Estanislao Lynch

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Estanislao José Antonio Lynch y Roo (1793-1849)[1], was an Argentine military officer and businessman, the grandson of an Irish immigrant, Patrick Lynch. Estanislao was the third son of Justo Pastor Lynch (1755–1830) and Ana Bernardo Roo (d.1836).

Career[edit]

Born in Buenos Aires, Lynch moved to Santiago de Chile in 1808, where he studied laws.[1] He became a partner of David DeForest, an American arms trader, sharing 30% of the business.[2] On 2 January 1817 the Buenos Aires city council appointed Estanislao Lynch as major of Barracas.[3] Later that year, Lynch enlisted in the Argentine Army of the Andes, and offered financial and material support to command-in-chief .Jose de San Martin. After the army victory at Chacabuco, San Martin named him his personal secretary, with the rank of coronel, in February 1818.[1]

Family[edit]

Eventually, he retired from the army and expanded the family's businesses to Valparaiso where he settled and married Carmen Solo de Zaldívar y Rivero, a lady from the Chilean high-society, the couple settled in Chile[3] and issued:

  • Luis Alfredo Lynch, naval officer
  • Patricio Lynch, appointed Chilean Ambassador to Spain, previously a naval officer in the Chilean Navy reaching the rank of admiral.
  • Julio Angel Lynch, naval officer

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "Estanislao José Antonio Lynch | Real Academia de la Historia". dbe.rah.es. Retrieved 2024-05-26.
  2. ^ Besseghini, Deborah (January–June 2023). "The Weapons of Revolution: Global Merchants and the Arms Trade in South America (1808-1824)". Journal of Evolutionary Studies in Business. 8 (1): 92. doi:10.1344/jesb2023.8.1.34043. ISSN 2385-7137.
  3. ^ a b "Dictionary of Irish Latin American Biography > "Lynch, Estanislao J.A. (b.1793)"". www.irlandeses.org. Retrieved 2024-05-26.
  • Coghlan, Eduardo A., Los Irlandeses en la Argentina: Su Actuación y Descendencia (Buenos Aires, 1987), p. 626.
  • Buenos Aires City Council, Archivo General de la Nación, Series IV, Vol. VII, Sections LXXIV to LXXIX, 1816 and 1817 (Buenos Aires, 1930).
  • Dictionary of Irish Latin American Biography, by Gonzalo Cané