Joaquín Figueroa
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Joaquín Figueroa Larraín | |
Born | October 13, 1863 Santiago, Chile |
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Died | May 30, 1929 (aged 65) Santiago, Chile |
Joaquín Figueroa Larraín (c. 1863 - May 30, 1929) was a Chilean politician, and brother of President Emiliano Figueroa.
Figueroa was born in Santiago, the son of Francisco de Paula Figueroa Araoz and of Rosalía Larraín Echeverría. He studied at the San Ignacio School and then went on to study law at the Universidad de Chile, graduating on January 13, 1886. He married Elena Amunátegui Valdés but they had no children.
Figueroa decided to embark on a political career and joined the Liberal Democratic Party, which supported a stronger executive. On October 25, 1907, President Pedro Montt appointed Figueroa as Minister of Industry and Public Works, a position which he kept until August 29, 1908. President Montt also appointed him as Minister of Finance between June 15 and September 15, 1909. Then, in a 1908 by-election, he was elected Senator for Valparaíso and then reelected in 1912. President Ramón Barros Luco appointed him Minister of Foreign Affairs, Cult and Colonization from May 29 to August 8, 1912.
Joaquín Figueroa was a Director of the National Children's Fund (Patronato Nacional de la Infancia); Vice Presidente of the Santiago Charity Council (Junta de Beneficencia de Santiago); director of the San Luis Hospital and in 1911, one of the founders of the National Historic Museum of Chile and later one of its directors. He died in Santiago, in 1929, at the age of 66.
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- Official biography (Spanish)
Political offices | ||
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Preceded by Gonzalo Urrejola |
Minister of Industry and Public Works 1907-1908 |
Succeeded by Guillermo Echavarría |
Preceded by Luis Devoto |
Minister of Finance 1909 |
Succeeded by Manuel Salinas |
Preceded by Renato Sánchez |
Minister of Foreign Affairs, Cult and Colonization 1912 |
Succeeded by Antonio Huneeus |