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Francisco Bernabé Madero

Francisco Bernabé Madero
Francisco B Madero.JPG
6th Vice President of Argentina
In office
October 12, 1880 – October 12, 1886
President Julio Roca
Preceded by Mariano Acosta
Succeeded by Carlos Pellegrini
Personal details
Born October 14, 1816
Buenos Aires
Died 1896 (aged 79–80)
Buenos Aires
Nationality Argentine
Political party National Autonomist Party
Profession Lawyer

Francisco Bernabé Madero (October 14, 1816 – 1896) was an Argentine lawyer and politician. He served as Vice President of Argentina, and founded the town of Maipú.

Madero was born in Buenos Aires to María del Carmen Viana and Juan Bernabé Madero, the latter a Spanish nobleman whose family was originally from Alicante. He became an active Unitarian Party supporter, and joined Francisco Ramos Mexía as a leader of a failed 1839 rebellion against the Unitarians' nemesis, Buenos Aires Governor Juan Manuel de Rosas.

He married a daughter of Ramos Mexía's, Marta, in 1848, and had six children with her. They relocated to Spain after the wedding, but returned to Argentina following Rosas' defeat at the 1852 Battle of Caseros, and dedicated himself to animal husbandry at his wife's Pampas ranch, in rural Monsalvo. He was named Justice of the Peace of Monsalvo in 1857, and was elected to Congress in 1862. Madero retired to his ranch in 1866, though he was elected to the Argentine Senate in 1872. His tenure as Senator was marked by his work in the Economic Policy Committee and his having the newly established hamlet of Maipú recognized as a town.

Little known outside his local area, Madero was named the running mate for the governing National Autonomist Party candidate, Julio Roca. Elected in 1880, Madero built on the relationship he had established with the Western Railway (whose reaching Maipú that year had been the result of his efforts) to encourage their expansion throughout Buenos Aires Province.


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