Guillermo Vivas Valdivieso | |
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Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico | |
In office 1925–1928 |
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Preceded by | Abelardo Aguilú, Jr. |
Succeeded by | Emilio Fagot |
Personal details | |
Born | 1881 Ponce, Puerto Rico |
Nationality | Puerto Rican |
Profession | politician |
Guillermo Vivas Valdivieso (1881 – ca. 1940) was a Puerto Rican journalist, politician and Mayor of Ponce, Puerto Rico from 1925 to 1928.
Vivas Valdivieso was born in Ponce, Puerto Rico, in 1881. He had little formal education and starting to work at 12 years old for Olimpio Otero at his store, Bazar Otero. He later became a legal assistant for a law office, and subsequently a bookkeeper for seven years.
At age 14, Vivas Valdivieso founded, together with Alberto Marin and Eduardo Marin, the political autonomist newspaper, La Razon. Subsequently, he also became the owner and director of the "El Dia" newspaper during the time of the Ponce Massacre at the hands of the Insular Police under the governorship of U.S.-appointed Gov. Blanton Winship. He had purchased the paper from its founder, Guillermo V. Cintrón, in August 1928.
Vivas Valdivieso is recorded to have been the facilitator of the building of "Modern Ponce". During his administration, he secured a municipal loan of $1.25 million for citywide improvements that would turn the municipality of Ponce, come the administration of his successor Emilio Fagot, into the city it became during the rest of the 19th century. Some of the improvements made were included the paving of so far dirt city streets, the creation of the city's sewerage system, the enlargement of the old Acueducto, the repair of rural roads, facilitating the traffic of rural goods into the city market.
He is recognized as one of Ponce's most accomplished journalists at Ponce's Park for Illustrious Ponce Citizens.