Miguel Jerónimo Gutiérrez (June 15, 1822 – April 19, 1871) was a Cuban revolutionary, politician, and military officer who played a significant role in the Ten Years' War (1868) and served as the Vice President of the Chamber of Representatives of the Republic in Arms in 1869.
[3] At the Guáimaro Assembly on April 10, 1869, he was a delegate of Las Villas along with Honorato del Castillo, Eduardo Machado, Antonio Lorda, Arcadio García, and Tranquilino Valdés.
[4] The Guáimaro Constitution formalized the structure of the revolutionary government, including the creation of the Chamber of Representatives, which served as the legislative body of the Republic in Arms during the Ten Years' War.
The Chamber of Representatives of the Republic in Arms was formed with Salvador Cisneros Betancourt as chairman and Gutiérrez designated as vice-chairman.
[5] In Havana, on November 7, 1870, a court-martial convicted Miguel Jerónimo Gutiérrez and conspirators associated with the Cuban Junta of treason and rebellion, sentencing them to death by garrote if they were captured by Spanish authorities.