Juan Suero

Juan Ceferino Suero y Carmona (1808 – March 19, 1864) also known by his nickname, Black Cid, was a Dominican military commander who fought in the Dominican War of Independence. He later fought, however, in the service of Spain, in the Dominican Restoration War, in which he died after receiving a bullet wound during the Battle of Paso del Muerto, on March 19, 1864.[1]

Juan Suero
1862 Portrait of General Juan Suero
Birth nameJuan Ceferino Suero Carmona
Nickname(s)Black Cid
Born1808
San Cristóbal, Captaincy General of Santo Domingo
DiedMarch 19, 1864 (aged 56)
Santiago, Dominican Republic
Allegiance Dominican Republic
 Spain
Service / branch Dominican Army
 Spanish Army
Years of service1838–1864
RankGeneral
Battles / warsDominican War of Independence
Cibaeño Revolution
Dominican Restoration War

Early years

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Born in 1808, he was a native of San Cristóbal, and was the son of Ceferino Suero and María Josefa Carmona (la Rubia). Both of his parents were of African descent. He was raised by the religious Father Jesús Fabián Ayala y García, who had participated in the War of the Reconquista and had been the parish priest of that town since 1820. During the Haitian period of Santo Domingo, Suero refused to join military service, he instead chose to move to Cibao.[2][3]

Military career

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Suero in his youth c. 1830s-1850s

During the Dominican War of Independence, he commanded a battalion at the Battle of Sabana Larga (January 24, 1856) against the troops of Haitian Emperor Faustin Soulouque.[3]

When the revolution of 1857 began to depose Buenaventura Báez from the presidency of the Dominican Republic, he acted under the orders of General Matías Ramón Mella in the eviction of Parmentier from the Samaná fortification, and was promoted to brigadier general at the end of the campaign. Shortly afterward, he acquired a farm in Los Llanos de Pérez that he dedicated to the cultivation of sugar cane.[3]

When the annexation to Spain was proclaimed on March 18, 1861, he was military chief of Moca and when an armed uprising against Pedro Santana and the Spanish took place in that town, Suero introduced himself in disguise among the mutineers and managed to dominate the situation. Months later he moved to the Puerto Plata command.

As a consequence of the uprisings in Santiago and Guayubín in February 1863, which would escalate into the Dominican Restoration War, he accompanied the Spanish brigadier Manuel Buceta as he passed through Monte Cristi, but a few days later he returned to his position because his presence on the Line was not necessary. After the Grito del Capotillo on August 16, Juan Suero and the peninsular colonel Cappa left Puerto Plata to reinforce the garrison of Santiago, surrounded by Dominican patriots, making their way to the San Luis Fortress. The restorers reacted energetically and the Spaniards left the plaza heading to Puerto Plata, where Suero remained for a month confronting the insurgents in the surrounding cantons. He then embarked for Santo Domingo in order to join the Guanuma camp. Being military chief of the San Antonio de Guerra post, he went out to reconnoitre his jurisdiction, and upon reaching the crossing of the Yabacao River, a bloody scuffle broke out between his forces and those of one of the restoration leaders, Gregorio Luperón, without any of them of both sides emerging victorious. He finished the heat of combat and while he was discussing the encounter with his officers, a bullet seriously wounded him.[4]

Death

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He died on March 19, 1864. General Juan Suero died before the end of the war, which is why he did not accompany Máximo Gómez and Eusebio Puello, who were evacuated to Cuba at the end of the war along with the military units they served. Some of these soldiers, like the latter, continued to serve the interest of Spain. While others, like the former, joined the ranks of the "Mambises" who had waged the Ten Years' War against the Spanish. They were excellent warriors trained on the Dominican battlefields.[5]

See also

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Bibliography

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  • Martínez, Rufino: Dominican Biographical-Historical Dictionary, 1821-1930, Santo Domingo, Autonomous University of Santo Domingo Archived May 18, 2014 at the Wayback Machine, 1971.

References

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  1. ^ Torres-Saillant, Silvio (1998). "The Tribulations of Blackness: Stages in Dominican Racial Identity". Latin American Perspectives. 25 (3): 126–146. doi:10.1177/0094582X9802500307. ISSN 0094-582X. JSTOR 2634170.
  2. ^ "La hazaña del "Cid Negro" del Caribe que luchó hasta la muerte por el Imperio español". El Español (in Spanish). 2024-05-15. Retrieved 2024-05-29.
  3. ^ a b c "CEFERINO SUERO CARMONA EL CID NEGRO". HISTORIOLOGIA PUERTO (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-05-29.
  4. ^ DoñaAnaMusicTV (2021-03-21). Historia de Juan Ceferino Suero Carmona, el " Cid Negro". Retrieved 2024-09-23 – via YouTube.
  5. ^ "NEWS FROM MEXICO.; The Adhesion of Vidaurri not yet Declared --The French General's Ultimatum--Gen. Ghilardi Shot by Order of a Courtmartial--Santa Ana's Departure for St.Thomas--News from St. Domingo--A Negro General in the Spanish Service Mortally Wounded, &c". The New York Times. Nueva York. 16 April 1864.