SUPPLEMENTARY DOCUMENTS
SUPPLEMENTARY DOCUMENTS
Baler, Tayabas, P. I.
January 12, 1915
Sir:
We the undersigned, young men of this Municipality of Baler, Province of
Tayabas, hereby have the honor to relate the following petition in regard to the memory
about our town of Baler.
1. We notified that our town will be changed into Township which is under the
Municipal Government at present;
2. We therefore, young men are in the belief that our town should not be
Township because she is legally qualified as a Municipal Government.
3. During the previous years under the American administration, it has been in
our experience that this municipality was doing her good works as Municipal
Government.
4. We, undersigned below respectfully request the Excellency Governor
General, the Hon. Provincial Governor of Tayabas, the Hon. Delegates of the
First District of the Province of Tayabas and the Resident Commissioner, Hon.
Manuel L. Quezon, that this town should not be under the non-Christian
Province of Nueva Viscaya and be still remained in the Province of Tayabas.
In testimony whereof, we have hereunto set our names this 11 th day of January,
1915.
Very respectfully,
Kaming mga taga Baler, Tayabas na ang mga pangalan ay nakatala sa ibaba nito,
ay nagkaisang magka-api-api ngayong ika-16 ng Octubre, 1919, upang aming ipahayag
na kami ay nakikidamdamin at nakiki-api sa matagumpay na layunin ng “Partido o
Lapiang Makabayan” dito sa Kapuluang Filipinas.
Kami na buong pagsisikap ay nagpilit na maghalal na ng mga pamunuan, at ito’y
ang mga sumusunod:
G. Abundio Donato Pangulo
G. Silvestre dela Torre Pangalawang Pangulo
G. Rogaciano Angara Kalihim
G. Emilio Carrasco Ingat-Yaman
PASIYA
Ang Pangulo ay nagsalaysay ng tungkol sa pinagtibay na kapasiyahan nang siya’y
nakadalo sa pulong na kaharap ang mga Guro. Ipinalagay niya na yaon ay isang uri ng
tunay na pag-ibig sa bayan; kaya’t nagpasok siya ng palagay na dapat ipahayon sa
kaalaman ng lalong nakatataas na pamunuan, Superintendente ng mga Paaralan,
Gobernador Provincial nitong Tayabas, Representante ng Hilagang Purok nito at sa
Presidente ng Senado, at
Sa mungkahi ni Kg. Simon Poblete na pinangalawahan ni Kg. Diego Gomez ay
pinagtibay ang mga sumusunod:
Sapagkat ang mga Guro ay nakipagkasundo na sa kapisasanan na sila ay lalagda
sa isang kasunduang hiling sa kanila ng kapisanan, upang ang paaralan ay huwag lamang
mapapinid at kahit wala pang salaping ipon upang maibayad sa kanila, ay kusang loob
silang magtuturo at magaantay ng panahong magkakaroon ng salaping laan upang
maging sahod nila;
Sapagkat ang nasabing kapasiyahan ay dapat ipaalam sa lahat ng kinauukulang
Paaralang Pamahalaan na natala na sa itaas, ang Pangulo ng Kapisanang ito na si G.
Teodoro Ranillo ay mahirang na magdadala ng salin ng pasiyang ito, kalakip ang salin ng
kapasiyahang ito sa mga Guro sa bayang ito upang patunayan sa kanila ng nasabing
kapisanan sa ikapapanuto ng paaralan dito sa Baler, Tayabas, at dahil dito’y
PASYAHAN NA, ang kapisanang ito ay magpadala ng isang kinatawan upang
makipanayam sa mga kinauukulan, tungkol sa salin ng kasulatang nilagdaan ng mga
Guro ng Paaralan dito sa Baler, Tayabas, siyasatin at ipaalam ang sitwasyon nito sa
kanila;
PASYAHAN DIN, na ang Kalihim ay magawang magpadala ng sipi ng pasiyang ito
sa pamamagitan ng kinatawang nahirang upang ibigay sa bawat isang kinauukulan.
PINATUTUNAYAN KO, na ang salin ng katitikang nasulat sa itaas, ay tama at
sakto.
Knowing full well that the funds for salaries of municipal teachers of Baler,
Tayabas have already been endorsed after July 31, 1927, be it known to all concerned
that we the undersigned, tied with the spirit of service, do hereby express solemnly and
without mental reservation the following:
1. That we voluntarily render our service as teachers in Baler Elementary School
without pay for a period of time until funds for salaries of municipal teachers
shall have been raised by proper authorities, that is to say, that when
sufficient funds are available, we would be given salaries corresponding
services beginning August 1, 1927;
2. That we render our services with the same interest as heretofore;
3. That we give the above statements in order to avoid troubles that may arise
in the future.
