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・ Federico Sturzenegger
・ Federico Sáiz
・ Federico Tabeira
・ Federico Taddia
・ Federico Tafani
・ Federico Tantalean
・ Federico Tedeschini
・ Federico Tesio
・ Federico Tesio Stakes top three finishers
・ Federico Tinoco Granados
・ Federico Ilustre
・ Federico Insúa
・ Federico Jiménez Losantos
・ Federico Johow
・ Federico Jordan
Federico José María Ronstadt
・ Federico José Pagura
・ Federico Jusid
・ Federico Kammerichs
・ Federico Kauffmann Doig
・ Federico Krutwig
・ Federico Kurtz
・ Federico Lacroze
・ Federico Lacroze (Buenos Aires Underground)
・ Federico Lacroze railway station
・ Federico Laens
・ Federico Lardi
・ Federico Laredo Brú
・ Federico Laurito
・ Federico Leo


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Federico José María Ronstadt : ウィキペディア英語版
Federico José María Ronstadt

Federico José María Ronstadt (1868 - 1954) was a business and cultural leader in Tucson, Arizona, USA, in the early 20th century.
==Life and career==
Ronstadt was born in Las Delicias, in the municipality of Banamichi, Sonora, Mexico, in 1868, the son of Margarita Redondo Y Vasquez and Friederich August Ronstadt. He moved to Tucson in 1882 to learn the blacksmithing and wheelwright trades. He eventually formed the F. Ronstadt wagon and carriage company, which later changed its name to the F. Ronstadt Hardware and Machinery Company and became the largest business of its kind in southern Arizona.〔(''Borderman: The Memoirs of Federico José María Ronstadt'' ), The University of Arizona Library〕
Though he declined many invitations to run for high political offices, Ronstadt was an active community leader. He served a two-year term on the Pima County Board of Supervisors, was chairman of the Water and Agricultural Committee of the Tucson Chamber of Commerce, a member of the Tucson Rotary Club and supported numerous political campaigns and causes.〔
Music was essential to his life. A guitarist and vocalist, he founded what was probably Tucson's first professional orchestra, the Club Filarmonico Tucsonense, in 1896.〔James S. Griffith.(''Tucson's Ronstadt Family,'' ) The University of Arizona Library〕 In the mid-1920s Ronstadt was among the organizers of the Tucson Symphony Orchestra and he directed a production of Victor Herbert's ''The Red Mill''.〔
Music and stories always filled Ronstadt's home and inspired his children and grandchildren. He was married to Maria Guadalupe Agustina Dalton, who was of one-quarter English and three-quarters Mexican ancestry.〔("Descendants of Gonzalo Zamorano." ) ''www.familytreemaker.genealogy.com.'' Retrieved September 14, 2014.〕 Their daughter, Luisa Espinel, and granddaughter, Linda Ronstadt, became internationally acclaimed singers. Each paid tribute to their creative family tradition by publishing works entitled ''Canciones de mi padre'' (Songs of my Father).〔
Ronstadt remained active in business, writing and music up to his death in 1954.〔〔 The City of Tucson dedicated its central transit terminal to Ronstadt on March 16, 1991, for his early contribution to the city's mobility which included six mule-drawn streetcars delivered in 1903-1904.〔(''Transportation Research Board'' ), TRID Database〕 The Tucson Musicians Museum is dedicated to the legacy of Ronstadt for his fundamental contributions to Tucson's cultural identity.〔(''Federico José María Ronstadt'' ) Tucson Musicians Museum〕

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