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Paseo Gautier Benítez, colloquially known as Paseo Gautier, is a pedestrian street and shopping district located in Caguas Pueblo (downtown Caguas) in the municipality of Caguas, Puerto Rico. The street is named after José Gautier Benítez , a poet from the Romantic Era who was born in Caguas in 1851.
The Gautier Benitez High School, a school named after Puerto Rican poet José Gautier Benítez, was built in 1924 in Caguas, Puerto Rico and is listed on both the U.S. National Register of Historic Places and the Puerto Rico Register of Historic Sites and Zones. [1] [2]
Like all municipalities of Puerto Rico, Caguas is subdivided into administrative units called barrios, which are, in contemporary times, roughly comparable to minor civil divisions, [1] (and means wards or boroughs or neighborhoods in English).
Puerto Rico Highway 52 (PR-52), a major toll road in Puerto Rico, is also known as Autopista Luis A. Ferré.It was formerly called Expreso Las Américas.It runs from PR-1 in southwest Río Piedras and heads south until it intersects with highway PR-2 in Ponce. [3]
Caguas (Spanish pronunciation:, locally) is a city and municipality in central eastern Puerto Rico.Located in the eponymous Caguas Valley between the Sierra de Cayey and Sierra de Luquillo of the Central Mountain Range, it is bordered by San Juan and Trujillo Alto to the north, Gurabo and San Lorenzo to the west, Aguas Buenas, Cidra and Cayey to the east, and Patillas to the south.
The pedestrian killed in Thursday morning’s North Miami-Dade hit-and-run has been identified by Miami-Dade police. Now, they’d like to find the driver of the car who killed 36-year-old Felix ...
Published in Ponce from 1 July 1890 to 19 September 1900, then in Caguas where it published its first issue on 23 October 1900 and published until 1902, then in San Juan where it published its first issue on 1 June 1904.; [165] Continued by Diario de Puerto Rico 1948- El Porvenir: Ponce [166] 1890 (Jul) [166]
Gautier Benítez was born in Caguas, Puerto Rico to Rodulfo Gautier and the Puerto Rican poet, Alejandrina Benitez de Gautier. His great-aunt, María Bibiana Benítez, was also a well known Puerto Rican poet. He was mostly influenced by the exponents of the Romantic poetry of the 19th century. [3]