Very respectfully,
CERTIFIED CORRECT:
(Sgd.) PEDRO A. SINDAC
Teacher-Secretary
Parents Teachers Association
KASAYSAYAN NG MUSEO DE BALER
Sinulat ni Jason Francisco V. de Asis
O. G. No. 2043
REPUBLIC ACT NO. 648
June 30 is the day when President Emilio Aguinaldo commended the besieged Spanish
soldiers in the church of Baler for their loyalty and gallantry. To mark this momentous
occasions, there is need to declare said day a national holiday to remember the act of
benevolence which has paved the way in bridging better relations between Philippines
and Spain.
SEC. 2. Philippine-Spanish Day. The thirtieth of June of each year is hereby declared as
Philippine-Spanish Friendship Day to commemorate the cultural and historical ties,
friendship and cooperation between the Philippines and Spain. It is hereby declared as a
national special working holiday and a special non-working holiday in Aurora Province.
SEC. 3. Implementation. The National Historical Institute (NHI) shall be responsible for
the implementation of this Act. For this purpose, it shall formulate and issue the
implementing rules and regulations necessary for the proper implementation of this Act.
SEC. 5. Appropriations. An annual budget for the celebration of the Fil-Hispano Day in
the amount of Fifteen million pesos (Php 15,000,000.00) shall be included in the General
Appropriations Act of the year following its enactment into law, thirty percent (30%) of
which shall be devoted exclusively for research and development. Thereafter, the
expenses for its continued implementation shall be included in the subsequent General
Appropriation Act.
SEC. 6. Separability Clause. If any section or provision of this Act is held unconstitutional
or invalid, the other sections or provisions not affected thereby shall remain valid and
effective.
SEC. 7. Repealing Clause. All laws, presidential decrees, executive orders, rules and
regulations, or any part thereof, which are inconsistent with the provisions of this Act
are hereby repealed or modified accordingly.
SEC. 8. Effectivity. This law shall take effect within fifteen (15) days from publication in
the Official Gazette or two (2) newspaper of general circulation.
Approved:
This Act which is a consolidation of Senate Bill No. 4751, was finally passed by
the Senate and the House of Representatives on December 17, 2002 and December 18,
2002, respectively.
The event which led to the first official manifestation of friendship between the
Philippines and Spain actually began in the midst of the Philippine Revolution. In the
town of Baler in the district of EL Principe (now Aurora Province) the longest siege
between the Philippines and Spanish troops took place.
Following the attacks of the revolutionaries in Manila sent 100 cazadores under
Captain Jesus Roldan Maizonda who arrived in Baler on October 18, 1897. The Spanish
forces engaged the Katipuneros until relieved on January 28, 1898.
The Treaty of Biak-na-Bato caused the reduction of the Spanish garrison from
400 to only 50 men. The new garrison under Captain Enrique de las Morenas arrived in
February 1898. Fearing an attack by the Filipinos, Captain de las Morenas ordered his
men to move into the Baler Church on June 27, 1898. For the next month the Spaniards
would be isolated from the rest of the world and surrounded by Filipino freedom
fighters.
On July 1, 1898 the Filipinos left a letter at the doorstep of the church
demanding the surrender of the garrison saying that Manila was surrounded by 20,000
Tagalog troops. After being rebuffed several times, Villacorta ordered a cannon fired at
the church. However, the thick walls of the church prevented any damage.
Meanwhile, the supplies of the Spanish soldiers started to run out. Beri-beri,
scurvy and dysentery became the common sickness in the garrison. The absence of salt
caused discomfort among the defenders of the accidentally wandered into the
churchyard. The garrison which was by that time was led by 2 nd Lieutenant Saturnino
Martin Cerezo who supplemented his men’s diet with squash leaves.
Disease also stalked the garrison. Beriberi would claim 13 lives including the
original commander of the garrison Captain de las Morenas. Two others died from
dysentery.
The Filipinos outside the church made attempts to demoralize the defenders.
The church was pelted with stones and in some occasions they had women calling on
the defenders to leave the church. There were also times they had a man and a woman
copulate within view of the Spaniards. Lt. Martin Cerezo who took over command of
the garrison ordered his men to stay away from the windows and play games inside the
church.
By April 1899, the food supply reached a critical level. What were left were a
few bags of coffee and some rusty cans of sardines. Despite this condition the defenders
prevented an attempt of the enemy to burn down the church.
By the end of May, a Spanish officer named Lt. Colonel Cristobal Aguilar
Castaneda appeared in front of the church. Lt. Martin Cerezo first believed the papers to
be clever forgeries. However, he became convinced that upon seeing that it contained
information about his friend which he only knew.
On June 2, 1899, Martin Cerezo ordered his bugler to signal surrender to the
Filipinos. But before surrendering, he ordered the execution of two of his men, Vicente
Gonzales Toca and Antonio Menache Sanchez for their attempt to desert the garrison.
