Tomás Cox Méndez
Tomás Cox Méndez | |
|---|---|
| Member of the Senate | |
| In office 15 May 1933 – 15 May 1937 | |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 15 April 1883 |
| Died | 6 June 1969 (aged 86) |
| Party | Conservative Party |
| Spouse | Lucía Palma |
| Profession | Farmer, Vintner, Politician |
Tomás Cox Méndez (15 April 1883 – 6 June 1969) was a Chilean farmer, vintner and politician affiliated with the Conservative Party. He served as senator for the Seventh Provincial Grouping of Ñuble and Concepción during the 1933–1937 legislative period and played an active role in agricultural and vitivinicultural policy in Chile.[1]
Biography
Cox Méndez was born in Concepción on 15 April 1883, the son of Guillermo Cox Bustillos and Loreto Méndez Urrejola. He married Lucía Palma.[1]
He completed his education at the Colegio San Ignacio in Santiago. Professionally, he devoted himself to agricultural activities and vitiviniculture, becoming the owner of the Viña Cucha Cucha in the Itata valley, one of the country's important wine-producing regions.[1]
Political and public career
A member of the Conservative Party, Cox Méndez was elected senator for the provinces of Ñuble and Concepción for the 1933–1937 legislative period. This four-year senatorial mandate formed part of the institutional adjustment following the political crisis of June 1932, which temporarily altered the constitutional duration of senatorial terms.[1]
During his time in the Senate, he served on the Standing Committees on War and Navy and on Labour and Social Welfare. He took an active role in vitivinicultural legislation, attending all sessions of the Finance Committee in his capacity as president of the Central Association of Vintners.[1]
He was president of the Central Association of Vintners and served as director of the National Society of Agriculture (SNA) and of the Agricultural Colonization Fund. He was also the author of the study Ausentismo en nuestros campos, a work analyzing absenteeism in rural estates and its social implications for relations between landowners and tenant farmers.[1]
Other activities
Cox Méndez was a member of the Club de la Unión, the League Against Alcoholism and the Santiago Golf Club. He also collaborated with the National Child Welfare Board (Patronato Nacional de la Infancia).[1]