into public service. He
successfully had the Puerto Rico Constitution amended to lower the
voting age to 18, strongly supported the New Progressive Party
Youth organization as party president, and appointed then-young
statehooders such as Antonio Quiñones Calderon and Francisco
"Pompi" Gonzalez to high-level administration jobs, campaigned for
a 26-year-old at large House candidate, nominated a future Senate
President, teenager Kenneth McClintock as Puerto Rico
delegate to the 1971 White
House Conference on Youth, and strengthened college scholarship
programs.
Before the Congress created the United States
Environmental Protection Agency, Ferré had already created
Puerto Rico's Environmental Quality Board, charged with protecting
the islands' environment.
In the elections of 1972 he sought re-election but lost to Rafael Hernández Colón of the
PPD by the biggest margin since the PNP's foundation; the PDP had
claimed that many corruption scandals (rather minor compared to
similar ones in the various administrations following Ferré's) had
been overlooked by the Ferré administration. A bloody student
strike at the University of Puerto Rico at Rio Piedras in
1971 had been neutralized by the Puerto Rican police using brute
force, something about which Ferré had mixed feelings. Hernández
played the youth card in his campaign (when elected he was the
youngest Puerto Rican governor ever). All these issues contributed
to a PDP win over Ferré in the election.
Despite this Ferre was one of the most liked former governors in
history as well Luis Munoz Marin and Rafael Hernandez Colon.
Ferré remained active in politics and in 1976, he was elected to
the Senate of Puerto Rico. Ferré
served as eighth president of the Senate from 1976-1980 and
continued serving as senator until 1985.
Years after leaving La Fortaleza, he married Tiody De Jesus, a
nurse who later became a physician.
After serving as senator, Ferré continued to be active in
politics, especially representing the United
States Republican Party on the island. Between 1989 and 1991,
Ferré served with former Governor Carlos Romero Barceló, former
representative Benny Frankie Cerezo, PNP leader
Kenneth
McClintock and former congressional staffer David Gergen as the
New Progressive Party's negotiating team while Congress considered
Puerto Rico political status legislation introduced by Senator J. Bennett Johnston.
Renaissance
man
Awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1991
Ferré was also a talented pianist who recorded several albums of his
piano music. On January 3, 1959 he founded the Ponce Museum of Art, in his hometown of
Ponce.[6]
The museum initially displayed 71 paintings from his personal
collection and today displays over 3,000 pieces. Among other
things, Ferré is credited with having rescued from oblivion the
painting "Flaming
June" by the Victorian painter Frederic Lord Leighton - purchasing it in
1963, when it was considered "too old fashioned" and getting it
prominently displayed at the Ponce Museum of Art.
"El Centro de Bellas Artes", the center for performing arts in
Santurce, Puerto Rico also bears his name,
as well as the main highway connecting San Juan and Ponce. He also
assisted in the creation of the Casals Festival and the Puerto Rico Conservatory of Music. He was a
member of Phi
Sigma Alpha Fraternity. As a sportsman, Ferré practiced
fencing, and is honored annually with the "Campeonato Nacional de
Esgrima" in Puerto Rico.
His philanthropic deeds and defense for democracy earned him the Presidential Medal of
Freedom, awarded by President George H. W. Bush on November 18,
1991.[7]
Death and
legacy
On September 29, 2003, Ferré was hospitalized with a urinary tract infection and
underwent surgery for an intestinal blockage on October 1. While in
the hospital he developed pneumonia before finally succumbing to respiratory
failure on the morning of October 21, 2003. He was 99 years
old, three and a half months shy of his 100th birthday.
His body laid in state in Puerto Rico's capitol building in San
Juan, then transported to his museum in Ponce, before being taken
for a state funeral and burial nearby. His funeral and ceremonies
honoring him were attended by numerous politicians. Former U.S.
President and friend, George H. W. Bush, visited his tomb
soon after.
Among the numerous awards that were bestowed on Luis A. Ferré
was the Presidential Medal of
Freedom, an honor which was also subsequently bestowed on his
sister Sor Isolina Ferre.[8] The
renowned sculptor Tomás Batista was also commissioned to
make a bust of Ferré, which is exhibited in the Ponce Museum of Art. Another Tomás Batista
bust of him was unveiled by his widow, Tiody, Senate President Kenneth
McClintock and Senate Vice President Orlando Parga in February, 2008 at the Senate
of Puerto Rico's Hall of Governors.
See also
References
External
links