Antonio de la Mora

In de la Mora's post-military career, he served as an educator and bandmaster of YMCAs and Shriners of several cities.

In particular, he organized (i) the amateur military band at the Salt Lake City YMCA in 1913, (ii) the Kem Shrine and YMCA of Grand Forks, North Dakota, and (iii) the Hamasa Temple Shrine Band of Meridian, Mississippi.

Como suave racha primaveral empapada con los perfumados cármenes del Anáhuac recibí la noticia.

Pero comenzó la compaña política, y todos los que militamos en las filas delahuertistas, fuimos cesados inmediatamente.

Sobrevino la revolución, y los elementos civiles no dejamos de estar amagados hasta que por fin puse pies en polvorosa, y aquí me tiene Ud.

Después rompiendo la estridencia incandecente del tópico electoral, me dice: Ahora, que conoce Ud.

He re-enlisted that same day, December 16, 1909, in the 20th Infantry at Fort Douglas, Utah – just a few miles east of Salt Lake City.

Around 1910, while serving as vice head musician, he was with the 21st U.S. Infantry in the Philippines, on the island of Mindanáo at Ludlow Barracks.

While in the Philippines, De la Mora was on the "Sick List" of enlisted personnel: Admitted February 10, 1910, return to duty March 25, 1911, in Manilla.

When he signed his World War I Draft Registration on September 12, 1818, he provided the name of his wife, Amanda de la Mora, and his address at 817 24th Avenue (between 8th and 9th Streets), Meridian, Mississippi, an address that corresponds to the site upon which the Hamasa Temple was built in 1924.

News accounts attributed de la Mora's distress to a prior nervous breakdown from overwork and marital unhappiness relating to disagreements with in-laws.

De la Mora, about two months earlier, had married Susan May Stennis (maiden; 1899–1973) in Meridian, Mississippi.

Trabajo ligero pagos desde $3.20 diarios Instrumentos que más falta hacen: Soprano Saxophon-primer, clarinete, primer cornetín, 1er alto o corno, dos trombones de vara, baterías.

De la Mora moved to Kansas City, Missouri, around December 1925 to organize the Mexican Band of the Unión Cultural Mexicana (U.C.M.)

De la Mora, with Martha (1903–1983), Antonio, Jr. (1922–1985), and Adolfo (born 1934) – his wife and two sons – resided at 2322 Monitor Place.

Dr. Nicolás Jaime (1885–1965) (surname pronounced "high-me" with the accent evenly divided) was the attending physician who signed the death certificate.

Dr. Jaime, a co-founder of the U.C.M., 73 days earlier had signed a US$2,500 bail bond (equivalent to US$43,026 in 2023) for Jorge Prieto Laurens (1895–1990), who was elected and served as interim governor of San Luis Potosí in 1923 for one year, was indicted in San Antonio and arrested on February 28, 1926, in Kansas City, on a charge by the Mexican government that he had, as part of the Huerta faction, participated in a plot to overthrow (another revolution) the then present Mexican regime, a government for which, diplomatically, the United States was on friendly terms.

But as a community member, in 1958, he was named "Man of the Year" by the Kansas City Academy of General Practice.

Antonio de la Mora Hernandez