Juan B. Alegre

Juan Bautista Alegre y Levantino (February 2, 1882 – June 14, 1931) was a Filipino statesman, a delegate of the first Philippine Independence Mission of 1919 to Washington, D.C., Secretary of the National Committee of the Philippine Independence Commission of 1922,    a member of the first Philippine Independence Congress of 1930, and Senator of the Philippines.

Biography
Juan B. Alegre was born on February 2, 1882, in Casiguran in the province of Sorsogon in the Bicol Peninsula. In 1926, he later moved residence to what is now known as Barangay San Juan in Irosin.

Alegre was an abaca plantation owner and reportedly one of the wealthiest citizens of the Philippines of his time. He was the president of the Chamber of Commerce of the Philippine Islands from 1920 to 1921, and one of the financiers of the Philippines Herald  newspaper. Juan B. Alegre was married to Amanda Sargent  and survived by four of his children.

After completing his training in the Philippines, Juan B. Alegre attended Yale University from 1903 to 1905 but had to leave his 3Ls in Yale Law School, abetted by business concerns from the death of his father, Narciso Alegre Pellicer.

In 1922, he was elected to the Senate of the Philippines for the Sixth Senatorial District on behalf of the Nacionalista Party. Three years later, Alegre was re-elected to the 7th Philippine Legislature. However, after being defeated for a third term in the 1928 Senate elections by another member of the Nacionalista Party, he joined the Democrata Party.

On behalf of the Demócratas, he succeeded afterwards in being re-elected again to the Senate. But before Alegre could take his place in the 9th Philippine Legislature, however, he died in his home in Manila after being sworn to office at the age of 49, on June 14, 1931 from complications of gastric ulcer. His vacancy was filled by Jose O. Vera by a special election later that year. A street fronting the Sorsogon Provincial Capitol and Park in Sorsogon City is named in his honor.