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Biography of Carlos Romero Barceló
Name: Carlos Romero Barceló
Birth Date: September 4, 1932
Death Date: N/A
Place of Birth: San Juan, Puerto Rico
Nationality: Puerto Rican
Gender: Male
Occupations: politician, attorney
Carlos Romero Barceló
Carlos Romero Barceló (born 1932), Puerto Rican political leader, the fifth elected governor of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and a representative in the U.S. Congress under territorial status, was one of the foremost advocates of U.S. statehood for his country.Carlos Romero Barceló was born on September 4, 1932, in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and was reared in a family atmosphere in which public affairs and politics were considered important. His father, Antonio Romero Moreno, was a lawyer and engineer and served as a superior court judge. His maternal grandfather was Antonio R. Barceló, who had been one of Luis Muñoz Rivera's close associates, the first president of the Puerto Rico Senate (elected in 1917) and the founder of the Liberal Party in the early 1930s. His mother, Josefina Barceló, became the president of the Liberal Party shortly after her father's death.Romero Barceló
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In 1981 he was awarded the U.S. Attorney General's Medal. Associated Organizations Further Reading There are no books in English dealing specifically with Romero Barceló or his administration. A good source for his activities in the U.S. Congress, including a biography, is the House of Representatives Web site (www.house.gov/romero-barcelo/). For more information on the issue of Puerto Rican statehood and Romero's involvement, refer to the Puerto Rico Statehood Web site (www.puertorico51.org/english/). Some good general works on Puerto Rico contain useful material on Romero and his activities. Examples are Kal Wagenheim, Puerto Rico: A Profile (1970); Jorge Heine and J. M. Garcia-Passalacqua, The Puerto Rican Question, Foreign Policy Association Headline Series #266 (Nov./Dec. 1983); Jorge Heine, ed., Time for Decision (1983), especially chapters 1, 8, and 9; and Raymond J. Carr, Puerto Rico: A Colonial Experiment (1984). Several of Romero's speeches have been published in Vital Speeches of the Day.
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