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The 201st Fighter Squadron (Spanish: Escuadrón Aéreo de Pelea 201) is a fighter squadron of the Mexican Air Force, part of the Mexican Expeditionary Air Force that aided the Allied war effort during World War II. The squadron was known by the nickname Águilas Aztecas or "Aztec Eagles", apparently coined by members of the squadron during ...
Researchers at the Archivo Histórico de Ponce. The Archivo Histórico de Ponce comprises all the documentation generated by the agencies of the municipality of Ponce as well as donations by private citizens. It also contains documentation about other municipalities in Puerto Rico. [14] Archivo Histórico has some 100 million archived documents.
1508 – Cacique Agüeybaná, the cacique who led the region of which Ponce was a part, greets Spanish conquistador Juan Ponce de León on his arrival to the island of Puerto Rico. 1511 – Agüeybaná II , the cacique of the area that would later be known as Ponce, leads the Taíno rebellion of 1511 against the Spanish invaders but later dies ...
Carmelo Rosario Natal has linked the origins of the Ponce Historic Zone to an event that took place on 8 June 1893. On that date, La Gaceta de Puerto Rico, the insular government's official periodical, published an edict of the Governor of Puerto Rico, Antonio Daban y Ramirez de Arellano, that mandated municipal authorities throughout the Island to divide, for fire control purposes, a town's ...
Casa Salazar-Candal (English: Salazar–Candal House) is a historic building located on the southeast corner of Isabel and Mayor Cantera streets in Ponce, Puerto Rico, in the city's historic district. The building dates from 1911.
José de Nouvilas de Vilar [b] (1856 – 1931) was Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico, from 3 January 1893 [3] to 9 August 1894. [4] He was a soldier in the Spanish military and held the rank of "General de Brigada".
Ramón Marín Solá [note 1] [3] [4] was born in Arecibo, Puerto Rico, on 2 January 1832 [5] and died in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on 13 September 1902. [6] His parents were Vicente Marín and his slave Rosa. [7] He studied at Arecibo's Liceo San Felipe and in 1850, at 18 years old, he moved to Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico, to work as a teacher. He was ...
Fuerte de San José, also known as Fuerte de la Playa de Ponce, [a] was an 18th-19th-century Spanish fortress located in Barrio Playa in the municipality of Ponce, Puerto Rico. It was part of a three-fort system design to defend the Port of Ponce , the Barrio Playa seaport village and the City of Ponce from seaborne attacks.