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John W. Haussermann

American colonial army officer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John W. Haussermann
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John W. Haussermann or "Judge" Haussermann (December 14, 1867 – July 11, 1965)[1] was an American colonial army officer and gold mine owner in the Philippines. Haussermann was born in New Richmond, Ohio and came to the Philippines in 1898 as a second lieutenant during the Spanish–American War.[2][3] After the war he remained in the Philippines and founded the gold mining company Benguet Mining Consolidated whose two largest gold mines (the Antamok Gulch and the Balatoc[4][better source needed]) supplied gold to the U.S. Department of Treasury.[2] The company is estimated to have lost $13 million due to the Japanese occupation during World War II.[5] Benguet Mining Consolidated was an important for its role as the defendant in the Perkins v. Benguet Mining Co. U.S. Supreme Court case of 1952.

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Joaquín Miguel Elizalde, Sergio Osmeña, and John W. Haussermann, 1938 or 1939

He served as Judge Advocate and Assistant Attorney-General of the Philippines, the former under governor-general William Howard Taft.[3][6]

After being forced to flee by the Japanese invasion, Mr. Haussermann began planning a trip back to the Philippines as early as October 1944.[7] He was finally able to fulfil this plan in 1948.[8]

His son, John William Haussermann Jr. (1909-1986) was born in Manila, and became a composer.[9]

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