Background
The son of José Gregorio Allende Garcés and Salomé Padín Ruiz, Allende was born in Valparaísouthern
The son of José Gregorio Allende Garcés and Salomé Padín Ruiz, Allende was born in Valparaísouthern
He studied at the Liceo de Valparaíso and the Instituto Nacional before graduating, on 20 June 1865, from the Universidad de Chile as a physician specializing in obstetrics and surgery.
The author of several important scientific publications, he also headed the Chilean Army"s medical services during the War of the Pacific. Allende was of Basque descent. He was an assistant professor of the School of Medicine, becoming a full professor in November 1865.
In 1870 he became the Chief Doctor of Valparaíso"s emergency public hospital, the Hospital de Sanidad.
He also worked with Professor Wenceslao Díaz and at the San Borja and San Vicente de Paul hospitals. In 1875 President Federico Errázuriz Zañartu appointed him to the Public Welfare Committee, charged with a reforming brief.
Allende joined the Radical Party and was in 1876 elected as deputy for Santiago. He was reelected in 1879, this time for Copiapó and Caldera.
He also served from 8 December 1879 to 1 November 1880 as chairman of the Council on Public Hygiene.
On 28 September 1880, during the War of the Pacific (1879–1884), Doctor Allende was appointed Superintendent of the Army Medical Services. During this time he attended the troops as chief medical officer in charge of the Ambulance Service (an "ambulance" at the time was a mobile hospital of about 20 beds, equipped for the performance of emergency field surgery). He was also a director of the Corps of Firemen.
Allende was elected to the Senate in 1882, and in 1884 he became Masonic Grand Master.
He was, though, to die just a few months later, aged 39, from complications arising from his diabetic condition. Allende"s funeral – at which the public eulogy was delivered by the radical leader Enrique Mac-Iver and two future presidents of Chile, José Manuel Balmaceda and Ramón Barros Luco, carried the coffin – turned into a gigantic political meeting.
He was also editor of the newspapers Guía para el Pueblo ("The People"s guide") and El Deber (""Duty""). He was nominated as a member of the Public Instruction Committee and in this role he founded several schools, among them the Blas Cuevas School in Valparaíso, the first masonically controlled school.