Daniel Florence O'Leary

Irish general and aide-de-camp under Simón Bolívar
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroIrish general and aide-de-camp under Simón Bolívar
PlacesUnited Kingdom
wasDiplomat Military personnel
Work fieldMilitary Politics
Gender
Male
Birth14 February 1801, Cork, County Cork, Munster, Ireland
Death24 February 1854Bogota, Colombia (aged 53 years)
The details

Biography

Daniel Florence O'Leary (Irish: Dónall Fínín Ó Laoghaire; 1801–1854) was a military general and aide-de-camp under Simón Bolívar.

Life

He was born in Cork, Ireland; his father was Jeremiah O'Leary, a butter merchant. In 1817, he emigrated to South America.

Bust of General O'Leary, Fitzgerald Park, Cork

Unlike many of the Irish who fought for Simon Bolívar in his many campaigns to win South American independence, O'Leary had not served in the Napoleonic Wars.

In 1827 he married Soledad Soublette, the younger sister of General Carlos Soublette, with whom he had nine children.

After Bolívar's death in 1830, O'Leary disobeyed orders to burn the general's personal documents. He spent much of the rest of his life organizing them, along with writing his own very extensive memoirs (spanning thirty-four volumes) of his time fighting in the revolutionary wars with Bolívar. He died in Bogotá, Colombia. He is buried in the National Pantheon of Venezuela.

A bust and plaque honouring O'Leary were presented by the Venezuelan Government to the people of Cork and unveiled on 12 May 2010 by the Venezuelan Ambassador to Ireland, Dr. Samuel Moncada.

Plaque below the bust of General Daniel O'Leary
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