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In 1894 Jacintho Nunes Leite was one of the shareholders of Companhia Progresso Alagoano, and was director of the Companhia de Navegação das Lagoas Norte and Manguaba.<ref name=":7" />
In 1894 Jacintho Nunes Leite was one of the shareholders of Companhia Progresso Alagoano, and was director of the Companhia de Navegação das Lagoas Norte and Manguaba.<ref name=":7" />

[[Image:Solar Nunes Leite defronte à atual Praça Cel. Lucena Maranhão, RELU.jpg|thumbnail|esquerda|290px|Solar Nunes Leite in Coronel Lucena Maranhão square, Maceió, in 2016]]


== Tributes and Honors ==
== Tributes and Honors ==

Revision as of 13:19, 27 July 2024

Jacintho José Nunes Leite was born in Oliveira de Azeméis, Aveiro, Portugal on January 18, 1840. He was a Commander, Industrialist, Businessman and Colonel.

Jacintho Nunes Leite
Comendador Jacintho José Nunes Leite

He was the son of Jacintho José Nunes Leite and Maria Joaquina de Jesus. His parents were traders who produced figs, olives and olive oil that were exported to Brazil. In his youth he studied in Porto.[1][2]

In 1855 he was a partner in Companhia União Mercantil, whose main investor was Barão de Jaraguá, being the first industrialization initiative in the State of Alagoas. In the early 1860s he married Maria Thereza de Jesus and came to Brazil on the Guadiana liner, until arriving at the port of Recife.[3]

He established himself in Maceió as a Dry & Wet dealer. Over time, his brothers, Domingos, João and Francisco also settled in Maceió, after many years Francisco settled in Rio de Janeiro.[3]

The Commander Jacintho Nunes Leite was the brother of Francisco Nunes Leite, the Colonel Domingos Nunes Leite, the Colonel João Nunes Leite, Ana Nunes Leite, Manoel Nunes Leite, Luiz Nunes Leite, José Nunes Leite, Rosa Nunes Leite, Emilia Nunes Leite, Maria Nunes Leite.[4] He stood out during his first years in Maceió, participating on September 7, 1866 in the creation of the Maceió Commercial Association. In 1867 there was a firm called Jacintho Leite & Cia, which founded the first hardware store in Maceió in 1867, and owned a sugar refinery.[5][6][1][7]

Maceió Commercial Association
Maceió Commercial Association

In 1857 he participated in the founding of the Sociedade Anônima Companhia União Mercantil, and in 1863 a cotton weaving factory in Fernão Velho was inaugurated by the Sociedade Anônima Companhia União Mercantil, nowadays known as Fabrica de Tecidos Carmen, whose partners were José Antônio of Mendonça: the Barão de Jaraguá and Tibúrcio Alves de Carvalho, and among the shareholders was Jacintho José Nunes Leite, who increased his participation until he became one of the directors of the factory in 1870, the commander was the second owner of the factory and was responsible for building a road connecting Bebedouro and Fernão Velho.[1]

In 1882, the Liceu Provincial of Alagoas held the preparatory exams in July with the financial assistance of Jacintho José Nunes Leite, Dr. Joaquim Pontes de Miranda and Candido Venancio, in the amount of 700,000 réis, Candido Venancio was the only one who had children in the Provincial Lyceum.[4] Still in 1882, the firm, Lima, Leite & Cia, was created, composed of mechanical engineer Eduardo Lima and Jacintho José Nunes Leite. On December 2, 1883, at 2 pm, the Fundição Alagoana (Alagoana foundry), was inaugurated, the first foundry in the state of Alagoas.[8][9] After the death of engineer Eduardo Lima in 1884, his rights to the foundry were purchased from his wife by Jacintho José Nunes Leite.[8]

Old Fundição Alagoana, road Sá e Albuquerque, RELU, 2016

In 1883 he created the company Água Potável Maceioense together with Manoel José de Pinho, and on October 23, 1885 he implemented piped water in the neighborhoods of Bebedouro and Mutange, some time later he implemented it in Maceió.[10]

Jacintho José Nunes Leite was the founder, shareholder and director of the first tram transport company in Maceió, Companhia Alagoana de Trilhos Urbanos - CATU, in the beginning the trams were powered by animal traction.[11][12] He was responsible for the drinking water supply service in Maceió and the construction of a hospital. He built a port in Maceió, which would later be sold by him, to the state for a low price, he also built a new cemetery for the city, the cemetery gates were made in his foundry and he carried out the construction of the Parish of Santo Antônio de Padua between 1870 and 1873, replacing the previous chapel built in 1816 by the Portuguese Antônio Maria de Aguiar, the parish bell was donated by him and the tiles were imported directly from Portugal by him.[13] He was also an abolitionist, purchasing slaves and then freeing them.[1]

