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Orono

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Nicasio V. Oroño (July 20, 1825 in Coronda , Santa Fe – October 12, 1904 in Santa Fe ) was an Argentine politician and lawyer, and governor of Santa Fe between 1865 and 1868.

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11-593: Orono may refer to: Places [ edit ] Oroño Boulevard , Rosario, Santa Fe Province, Argentina Orono, Ontario , Canada, a town in the Municipality of Clarington United States [ edit ] Orono, Maine , a town in Penobscot County, home to the University of Maine Orono (CDP), Maine , the main settled area of the town Orono, Minnesota ,

22-556: A butterfly of family Hesperiidae Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Orono . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Orono&oldid=1109241135 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Disambiguation pages with surname-holder lists Hidden categories: Short description

33-570: A city in Hennepin County Orono Township, Muscatine County, Iowa People [ edit ] Dumas Oroño (1921–2005), Uruguayan artist Joseph Orono (1688–1738), Penobscot Indian chief Nicasio Oroño (1825–1904), Argentine politician and lawyer Rafael Orono (born 1958), Venezuelan boxer Orono Wor Petchpun (born 1978), Thai kickboxer and mixed martial artist Orono Noguchi, member of Superorganism (band) Other uses [ edit ] Hedone orono ,

44-571: A major street as Oroño Boulevard in 1904. Together with Marcelino Freyre , Oroño represented Santa Fe in the Assembly that wrote the Argentine Constitution in 1853. In 1862 Oroño was elected member of the Chamber of Deputies , but in 1865 he resigned, after being chosen to replace Patricio Cullen as governor of Santa Fe Province. In the latter office he focused on the institutionalization of

55-426: A tiled pedestrian area and a cycleway . The lanes themselves are comparatively narrow. The boulevard was inaugurated in 1868 as Bulevar Santafesino , as part of a program of the municipality (created 6 years before) to beautify the city, then home to 23,000 residents, and which also included the opening of Pellegrini Avenue (then Bulevar Argentino ). Initially 18 blocks long, it was chosen by many wealthy families of

66-554: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Oro%C3%B1o Boulevard Oroño Boulevard (in Spanish, Bulevar Oroño ) is a street in Rosario , Santa Fe Province , Argentina . It is a two-way boulevard that runs north–south through the center-east of the city, from the coastal avenue by the Paraná River to the southern limit of

77-617: The Battle of Caseros , fighting together with the forces of Entre Ríos under the command of Ricardo López Jordán , one of the divisions of the Grand Army, against the forces of Buenos Aires led by Juan Manuel de Rosas . In 1854 Oroño sent a letter to president of the Argentine Confederation Justo José de Urquiza with a proposal for the institutional organization of Rosario , which was approved. On August 17 of that year he

88-534: The province. When he finished his mandate in 1868 he was elected national senator , and from his seat he promoted the expansion and population of the country. After a period of political inactivity, Oroño was named director of the Office of Lands and Colonies of the Nation in 1891, but was removed from the charge after political differences with president Luis Sáenz Peña . In 1899 he was elected as constitutional deputy for

99-529: The time to build mansions, many of which still persist. Its name was changed in 1904 to honor Nicasio Oroño , former mayor of Rosario and governor of Santa Fe, upon his death. Nicasio Oro%C3%B1o Oroño was born to Unitarian Coronel Santiago Oroño and Juana Ávila Baigorria. At age 16, he joined his father and participated of the military campaigns directed by Juan Lavalle and José María Paz . In 1839, he married Joaquina Cullen, daughter of Santa Fe governor Domingo Cullen . In 1852, he participated of

110-432: The urbanized area. Together with the river and Pellegrini Avenue , it also marks the unofficial limit of the downtown area. The downtown segment of the boulevard hosts a number of historical buildings and mansions formerly belonging to wealthy local families, in some cases transformed into institutional buildings (such as schools and private hospitals). The central reservation is wide, lined with palm trees , and includes

121-493: Was named Customs Administrator, an important position during those times. After the promulgation of the law that gave Rosario city status, the governor of Santa Fe José María Cullen , Oroño's brother-in-law, named him political chief of the city. Oroño created a vigilance service for the city. Under his administration the Provincial Hospital of Rosario was opened. The Municipality of Rosario honoured his legacy by renaming

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