Dolores Prats de Huisi

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Bandera de los Andes
Bandera de los Andes
Fan
Fan
Flag
Flag
Ejército de los Andes
Ejército de los Andes
Plaque
Plaque
Dolores Prats de Huisi
Dolores Prats de Huisi
Route to exile
Route to exile
 

Gender:Female

Ethnic origen: White

Events:

1795  -  Valparaíso  -  Not applicable  -  She was born in Valparaíso around 1785.
1814  -  Mendoza  -  Unknown  -  She fled here after the Spanish re-conquista of Chile.
1817  -  Valparaíso  -  Unknown  -  She returned to Chile after the Battle of Chacabuco.
1817  -  Mendoza  -  Unknown  -  She helped to make the Bandera de los Andes on 5 January 1817.
1834  -  Valparaíso  -  Unknown  -  She died in Chile.

Connections:

Chilean exiles (Mendoza)
Escalada friends
Wealth confiscated (for pro-independence support)
Women sewed flags for patriots

Biography:
She was born in Valparaíso, Chile, around 1785. Her husband died in the battle of Rancagua. Her wealth was confiscated and she fled the royalists to Mendoza where she stayed in the Ferrari household. San Martín stayed there for Christmas, 1816 and asked the women if they would make a flag for the army. She, along with Remedios de Escalada, Mercedes Alvarez de Segura, Laureana Ferrari and Margarita Corvalán began work immediately and finished the Bandera de los Andes on 5 January 1817. After the victory at Chacabuco she returned to Chile where she died in 1834. (Sosa de Newton, 25, 508)

She was born in Chile in 1785. She married a merchant, who was a staunch patriot. They fled to Mendoza in 1814 after Rancagua, during the Spanish reconquest of Chile. There, she made a flag for San Martín. On 5 January 1817 it was hung in the capital of Cuyo province, where the General en Jefe saluted it saying, "Soldados! Jurad sostenirla muriendo en su defensa como lo juro". Carranza claims that this was the first flag of independence. She remianed in Mendoza until the battle of Chacabuco, after which she returned to Chile, where she was much respected. She died in 1834. (Carranza, 132-137)

References:

Carranza, Adolfo P. (1910) Patricias argentinas
Sosa de Newton, Lily (1986) Diccionario biográfico de mujeres argentinas