Fort Santiago Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Fort Santiago. Here they are! All 4 of them:

Já não ouvia o som do motor da mota de Hugo a rugir, lá em baixo, nem as suas mãos fortes a enfiar a chave na fechadura, e muito menos ouvia quaisquer pancadas na porta de madeira ou os seus gritos furiosos. Não havia passado nesse instante, nem medo, nem tormento. Santiago levava-a a esquecer tudo isso, o príncipe do seu palácio e do seu mundo cor-de-rosa. Só uma coisa não podia ser esquecida, mas já a esquecera, entretanto. As cartas de Hugo continuavam escondidas por baixo do assento do sofá e fora ela própria a escondê-las. Porque é que o fizera? Para quem? Para si mesma ou para o marido? Pouco importava. Só o gesto já era uma mentira e uma traição e não sabia o que faria quando voltasse a recordar-se delas outra vez e daquilo que a esperava. E muito menos sabia o que faria quando voltasse a esquecer as cartas e Hugo, porque quando o fizesse, jamais se recordaria de retirar as missivas debaixo do assento do sofá e o marido iria descobrir todas as suas mentiras, antes que ela lhas pudesse revelar
Carina Rosa (A Sombra de um Passado)
Major General Leonard Wood Leonard Wood was an army officer and physician, born October 9, 1860 in Winchester, New Hampshire. His first assignment was in 1886 at Fort Huachuca, Arizona where he fought in the last campaign against the fierce Apache warrior Geronimo. He was awarded the Medal of Honor for carrying dispatches 100 miles through hostile territory and was promoted to the rank of Captain, commanding a detachment of the 8th Infantry. From 1887 to 1898, he served as a medical officer in a number of positions, the last of which was as the personal physician to President William McKinley. In 1898 at the beginning of the war with Spain, he was given command of the 1st Volunteer Cavalry. The regiment was soon to be known as the “Rough Riders." Wood lead his men on the famous charge up San Juan Hill and was given a field promotion to brigadier general. In 1898 he was appointed the Military Governor of Santiago de Cuba. In 1920, as a retired Major General, Wood ran as the Republican candidate for the presidency of the United States, losing to Warren Harding. In 1921 following his defeat, General Wood accepted the post of Governor General of the Philippines. He held this position from 1921 to 1927, when he died of a brain tumor in Boston, on 7 August 1927, at 66 years of age after which he was buried, with full honors, in Arlington National Cemetery.
Hank Bracker
la dimostrazione che si può davvero fare tanto, se mossi da qualcosa di forte.
Nicolò Balini (Todo Cambia: il Viaggio della Vita sul Cammino di Santiago)
Captain Joseph Frye One of the nicest parks in present day downtown Tampa, Florida, is the Cotanchobee Fort Brooke Park. The 5-acre park, which lies between the Tampa Bay Times Forum (Amalie Arena) and the mouth of the Hillsborough River at the Garrison Channel, is used for many weddings and special events such as the dragon boat races and the duck race. Few people give thought to the historic significance of the location, or to Captain Joseph Frye, considered Tampa’s first native son, who was born there on June 14, 1826. Going to sea was a tradition in the Frye family, starting with his paternal great-grandfather Samuel Frye from East Greenwich, Rhode Island, who was the master of the sloop Humbird. As a young man, Joseph attended the United States Naval Academy and graduated with the second class in 1847. Starting as an Ensign, he served as a commissioned officer in the U.S. Navy until the Civil War, at which time he resigned and took a commission as a Lieutenant in the Confederate Navy. The Ten Years’ War, also known as “the Great War,” which started in 1868 became the first of three wars of Cuban Independence. In October 1873, following the defeat of the Confederacy and five years into the Cuban revolution, Frye became Captain of a side-wheeler, the S/S Virginius. His mission was to take guns and ammunition, as well as approximately 300 Cuban rebels to Cuba, with the intent of fighting the Spanish army for Cuban Independence. Unfortunately, the mission failed when the ship was intercepted by the Spanish warship Tornado. Captain Frye and his crew were taken to Santiago de Cuba and given a hasty trial and before a British warship Commander, hearing of the incident, could intervene, they were sentenced to death. After thanking the members of his crew for their service, Captain Frye and fifty-three members of his crew were put to death by firing squad, and were then decapitated and trampled upon by the Spanish soldiers. However, the British Commander Sir Lambton Lorraine of HMS Niobe did manage to save the lives of a few of the remaining crewmembers and rebels.
Hank Bracker