Former Praça da Matriz de Bebedouro, current Praça Coronel Lucena Maranhão and Parish of Santo Antônio de Pádua, RELU, 2016

Jacintho José Nunes Leite began to be called in the newspapers by the title of Commander in 1889. Having received the title at some point in the period. The title of Commander was granted to Jacintho Nunes Leite by Dom Pedro II.[7]

In 1891 the commander was elected Venerable in the Masonic lodge Perfeita Amizade Alagoana.[14]

In 1894 Jacintho Nunes Leite was one of the shareholders of Companhia Progresso Alagoano, and was director of the Companhia de Navegação das Lagoas Norte and Manguaba.[14]

Solar Nunes Leite in Coronel Lucena Maranhão square, Maceió, in 2016

Tributes and Honors

Road Comendador Jacintho Leite in Fernão Velho, Maceió.[15]

Entrepreneur and Commander Jacintho José Nunes Leite Commendation.[16]

In 1889 he was a commander, probably Commander of the Imperial Order of the Rose due to his services to the State.[17][7]

In 2014, the centenary of his death was celebrated in Alagoas.[6]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Ticianeli (2020-03-19). "Estrada de Bebedouro, um dos primeiros caminhos para Maceió". História de Alagoas (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2024-07-23.
  2. ^ "Jornal do Comercio (RJ) - DocReader Web". Retrieved 2024-06-22.
  3. ^ a b "Gutenberg : Orgão da Associação Typographica Alagoana de Socorros Mutuos (AL) - 1881 a 1911 - DocReader Web". Retrieved 2024-06-23.
  4. ^ a b "Evolucionista : Jornal da Tarde (AL) - 1905 a 1906 - DocReader Web". memoria.bn.gov.br. Retrieved 2024-07-27.
  5. ^ Lima, Weldja Marques da Silva (2020-05-25). "Do conflito à re-volta: O deslocamento campo-cidade-campo entre camponeses em Alagoas". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ a b "Alagoanos comemoram centenário do português Jacintho Nunes Leite". Cadaminuto (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2024-07-27.
  7. ^ a b c "Almanak da Provincia das Alagoas (AL) - 1873 a 1880 - DocReader Web". memoria.bn.gov.br. Retrieved 2024-07-27.
  8. ^ a b Ticianeli (2016-10-28). "Fundição Alagoana de Jacintho Leite". História de Alagoas (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2024-07-27.
  9. ^ "O Orbe (AL) - 1879 a 1900 - DocReader Web". memoria.bn.gov.br. Retrieved 2024-07-27.
  10. ^ Maciel, Osvaldo Batista Acioly (2011-01-31). "A perseverança dos caixeiros : o mutualismo dos trabalhadores do comércio em Maceió (1879 1917)". repositorio.ufpe.br. Retrieved 2024-07-27.
  11. ^ "Evolucionista : Jornal da Tarde (AL) - 1905 a 1906 - DocReader Web". memoria.bn.gov.br. Retrieved 2024-07-27.
  12. ^ "Bebedouro de histórias e tradições". Portal Escritores (in Brazilian Portuguese). 2023-07-31. Retrieved 2024-07-27.
  13. ^ "Igreja histórica de Bebedouro passa por intervenções para preservação de azulejaria". www.braskem.com.br (in Brazilian Portuguese). 2024-04-18. Retrieved 2024-07-27.
  14. ^ a b "Almanak do Estado das Alagoas (AL) - 1891 a 1894 - DocReader Web". memoria.bn.gov.br. Retrieved 2024-07-27.
  15. ^ "R. Comendador Jacinto Leite - Fernão Velho · Fernão Velho, Maceió - State of Alagoas, 57070-100, Brazil". R. Comendador Jacinto Leite - Fernão Velho · Fernão Velho, Maceió - State of Alagoas, 57070-100, Brazil. Retrieved 2024-07-27.
  16. ^ "História de vida, homenagens, música e poesias marcam a festa dos 106 do Campus Maceió". Instituto Federal de Alagoas (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2024-07-27.
  17. ^ "Brasil Imperial » Pró Monarquia". monarquia.org.br. Retrieved 2024-07-27.