Aurelio Baldor

Aurelio Baldor (October 22, 1906, Havana, Cuba – April 2, 1978, Miami) was a Cuban mathematician, educator and lawyer.[1] Baldor is the author of a secondary school algebra textbook, titled Algebra, used throughout the Spanish-speaking world and published for the first time in 1941.

He was the youngest child of Daniel and Gertrudis Baldor. He was the founder and director of the prestigious Baldor School in the exclusive Vedado section of Havana. In its heyday, the school had 3,500 students and used 23 buses to provide transportation to its students. In 1959, with the arrival of Fidel Castro's communist regime, Aurelio Baldor and his family began experiencing some problems. Raúl Castro had intended to arrest Baldor, but Camilo Cienfuegosone of Fidel Castro's own top commandersprevented the arrest, as he highly admired and respected Baldor for his accomplishments as an educator.

After the sudden and mysterious death of Camilo Cienfuegos approximately one month later in an airplane which disappeared over the sea, Baldor and his family left Cuba and were exiled in Mexico for a short time, and then they migrated to New Orleans, Louisiana. Afterward, they moved on to New York (Brooklyn) and New Jersey, where Baldor continued teaching at Saint Peter's College in Jersey City. He also taught daily classes in mathematics at the now defunct Stevens Academy, in Hoboken, New Jersey.

He spent much time writing mathematical theorems and exercises. Once a tall and imposing man weighing 100 kg (220 lbs), Baldor slowly began losing weight as his health declined. He died from pulmonary emphysema in Miami, FL, on April 2, 1978. His seven children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren still reside in Miami. Other Family include Francisco Baldor, Maria Cristina Baldor and Aurelio Baldor's second cousin Teresita Baldor

Baldor's algebra textbook "Algebra" (With Graphics and 6,523 exercises and answers) published by Compañía Cultural Editora y Distribuidora de Textos Americanos, S. A. continues being used to this day in secondary schools throughout Latin America.

References

{{Persondata Just wanted to make a correction to what may have been a typo: Baldor did not have 23 school busses. There were 33. I know it for a fact, because I used to go to Baldor School in #32, and know for a fact that there was one more. How could I forget a detail, when I was attending the greatest school in the world, with the best school Principal ever? Gilda Echevarria

|NAME =Baldor, Aurelio |ALTERNATIVE NAMES = |SHORT DESCRIPTION =Cuban mathematician, educator, lawyer |DATE OF BIRTH =22 October 1906 |PLACE OF BIRTH =Havana, Cuba |DATE OF DEATH =3 April 1978 |PLACE OF DEATH =Miami }}


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