Emilio Azcárraga Vidaurreta

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Emilio Azcárraga Vidaurreta (2 March 1895, Tampico, Tamaulipas 1973, Mexico City) was a Mexican businessman, the son of Basque immigrants Mariano Azcárraga and Emilia Vidaurreta.

He studied primary education in Piedras Negras, Coahuila, middle school in San Antonio, Texas, and high school in Austin. Aged 17, he was employed at a shoe store while he studied trade and economics by night. He obtained distribution rights for a shoe store in Boston and, at age 23, he created the car distribution company, Azcárraga & Copland. [citation needed]

Radio broadcasting industry

In 1923 Azcárraga obtained a license to distribute radios from the Victor Talking Machine Company. While working at the "Mexico Music" division of RCA) he became more interested in the radio broadcasting industry. On 19 March 1930 the radio station XET-AM was founded in Monterrey. And on September 18 Azcárraga created the XEW-AM with Mexico Music Corporation as major stockholder. The station was also part of the NBC division of RCA. [citation needed]

Television industry

Azcárraga Vidaurreta established Estudios Churubusco in the 1940s and created the first TV station in Mexico, Channel 2, in 1951. He became the first president of Telesistemas Mexicanos in 1955. His entertainment conglomerate was composed of 92 different business units by 1969. He established Televisa, S.A., a television production company in 1973. He died the same year. [citation needed]

Family

Emilio married Laura Milmo Hickman, daughter of Patricio Milmo Vidaurri, an American citizen, and Laura Hickman Morales, and granddaughter of Patricio Milmo O'Dowd (né Patrick Milmo (1826–1899); son of Darby and Sarah (née O'Dowd) Milmo of Lisaneena, Collooney, County Sligo, Ireland), a major stockholder in the Milmo National Bank of Laredo and his wife, María Prudenciana Vidaurri Vidaurri (a descendant of the Vásquez Borregos, who helped to found Laredo, Texas).[1]

Emilio Azcárraga and Laura Milmo had three children: Emilio, Laura, and Carmela. In 1899 Patricio Milmo and Sons was established as a bank to invest in such interests as railroads and mines. After the Mexican Revolution the company focused on safer investments, like the then-recently-developing radio industry.[1]

See also

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