Juan Manuel Cafferata (1 January 1852 – 23 September 1920) was an Argentine politician of the National Autonomist Party.
He was the governor of province of Santa Fe between 1890 and 1893.Cafferata was born in Buenos Aires, the son of an immigrant businessman from Genoa, Italy, who had settled in Rosario (southern Santa Fe).
He studied law at the Jesuit's College of the Immaculate Conception in the city of Santa Fe.
He then moved to CĂłrdoba and became Doctor in Jurisprudence at the University of San Carlos (later National University of CĂłrdoba).
After Gálvez's rule he was elected to replace him.
He was the governor of Santa Fe from 7 April 1890 until his resignation in August 1893.
During Cafferata's term, 17 colonies were founded in the province and many elementary schools were opened.
Facing a difficult economic situation, his government issued bonds without authorization of the Legislature to pay public employees' salaries.
A few days after the beginning of the uprising known as the Revolution of 1893, which questioned the legitimacy of the elections that had taken him to power, Cafferata resigned and moved with his family to Buenos Aires.
The revolution, led by the newly formed Radical Civic Union against the rule of the National Autonomist Party, brought the Radical governor Mariano Candioti to power, though only for less than two months, until the defeat of the Radicals, first on the national level, and then in Santa Fe.
Cafferata died in CĂłrdoba, in 1920, of tuberculosis.
His remains were brought to Rosario and buried in the Saviour's Cemetery.