Fermin tanguis biography books

Fermín Tangüis (March 29, 1851 – August 24, 1930), was a Puerto Rican businessman, farmer, and scientist who developed the seed that would eventually produce....

A volume of highly crafted poems of militant and radical perspective, it is a literary masterpiece that attempts to translate history into.

  • A volume of highly crafted poems of militant and radical perspective, it is a literary masterpiece that attempts to translate history into.
  • Fermín Tangüis (1851–1930) was a Puerto Rican businessman, agriculturist and scientist who in 1901 developed the seed that would eventually produce the Tanguis.
  • Fermín Tangüis (March 29, 1851 – August 24, 1930), was a Puerto Rican businessman, farmer, and scientist who developed the seed that would eventually produce.
  • In response to a devastating plague of cotton wilt on the coast of Peru, Fermín Tangüis painstakingly bred a disease-resistant cotton hybrid.
  • Notable in this country was the generation, after enormous efforts, of a local variety, achieved by the Puerto Ri- can Fermín Tangüis around 1912.
  • Fermín Tangüis

    Fermín Tangüis

    developer of the Tanguis cotton seed which saved Peru's cotton industry.

    BornMarch 29, 1851
    San Juan, Puerto Rico
    DiedScript error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
    Lima, Peru

    Fermín Tangüis (March 29, 1851 - August 24, 1930), was a Puerto Ricanbusinessman, agriculturist and scientist who developed the seed that would eventually produce the Tanguis cotton in Peru and save that nation's cotton industry.

    Early years

    Tangüis' father, Enrique Tangüis, emigrated from France to San Juan, Puerto Rico where he met and married a young Puerto Rican girl by the name of Justa Uncal.

    Tangüis was born in San Juan, the capital of Puerto Rico, and there he received his primary and secondary education. Tangüis moved to Cuba to pursue a university degree; however when the Ten Years' War (1868–1878) broke out in that island, he decided that it would be best to move to South America.[1]

    He moved to Lima, Peru in 1873, when he