Juan José Nieto Gil

Juan José Nieto Gil
Portrait, c. 1860–1866
2nd President of the Granadine Confederation
In office
25 January 1861 – 18 July 1861
Preceded byMariano Ospina Rodríguez
Succeeded byTomás Cipriano de Mosquera y Arboleda
2nd President of Bolívar
In office
26 July 1859 – 11 December 1864
DeputyJuan Antonio de La Espriella
Preceded byJuan Antonio Calvo
Succeeded byBenjamín Noguera
Governor of Cartagena de Indias
In office
22 July 1851 – 25 June 1854
Preceded byJosé Antonio López de Tagle y Ortiz Muñoz
Succeeded byManuel Marcelino Núñez
In office
29 August 1849 – 16 December 1849
Preceded byJosé María Obando del Campo
Succeeded byJosé María Obando del Campo
Personal details
Born(1804-06-24)24 June 1804
Died16 July 1866(1866-07-16) (aged 62)
PartyLiberal
Spouse(s)María Margarita del Carmen Palacio García del Fierro (1827–1830)
Josefa Teresa Plácida de los Dolores Cavero y Leguina (1834–1866)
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Juan José Nieto Gil (24 June 1804 – 16 July 1866) was a Colombian politician, Army general and writer. A Liberal party caudillo of Cartagena, he served interimly as Governor of the Province of Cartagena, and was later elected President of the Sovereign State of Bolívar from 1859 to 1864. In 1861, during the Colombian Civil War, he fought on the side of the Liberal rebels against the Administration of President Mariano Ospina Rodríguez, and acting in rebellion proclaimed himself President of the Granadine Confederation in his right as the Presidential Designate, relinquishing power four months later to the Liberal leader, General Tomás Cipriano de Mosquera y Arboleda, who led a successful coup d'état against the Conservative Government in Bogotá.

Nieto, of mulatto background, was the first mixed-race Colombian to rise to politics in the history of Colombia becoming the first mixed-race Colombian to become the executive officeholder of a first level administrative division of Colombia.