Palomino & Vergara products were served to former queen Victoria Eugenia, the Grimaldis, king Baldouin of Belgium, president Kennedy, president Marcos, and the prime minister Golda Meir, ABC 08.04.72, available here
Palomino is not mentioned in numerous press articles on Palomino & Vergara products, compare ABC 02.07.72, available here, ABC 08.04.72, available here, or ABC 25.08.73, available here
bibliotecavirtualdeandalucia.es
"Francisco Palomino López" entry, [in:] Geneanet service, available here. Information is not confirmed as it comes from a single source. Local press reported death of a “Francisco Palomino y López” in 1885, El Guadalete 04.10.89, available here
in 1934 she was in very bad health, El Guadalete 21.04.34, available here
in 1891 a religious service was held in Jerez for the souls of defunct Francisco Palomino Lopez and Rosario Jimenez, El Guadalete 01.10.91, available here. Given Rosario is elsewhere reported to live at least until 1933, the information is unclear
El Guadalete 14.04.31, available here. Few months later but already under the Republican administration, in October 1931, Palomino received another official appointment; he member of Comité Paritario de Dependencias y Oficiales of Jerez de la Frontera, a labor arbitration committee. Palomino too his seat from the "vocales propietarios efectivos" pool, El Guadalete 30.10.31, available here
El Siglo Futuro 24.07.33, available here, El Guadalete 29.08.33, available here
in the press Palomino was rather noted for his labors in the Jerez ayuntamiento, El Guadalete 24.03.35, available here, or in the local Cámara de Comercio, El Guadalete 04.04.36, available here
e.g. in 1935 Palomino lobbied for construction of a railway line, which would run connect Jerez to major national route and run through a mountainous area, El Guadalete 22.08.35, available here
some general data in Francisco Bernal García, El lobby del Jerez. El sindicato de criadores exportadores de vinos de Jerez de la Frontera, 1931-1938, [in:] VI Encuentro de la Asociación Española de la Historia Económica, Sevilla 2016, pp. 16-17. For details see e.g. to fighting for winegrowers interests and duties on alcohol El Guadalete 27.03.35, available here (question of taxation and duties on alcohol), or El Guadalete 12.12.35, available here (question of limits on currency exchange)
see e.g. Palomino's March 1935 labors in the Andalusian Bloque Nacional, El Guadalete 19.03.35, available here
El Guadalete 17.01.36, available here, Rey Soto 2018, p. 91
political references were fairly common in the Jerez wine business and Palomino was no exception, for other samples see José Luis Jiménez, Monárquicos, republicanos y sublevados en la publicidad del jerez, [in:] La Voz Digital 17.09.06, available here. It is not known that political flavor spelled trouble to Palomino's business during the Republic, but it did translate into problems during Francoism later; censors suspected that the marketing slogan “la hora del cambio”, which accompanied the advertising campaign of the Fabuloso brandy, contained a veiled political message, Enrique Becerra, El vino de Jerez y Sanlúcar, s.l. 2017, ISBN9788417044985, page unavailable, see here
Bodegas Dio Baco, [in:] CosasDeCome service, available here/
elpais.com
P&V brand was purchased by Harvey, part of the Alliendyos conglomerate, Terry y Palomino y Vergara, para Harvey, según la comisión asesora de Rumasa, [in:] El País 11.06.85, available here
facebook.com
no source mentions any of his children. His death notice lists a number of relatives, but not any descendants, compare Don Juan J. Palomino Jiménez, [in:] Palomino & Vergara FB account 28.12.16, available here
Rafael Gines de Segundo, [in:] Palomino & Vergara Jerez FB profile 21.10.13, available here
Rafael Gines de Segundo, [in:] Palomino & Vergara Jerez FB profile 22.10.13, available here
geneanet.org
gw.geneanet.org
"Pedro Palomino" entry, [in:] Geneanet service, available here
"Francisco Palomino López" entry, [in:] Geneanet service, available here. Information is not confirmed as it comes from a single source. Local press reported death of a “Francisco Palomino y López” in 1885, El Guadalete 04.10.89, available here
"María del Rosario Jiménez García" entry, [in:] Geneanet service, available here
she was daughter to Antonio Jiménez and María García, "María del Rosario Jiménez García" entry, [in:] Geneanet service, available here
one and the same source claims that their daughter was born in 1862, but that her brother was born 34 year later, in 1896, "María del Rosario Jiménez García" entry, [in:] Geneanet service, available here
"Juan José Palomino Jimenez" entry, [in:] Geneanet service, available here
"Isabel Vergara Sanchiz" entry, [in:] Geneanet service, available here
she was daughter to Juan Mateo Vergara Quesada (1862-?) and Manuela Sanchiz Quesada (1867-?), both born and probably resident in Jerez de la Frontera, "Juan Mateo Vergara Quesada" entry, [in:] Geneanet service, available here
google.ru
now the building serves as a post office, see GoogleMaps service, available here
heraldrysinstitute.com
Palomino entry, [in:] HeraldryInstitute service, available here
jerez-xeres-sherry.blogspot.com
Paula MacLean, Bodegas: Palomino & Vergara, [in:] Jerez-Xeres-Sherry blog 20.08.12, available here
lavanguardia.com
hemeroteca.lavanguardia.com
Palomino travelled with Traditionalist militants José María Lamamie and Luis García Noelio, Martínez Sánchez 2002, p. 447. Palomino travelled also to Britain, probably on business. In 1946 he visited London and witnessed the House of Commons proceedings. When asked for comparison between the Commons and the Cortes, he responded that “aquí hablan, y nosotros declamamos; aquí discuten, y nosotros disputamos”, La Vanguardia Española 14.04.46, available here
lavozdigital.es
political references were fairly common in the Jerez wine business and Palomino was no exception, for other samples see José Luis Jiménez, Monárquicos, republicanos y sublevados en la publicidad del jerez, [in:] La Voz Digital 17.09.06, available here. It is not known that political flavor spelled trouble to Palomino's business during the Republic, but it did translate into problems during Francoism later; censors suspected that the marketing slogan “la hora del cambio”, which accompanied the advertising campaign of the Fabuloso brandy, contained a veiled political message, Enrique Becerra, El vino de Jerez y Sanlúcar, s.l. 2017, ISBN9788417044985, page unavailable, see here
legitymizm.org
in late spring of 1971 Palomino was referred in the Carlist press as merely “Miembro de la Junta Suprema y Delegado Regio de la Zona Sur”; the president of Junta Suprema was José Puig Pellicer, jefe of Andalucia Occidental was Guillermo García Pascual, and Andalucia Oriental was headed by Antonio Peña Suárez, Rodón Guinjoan 2015, pp. 510-511. According to one scholar Palomino was dismissed as president on July 27, 1971, Jacek Bartyzel, Królowie i przywódcy karlistowscy, [in:] Legitymizm service, available here, the same date is given in Fermín Pérez-Nievas Borderas, Contra viento y marea. Historia de la evolución ideológica del carlismo a través de dos siglos de lucha, Pamplona 1999, ISBN9788460589327, p. 176
Paula MacLean, Bodegas: Palomino & Vergara, [in:] Jerez-Xeres-Sherry blog 20.08.12, [link blocked by Wikipedia], also Rumasa: the dark years of sherry, [in:] SherryNotes service 22.11.18, available here
wine-searcher.com
Palomino wine entry, [in:] WineSearcher service, available here