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==Posthumous==
==Posthumous==
[[File:Lima Monumento Quinones.jpg|thumb|right|Monument in [[San Isidro District, Lima|San Isidro]], [[Lima]]]]
[[File:Lima Monumento Quinones.jpg|thumb|right|Monument in [[San Isidro District, Lima|San Isidro]], [[Lima]]]]
Following his death, Quiñones was promoted to the rank of Air Force Captain and he was declared a national hero by law on May 10, 1966.<ref>{{in lang|es}} Law N° 16126, May 10, 1966</ref> Named in his honour is the [[FAP Captain José Abelardo Quiñones González International Airport]] near his town of birth in [[Chiclayo]]. When the new currency of Peru was introduced in 1991, Gonzales appeared on the 10 [[Peruvian sol|sol]] Banknote. He was also the subject of the banknote of 500 [[Peruvian sol (1863-1985)|soles de oro]] issued in 1976.
Following his death, Quiñones was promoted to the rank of Air Force Captain and he was declared a national hero by law on May 10, 1966.<ref>{{in lang|es}} Law N° 16126, May 10, 1966</ref> Named in his honour is the [[FAP Captain José Abelardo Quiñones González International Airport]] near his town of birth in [[Chiclayo]]. When the new currency of Peru was introduced in 1991, Gonzales appeared on the 10 [[Peruvian sol|sol]] Banknote.{{citation needed|date=March 2022}} He was also the subject of the banknote of 500 [[Peruvian sol (1863-1985)|soles de oro]] issued in 1976.{{citation needed|date=March 2022}}


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 20:42, 25 March 2022

José Quiñones Gonzales
Birth nameJosé Abelardo Quiñones Gonzáles
Born(1914-04-22)April 22, 1914
Pimentel, Lambayeque, Peru
DiedJuly 23, 1941(1941-07-23) (aged 27)
Quebrada Seca, Ecuador
(today Peru)
Allegiance Peru
Service / branchPeruvian Air Force
Paratrooper Company
Years of service1935–1944
RankGrand General of the Air of Peru (posthumous)
Battles / warsEcuadorian–Peruvian War

José Abelardo Quiñones Gonzáles (April 22, 1914 – July 23, 1941) was a Peruvian military aviator and posthumously became a national hero for his actions at the Battle of Zarumilla during the Ecuadorian–Peruvian War of 1941.

Early Life

Military portrait

Quiñones was born in the port of Pimentel on April 22, 1914. His parents were José María Quiñones Arízola and María Juana Rosa Gonzales Orrego. He was the third legitimate child of three brothers. He his primary studies were at a local school run by nuns, and then at the Colegio Nacional San José de Chiclayo. The rector of the school, Karl Weiss, promoted gliding, tan activthat that[clarify] Quiñones, along with other classmates, had became fond of, excited by the exploits of outstanding figures of Peruvian civil aviation, such as Jorge Chávez and Juan Bielovucic.

In 1928, by decision of his parents, he moved to Lima and began his secondary education at the Colegio Sagrados Corazones Recoleta, until the second year in 1929. He finished his remaining years at the Colegio Nacional Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe, attending from 1930 to 1932.[1] Despite his parents' firece opposition, he decided to join the Peruvian Air Force.[2]

Military career

Quiñones' inverted flight

In 1935, he entered the Jorge Chávez Central Aviation School as a cadet and joined the Comandante CAP José Lucas Raguz Verán class. In officers' school he stood out for his ability to adapt to different piloting and aviation techniques. Four years after entering, he was received as an ensign on January 21, 1939, as the first of his promotion in the specialty of fighter pilot. In merit of this, he received the "Golden Wing" of the Air Force. It was precisely in the aerial display that he gave on his graduation day that he amazed those present with an inverted flight almost one meter above the ground, which can still be seen on film today.[1]

As an aviation officer he was assigned to the No. 4 Squadron in Ancón. After four months, he was transferred to the Las Palmas base and from there to the 21st Fighter Squadron of the First Air Group, located in the city of Chiclayo.

Quiñones was part of the 41st (forty-first) Squadron of North American NA-50 aircraft and was part of the first High Aerobatics Squadron. When the paratrooper unit was created and after intense training, he made jumps from the skies of Chiclayo.

Combat history

NA-50 "Torito", similar to that flown by Lt. Quiñones on July 23, 1941.

Lieutenant Quiñones was a fighter pilot of the 41st Escuadrilla (Squadron), Peruvian Air Force, and was part of a section carrying out a low-level strafing/bombing attack against Ecuadorian forces at Quebrada Seca on July 23, 1941. During the raid, Quiñones' aircraft, a North American NA-50 "TORITO" (North American P-64) nicknamed Pantera, was mortally hit by ground fire from a battery of Ecuadorian anti-aircraft artillery.[3]

According to Peruvian accounts, instead of parachuting to safety, Quiñones chose to make the supreme sacrifice by crashing his damaged aircraft onto the Ecuadorian position, rendering the battery out of action. This version of events has been subsequently called into question by Ecuadorian military authorities, who have stated that there were no anti-aircraft guns in the area.[4]

Posthumous

Monument in San Isidro, Lima

Following his death, Quiñones was promoted to the rank of Air Force Captain and he was declared a national hero by law on May 10, 1966.[5] Named in his honour is the FAP Captain José Abelardo Quiñones González International Airport near his town of birth in Chiclayo. When the new currency of Peru was introduced in 1991, Gonzales appeared on the 10 sol Banknote.[citation needed] He was also the subject of the banknote of 500 soles de oro issued in 1976.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ a b "HÉROE NACIONAL CAPITÁN FAP JOSÉ ABERLARDO QUIÑONES GONZALES, GRAN GENERAL DEL AIRE DEL PERÚ". Peruvian Air Force.
  2. ^ Tauro del Pino, Alberto (2001). Enciclopedia ilustrada del Perú: QUI-SAL (in Spanish). Lima: Empresa Editora El Comercio S. A. p. 2188. ISBN 9972401499.
  3. ^ "José Abelardo Quiñones y su inmortal Vuelo Invertido". Caretas. 2020-01-21.
  4. ^ "Jose Quiñones - Peruvian Kamikaze Hero".
  5. ^ (in Spanish) Law N° 16126, May 10, 1966