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Antonio Imbert Barrera

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Resigned
  
August 30, 1965

Succeeded by
  
Hector Garcia-Godoy


Name
  
Antonio Barrera

Nationality
  
Dominican

First day in office
  
May 7, 1965

Antonio Imbert Barrera wwwencaribeorgFilesPersonalidadesantonioimbe

Vice President
  
Manuel Joaquin Castillo

Full Name
  
Antonio Imbert Barrera

Born
  
December 3, 1920 (age 103) San Felipe de Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic (
1920-12-03
)

Spouse(s)
  
Giralda Busto Sanchez Guarina Mercedes Tesson Hurtado Maria Sanchez

Relations
  
Carmen Imbert Brugal (niece) Segundo Imbert (grandfather) Jose Maria Imbert (great-grandfather)

Children
  
Antonio Imbert Tesson Leslie Imbert Tesson Oscar Imbert Tesson Manuel Imbert Sanchez

Role
  
Former President of the Dominican Republic

Presidential term
  
May 7, 1965 – August 30, 1965

Previous office
  
President of the Dominican Republic (1965–1965)

Preceded by
  
Pedro Bartolome Benoit

Antonio imbert barrera


Major General Antonio Cosme Imbert Barrera (December 3, 1920 – May 31, 2016) was a two-star army general advitam of the Dominican Army and was President of the Dominican Republic from May to August 1965.

Contents

Antonio Imbert Barrera Noticias SIN Servicios Informativos Nacionales Sport News

Imbert, who plotted to assassinate dictator Rafael Trujillo in 1961, was one of the two rival rulers in the Dominican Republic from May 7, 1965 until August 30, 1965, amid the Dominican Civil War. He had succeeded General Pedro B. Benoit van der Horst who ruled for less than a week. After the civil war ended, both General Imbert and his rival Colonel Francisco Caamaño resigned and Héctor García-Godoy, a civilian, was sworn as interim president.

Entrevista antonio imbert barreras part 2


Early life

Imbert was born into a prominent family of military tradition: his father, Brigadier General Segundo Manuel Imbert Mesnier had a leading role in the northern region of the Dominican Republic; Brigadier General Segundo Francisco Imbert, Imbert Barrera’s grandfather, was Vice-President of the Dominican Republic and candidate for President, and fought in the Dominican Restoration War; meanwhile his great-grandfather, Major General José María Imbert, who was a French migrant, achieved important victories against Haiti in the Dominican War of Independence.

Imbert’s first significant position was as governor of Puerto Plata in 1940. He was removed from the post by then president Rafael Trujillo for sending him a telegram informing upon the names of the survivors of the failed Luperón invasion. This caused, in a personal manner, the beginning of the assassination plan against Trujillo.

His brother Segundo, an army official too, was imprisoned in 1956 by Trujillo’s regime. Segundo was convicted for murder; implicated in the murder of Domingo Marión in 1943.

Assassination of Trujillo

On May 30, 1961 Trujillo was shot dead when his car was ambushed on a road outside the Dominican capital. Imbert, accompanied by Antonio de la Maza, Salvador Estrella Sahdalá and Amado García Guerrero, who was the driver of the ambushing vehicle, were the active participants who carried out the plot. Most of those involved in the assassination plot were subsequently captured and executed, with the exception of Imbert and Luis Amiama Tió. Imbert went into hiding until December 2.

After Joaquín Balaguer, Trujillo’s figurehead president, was overthrown in 1962 and the Trujillo family was ousted, Imbert was declared a "National Hero" and was promoted to Major General with the special grant of it being advitam or lifelong. In the Civil War in the Dominican Republic of 1965 he led one of the factions in the struggle which faced the constitutionalist government led by Colonel Francisco Caamaño, who tried to bring back Juan Bosch to the country's presidency. Imbert's faction, called the Government of National Reconstruction was endorsed by the U.S. troops inspectors, in addition, he was one of the collaborators with the Americans, finally signing a peace act that put an end to the April war.

Later life

On March 21, 1967, he was shot in Santo Domingo while traveling with Marino García, in an attempted assassination made by the late dictator Trujillo's supporters. He survived by driving himself to a medical clinic. On February 15, 1970 the Dominicana de Aviación flight wherein his sister Aida Imbert Barrera, his wife Guarina Tessón Hurtado, and his daughter, sportswoman Leslie Imbert Tessón, were travelling, crashed into the Caribbean Sea.

He was Minister of Defense of the Dominican Republic from 1986 to 1988; earlier that decade, his second-cousin Mario Imbert McGregor was also Minister of Defense. In 1989 he was assigned chairman of the board of directors of Rosario Dominicana. In September 2013, the Constitutionalist Soldiers of 25 April 1965 Foundation asked the National Congress of the Dominican Republic to explore the possibility of stripping Imbert his status of national hero as it considered that he went against constitutional precepts.

Imbert died on May 31, 2016, the day following the fifty-fifth anniversary of Trujillo's assassination, at the age of 95. Dominican President Danilo Medina declared three days of mourning. His niece, Carmen Imbert Brugal, said that cause of his death was complications of pneumonia.

Marriages and family

He married Guarina Tessón Hurtado on September 10, 1939 in Puerto Plata. They had three children:

  • Antonio Segundo Imbert Tessón (born June 9, 1940), army general. He married Victoria Isabel Pellerano Amiama and had 3 children.
  • Leslie Imbert Tessón (1949–February 15, 1970), sportswoman. Died childless in a aircraft accident.
  • Oscar José Antonio Imbert Tessón (born December 30, 1953), architecht. He designed the Punta Cana International Airport. He married Margarita Pou Guerra and had 1 children and divorced. He remarried to Solange Juliette Martín-Caro Lithgow, but later divorced with no children being begotten from this marriage.
  • His wife died in 1970 in a aircraft accident.

    He had a liaison with María Sánchez, from Sosúa, and begat Manuel Antonio Imbert Sánchez (born April 1, 1939), police officer and former diplomat; Imbert Sánchez a colonel and is married (to Josefina López Henríquez) with 4 children and he is since 2012 the chief of the Special Police Corps for State Banks, he also was consul to the United States in Charlotte Amalie, U.S. Virgin Islands in the 1980s and the 1990s.

    After widowing Imbert Barrera remarried to Giralda Busto Sánchez, but had no children from this marriage.

    References

    Antonio Imbert Barrera Wikipedia