CORONADO 



he was forced to emigrate to escape the 

 persecutions of the Spanish authorities. 

 Settling in New York he allied himself 

 with various revolutionary clubs and edited 

 P atria, the official organ of the Revolu- 

 tion in foreign parts. He collaborated 

 also in El Porvenir, Cuba y America, and 

 Cuba y Puerto Rico, all published in New 

 York. In 1897, in association with En- 

 rique Hernandes Meyares, he founded Ca- 

 carajicara but soon withdrew from it. 



In 1898, Coronado was free to return to 

 educational and literary work which he has 

 continued with a single interim of two 

 years, 190^-4, when he was Secretary of the 

 Cuban legation in Mexico. He has been 

 member of the Havana Board of Education 

 (1899), school inspector for the Province 

 of Havana (1900), member and secretary 

 of the board of judges for the scholastic 

 contests in the secondary schools of the 

 Provinces of Matanzas and Santa Clara 

 (1900), Provincial Superintendent of the 

 schools of Camaguey (1 900-1 902), Pro- 

 vincial Superintendent of the schools of 

 Havana (1904- 1909), Secretary of the Na- 



AND MONOGRAPHS 



483 



