The man to lead the Carlist rising, general
Sanjurjo, died in aviation accident in July 1936. Two military leaders of JTM,
Muslera and
Baselga, were captured during failed coup in
San Sebastián and executed soon afterwards.
Villegas (to lead the Sierra de Gata column) was captured in Madrid and killed in one of the 1936
sacas.
Villanova Rattazzi (Cuadro de Oficiales section of JTM) was fatally wounded in combat and died in 1937.
Manuel González-Quevedo (head of JTM Propaganda y Prensa section) was killed during so-called
Usera Tunnel scam in Madrid in 1937.
González de Gregorio (one of key Madrid plotters) died of natural causes in 1938.
Tellería (who arranged Guardia Civil uniforms) died in a car crash before the end of the civil war in 1939.
Serrador (to lead the Maestrazgo column) died as high military official in 1943.
Olazabál (head of JTM Entrada y Depósito section) and
Varela (to lead the Madrid coup) died as distinguished personalities in 1951.
Rada (JTM's Requeté section) rose to commander of the
II. Military Region while
Lamamie (JTM's Dirección section) became a dissident Carlist of early
Francoism; both deceased in 1956.
Utrilla (Navarrese requeté lead) was head of
VII. Military Region before his death in 1963.
Tarduchy (JTM's Propaganda y Prensa) became a
Falangist propagandist, died in 1964.
Redondo (to lead the Sierra de Aracena column) rose to general and high official; he died in 1973.
Fal led mainstream Carlism until the mid-1950s; he died in May 1975. , 1970s Some of the protagonists lived long enough to see the post-Francoist era.
Don Javier remained the exiled dynastical head of mainstream Carlism until his death in 1977. The head of Requeté section
Zamanillo following a period of fierce opposition to the regime became a die-hard Francoist, was member of
Consejo de Estado and died in 1980.
Oriol (JTM's Información) was a great industrial mogul and pro-Francoist Traditionalist, to die in 1985. There is no decease year known for
Ruiz Ojeda (JTM's Cuadro de Oficiales; he grew to high social insurance manager and was last heard of in 1957),
Calixto González-Quevedo (JTM's Información section; he abandoned politics and became a well-known doctor, last recorded in 1958) and
Cuerda (co-author of the insurgency plan, later a general and high official, died after 1969). ==In historiography==