Piedad Luisa Figueredo y Vazquez and Gabriel Moreno Ayala

[her parents]                                                         [parents not known]

 

 

Piedad Luisa Figueredo y Vazquez was born on June 21, 1859.8  In August 1870, she was captured by the Spanish, along with her mother and several of her sisters, following the burning of Bayamo.  She was sentenced into exile in the military prison in Ceuta,2,4 located on the north coast of Africa, opposite Gibraltar, but was permitted to disembark by a “humane Spanish ship captain” in New York City during a stopover.4  There she was reunited with her mother and sisters and, on December 11, 1871, moved with them to Key West, FL.

 

                In an article in the Tampa Tribune, Tony Pizzo wrote that José Martí “would enshrine her memory in a beautiful poem”,4 but, so far, that poem is unknown.

 

She married Gabriel Moreno Ayala y Fleites 1 on May 25, 1880,3 in Key West, Monroe County, FL 3 and they had five sons, Gabriel, Gustavo, Rolando, Armando, and Oscar Ayala y Figueredo.  Piedad died of pneumonia,? in Key West 3 on January 22, 1891,3 at which time Gabriel and Piedad’s address was said to be “Fleming Street, corner of Elizabeth”.11  A memorial service was held in St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Key West and she was buried in “the city cemetery” on January 23.9  Obituaries and funeral notices appeared in the Daily Equator Democrat on January 23, 1891, the Key West Advertiser on January 24, 1891, in La Verdad, published in Cienfuegos, Cuba, on February 5, 1891,6 and in another Spanish language publication, on January 24, 1891.

 

  The funeral party included “…, ladies of the Masonic Order of Estrella del Oriente, to which the deceased belonged, …” and numerous “gentlemen and ladies” 10 including Angel Maria Figueredo, her brother; Federico Portillo, husband of Candelaria, her sister; Fernando Figueredo, possibly Fernando Figueredo y Socarras, her second cousin; and Carlos Manuel de Céspedes, possibly Carlos Manuel de Céspedes y Céspedes, the widower of Eulalia Figueredo, her sister.11

 

Gabriel, who was born on November 13, 1848,1 in Santa Clara, Cuba,1 married, in 1893,1 Carlotta (Lottie) Russell,1 daughter of Joseph H. Russell and Ruth Pinder,1 in Key West.1  Gabriel and Lottie had two children, Dahlia 1 and Nelson Miles Ayala.1

 

Gabriel was a commander of the Cuban revolutionary army during the Ten Years’ War 3 and could trace his ancestry to López de Ayala, Spanish poet, historian, and nobleman in the court of Pedro I (el Cruel) of Castile,4 and to Juan Manuel de Ayala, a lieutenant of the royal (Spanish) navy, who, in 1775, 5 navigated the first European ship, the San Carlos, through La Boca del Puerto de San Francisco, 5 later known as the Golden Gate.4,5

 

During the Ten Years’ War Gabriel was imprisoned by the Spanish on the Isle of Pines, Cuba, and escaped by paying a fisherman $10,000 to take him off the island.1  He then made his way to Key West, arriving in 1875,1 and became a prominent businessman in Key West when that community was the leading cigar manufacturing center in the US.4  He had a business at the corner of Elizabeth and Fleming Streets,1 and was said to have been an intimate friend of President Grover Cleveland.4  He died in Key West,1 on November 15, 1900,1 and is buried next to Piedad in the family plot in Key West.7

#  Children of Piedad Figueredo and Gabriel Ayala:

 

i               Gabriel Felix Ayala

 

ii              Gustavo Louis Albert Ayala

 

iii             Rolando Ayala

 

iv                Armando Frederick Ayala

 

v              Oscar Augustus Ayala

 

____________________

 

1  Source: e-mail - John McComb - Sept 26, 2001

2  Footnote: It isn’t clear why Piedad would have been deported to Ceuta while her mother and sisters were apparently allowed to emigrate to New York.

3  Source: e-mail attachment - John McComb - June 13, 1999

4  Source: Tampa Tribune article by Tony Pizzo

5  Source: Encyclopaedia Britannica, 15th edition, 1976, Vol. IV, page 607

6  Source: e-mail attachment - John McComb - Dec 19, 2001

7  Source: e-mail - Neal A. Now - Oct 23, 2000

8  Source: notes written by Neal A. Now, between June 6 and 12, 2000

9  Source: obituary - Key West Advertiser - Jan 24, 1891

10  Source: obituary - in Spanish from an unknown source - Jan 24, 1891

11  Source: announcement of the funeral of Piedad, dated Jan 22, 1891.

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