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John Stallo John (Johann) Bernhard Stallo (Sierhausen, March 16, 1823 – Florence, January 6, 1900) was a German-American academic, jurist, philosopher, and ambassador. ==Early life== Stallo was born in Sierhausen in the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg (Germany) on March 16, 1823, the son of a schoolmaster, Johann Heinrich Stallo (1797–1840) and his wife, Anna Maria Adelheid Moormann (1798–1861). Stallo studied at home and at a free, Catholic normal school at Vechta. Because the family lacked the funds to send him to a ''Gymnasium'' (secondary school), Stallo emigrated to the United States in 1839, establishing himself in Cincinnati, Ohio, not far from his uncle, the Utopian socialist, Franz Joseph Stallo,(), where many other family members would settle. Stallo taught German and Mathematics at the newly renamed St. Xavier College() (formerly a Jesuit "lyceum" called "The Atheneum") from 1841-1844. He published his first book, ''ABC, Spelling and Reading Book, for the German Schools of America,'' which apparently sold very well. He then taught mathematics and science at another Jesuit institution, St. John's College (founded in 1841, now Fordham University() and not to be confused with St. John's University, New York, founded in 1870) in Fordham, New York from 1844 to 1848. At St. John's, Stallo wrote his first major work, ''General Principles of the Philosophy of Nature'' (1848). This book, which he later dismissed as 'youthful', was apparently a restatement of Hegel's philosophy of nature. Stallo married Helena Zimmerman of Cincinnati in 1850, with whom he had ten children, five of them surviving childhood.
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