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Richard Gonzmart (born March 21, 1953) is chairman of the $42 million Columbia Restaurant and 1905 Family Of Restaurants.

Early years
Gonzmart was the second child of César Gonzmart and Adela Hernandez, born in Tampa, Florida after his parents retired as touring musicians and assisted with the family's business, the Columbia Restaurant.

Musical success
When César was 18, he was a symphonic violin soloist. He attended the University of Havana, earning a doctorate in music, and stood as the Havana Symphony Orchestra's concertmaster at age 21. He married and fathered a son, César Gonzalez, Jr., who would eventually join the United States Department of State as a career diplomat. That son had no connection to the family restaurant business.

After performing as a concert violinist in the United States and Cuba, César also found lucrative success performing popular music with his touring orchestra, César Gonzalez and his Magic Violins.

Name change
At that point in his life, César Gonzalez changed his name to Gonzmart, drawn both from his father's surname of Gonzalez and his mother's of Martinez. He later explained that he had wanted to establish his own identity.

Second marriage
César married Adela Hernandez, the granddaughter of Columbia founder Casimiro Hernandez Sr. in 1946. Adela, a Juilliard School of Music graduate, was an accomplished touring pianist. Notably, Adela had played at Carnegie Hall.

After the wedding, César and Adela Gonzmart toured together until César was convinced to work instead at the Columbia. Though it was a considerable financial loss, César complied to provide stability to the couple's son, Casey. The following year, their second son Richard was born. Although he traded his career as a musician for one as a restaurateur, César Gonzmart regularly serenaded his guests. César learned the business quickly, and he and Adela began to have input in the decisions of the Columbia. In 1956, they convinced Adela's father, Casmiro, to build another large room, the Siboney dining room, named after a town in Cuba where American forces landed in the Spanish–American War (also the name of a song by a Cuban composer).

Career
For the rest of his life, Gonzmart focused on managing and expanding the Spanish-themed Columbia group—opening high-volume dinner houses in Sarasota, St. Augustine, St. Petersburg and Clearwater Beach. Gonzmart also oversaw the launch of tropical-themed Cha-Cha Coconuts, a casual-themed bar & restaurant in 1988, now open in Sarasota's St. Armands Circle. In addition, the Columbia group operates a commissary called Columbia Food Service Inc. The year Gonzmart left the music business, the Columbia grossed $1 million. In 1991, just before his death, the chain earned $42 million. Gonzmart never stopped being the entertainer. Until illness prevented it, he performed regularly at the Ybor City Restaurant where music has always been key to the dining experience.

Honors

 * 1971 Knighted by the King of Spain as a Knight of Sant’Yago, the patron saint of Spain
 * 1972 Gonzmart founded the Krewe of the Knights of Sant’Yago in Tampa.
 * 1974 served as second king of the Knights of Sant’Yago
 * 1990 inducted into the Nation's Restaurant News Fine Dining Hall of Fame
 * 1991 Tony Pizzo Award for Preservation of Tampa's Latin Heritage from the Ybor City Museum Society
 * 1992 Hispanic Man of the Year from Tampa Hispanic Heritage
 * 1993 State of Florida Resolution citing his lifetime accomplishments to the community and as a Florida businessman
 * 1993 inducted into Tampa Bay Business Hall of Fame
 * 1995 Lifetime Achievement Award from the Florida Restaurant Association.
 * 2000 Designated a Great Floridian by the Florida Department of State in the Great Floridians 2000 Program
 * 2005 Stetson University Distinguished Alumni Award