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Gutierre de Hevia

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Don Gutierre de Hevia y Valdés (Tortona, Italy - Isla de León Cadiz, December 2, 1772) was head of the Spanish Marine Corps and present when Spain lost Havana during the British expedition against Cuba.

He joined the Spanish Navy in 1720. In Cadiz, he was involved in a duel and killed his opponent. He was trialed but acquitted, and left for the Americas. He made career in the Spanish Marine Corps and was the third man to set foot on enemy territory during the expedition to Oran in 1732.

In 1740, he served in the successful defense of Cartagena under general Blas de Lezo against a British invasion force under Admiral Edward Vernon, and was wounded.

In 1747 he received his first command of the warship Nueva España. In 1759 he commanded the Fenix that was part of the convoy that brought Carlos III, the new King of Spain, from Naples to Spain. For this, he received the titles of Marqués del Real Transporte and Vizconde del Buen Viaje, and became Squadron leader.

In 1761, he was sent to Havana with a fleet of 12 ships to defend the city against an expected attack by the British, as Spain had entered the Seven Years' War that year, on the side of France.

On June 6, 1762, a powerful English invasion force under George Keppel, 3rd Earl of Albemarle began the siege of Havana. The fleet of Hevia played no part in the battle, all the guns and men were disembarked and used to defend the forts. The city was finally taken on 13 August. Hevia neglected to burn his fleet, which fell intact in the hands of the British.

Hevia and the surviving Spanish troops were transported to Spain. On his arrival, the Madrid government caused him to be tried by a court-martial. He was stripped of his titles and condemned to house arrest for 10 years. Thanks to the influence of his father-in-law don Juan José Navarro, Marqués de la Victoria, he was pardoned on September 17, 1765 on the occasion of the wedding of Charles, the Prince of Asturia.

He was reinstated as head of the Marine Corps and was based in Cadiz. He died in 1772.

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