Pedro Ferré
Argentine politician and military officer
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/92/Pedro_Ferr%C3%A9_01.jpg/220px-Pedro_Ferr%C3%A9_01.jpg)
Pedro Ferré (29 June 1788 - 21 January 1867) was an Argentine politician and military officer, who served in four terms as Governor of Corrientes Province (1824-1828, 1830-1833, 1839 and the last term between 1839 and 1842) and was constitutional delegate for the redaction of the Argentine Constitution of 1853.[1]
He was elected National Senator and was designated provisional president of the Senate between 1864 and 1865.[2]
References
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Argentine Civil Wars (1814–76)
involved
(leaders)
Federalists |
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Unitarians |
- Cepeda (1820)
- Navarro (1828)
- San Roque (1829)
- Márquez Bridge (1829)
- La Tablada (1829)
- Oncativo (1830)
- Sauce Grande (1840)
- Famaillá (1841)
- Caaguazú (1841)
- Laguna Limpia (1846)
- Caseros (1852)
- Cepeda (1859)
- Pavón (1861)
- Pozo de Vargas (1867)
- Don Gonzalo (1873)
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