Benito Lopez (politician)

Benito López
3rd Governor of Iloilo
In office
1906–1908
Preceded byRaymundo Melliza
Succeeded byRuperto Montinola
Personal details
BornBenito Villanueva López
(1877-04-03)April 3, 1877
DiedJanuary 20, 1908(1908-01-20) (aged 30)
PartyFederalista
SpousePresentacion Hofileña
ChildrenEugenio
Fernando
RelativesLópez family

Benito Villanueva López (April 3, 1877 – January 20, 1908) was a Filipino politician. He was a member of the influential Lopez family. Lopez was governor of Iloilo from 1903 until his assassination in 1908.

Biography

Benito López was born on April 3, 1877.[1] He was the ninth child of Eugenio López, one of the wealthiest sugar barons on Negros, and Marcella Felipe.

Immediately after the Philippine Revolution, he founded the newspaper El Tiempo, which grew to be Iloilo City's top newspaper. López also used the newspaper to launch his political career. He joined the Federalista Party in 1900 or 1901. In 1903 he won the election for governor of Iloilo. He was reelected in 1906.

On December 27, 1907, López was shot in his office by Joaquín Gil, a follower of Francisco Jalandoni, a political rival of López. A few weeks later, López died at the age of 30 at the Mission Hospital in Iloilo from the injuries sustained.[2]

Personal life and family

López was married to Presentacion Hofileña and had two children with her. Their eldest son, Eugenio Lopez, owned, among other things, the Manila Chronicle newspaper and was founder and owner of the Chronicle Broadcasting Network, a predecessor of ABS-CBN Corporation. Their other son, Fernando Lopez, served as mayor of Iloilo City, a member of the Senate of the Philippines, and Vice President of the Philippines for two terms, under Presidents Elpidio Quirino (1949 to 1953) and Ferdinand Marcos (1965 to 1972).

References

  1. ^ Vermelding geboortedatum Benito Lopez in Rubriek Nostalgia van Lopez Link, pag. 9, Lopez Group of Companies (April 2011)
  2. ^ Ingles, Raul Rafael (2008). 1908: The Way it Really was : Historical Journal for the UP Centennial, 1908-2008. UP Press. ISBN 978-971-542-580-3.