When the bugle sounded, the Filipinos emerged from their trenches shouting ‘’Amigos
Amigos’’. Colonel Simon Tecson and Major Nemesio Bartolome represented the
Filipinos while Lt. Martin Cerezo represented the Spaniards. One of the conditions of the
surrender was that the Spaniards will not be treated as prisoners of war. Of the original
50 men, 35 men survived the siege.
In view of the three centuries of Spanish legacy, the Philippine Congress passed
Republic Act No. 9187 of February 5, 2003, creating the Philippine-Spanish Friendship
Day. The law which was authored by Senator Edgardo J. Angara and Congresswoman
Bellaflor Angara-Castillo recognized the long historical and cultural links between the
Philippines and Spain and Spain’s economic and cultural partnership with the
Philippines.
With Aguinaldo’s decree of June 30, 1899 as a reference, the law also
recognized the first official act of friendship between the Philippines and Spain. It was an
act of magnanimity for its former enemy and recognition of the bravery of the men and
gallantry of both Filipino and Spanish soldiers in the siege of Baler. When Aguinaldo
issued his historic decree, time for both countries stand on equal footing as free nations,
no longer as colonizers and the colonized.
With the passage of the Philippine-Spanish Friendship Day Law, the Philippines
embraced its rich Hispanic legacy and envisioned a long and lasting relationship with
Spain.
PRESENT:
ABSENT:
WHEREAS, the foregoing figures and statistics are mute testimonies that Aurora
Sub-Province can viably exist as a regular and independent province;
APPROVED UNANIMOUSLY.
THE MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENT OF BALER
PROVINCE OF TAYABAS, P. I.
Office of the President
Hon. Senor:
In Reply Address
The Executive Secretary
Manila, P. I.
January 29, 1915
Sir:
Referring to a communication, addressed to His Excellency, the Governor-
General, dated January 12, 1915, signed by you and other residents of the Municipality
of Baler, protesting against the rumored transfer of that municipality to the Province of
Nueva Viscaya, I have to advise you that this office has no knowledge of any such plan
being considered, nor has the Honorable, the Secretary of the Interior. I am authorized
to say that no change in the present government of Baler will be made without first
consulting the views of the inhabitants.
Very respectfully,
2006-2007 (PB Arturo J. Angara) – Pinamunuan ang lupon ni Gng. Rose Palispis-
Querijero, Tagamasid Pansangay ng DepEd at mga guro ng Araling Panlipunan.
Somewhere in the east coast of Luzon, between the lofty ranges of the Caraballo
and the vast Pacific Ocean lies an isolated little town that has become historical in its
being the hometown of the Philippine Commonwealth’s first President and First Lady of
the land-Baler. The late President Manuel Luis Quezon first saw the light of the day in
this far- flung community on the 19 th of August 1878, while Mrs. Aurora Aragon Quezon
was born in the same town on February 19, ten years later.
There are several versions as to how Baler got its name. The most preferable,
however, seem to be the version that it got its name from the mountain birds called
“balod” which in the old days utilized it as their homing place. The word “balod” is well
noted and defined in “Vocabulario de la Lengua Tagala”, the first dictionary published in
1754, authored by Fathers Juan de la Noceda and Pedro San Lucar, and likewise, in
“Noceda San Lucar Vocabulario” published in 1860 where the theory of the origin of
Baler has been confirmed and accepted by the Philippine Institute of National Language.
The town of Baler was first reached in July 1609 by Franciscan missionaries, Fray
Blas Palomino, OFM and six others. It was through the PATRONATO REAL, an edict of the
King of Spain which authorized missionaries to join expeditions for the great glory of
God that the context of it led the founding of this community. Although, Fray Blas
Palomino opened the mission in Baler, his group did not stay long because they were
recalled back to Manila by his superiors.
On October 1611, the community of Baler was created as parish with Saint Luis
Obispo de Tolosa as its patron saint. Fray Juan Francisco de San Antonio, OFM, was its
first parish priest who initiated the construction of a church made of nipa and bamboo.
Baler was but a tiny and almost an inaccessible village. There was no way of
going to Manila and the outlying districts but through mountain trails or via the sea.
Lying at the mouth of San Jose River (today’s Aguang) on Baler Bay, it sticks out deep
into the Pacific Ocean. Notwithstanding its rugged physical features, Baler became the
foremost town in the District of El Principe, then a part of the province of Nueva Ecija.
The vast fields of Baler were suited for all kinds of crops and its virgin forests yielded a
beautiful supply of timber, bamboos, rattan and other forest products. Its fishing
grounds abounded with delectable catches of sardines, tuna and other kinds of fishes. It
was a very peaceful community and its inhabitants were bound by common tie of
brotherly love as fruit of missionary activities.
A most tragic fate befell the town of Baler on December 27, 1735. At two o’clock
in the morning of this day, the church mayordomo saw from the convent the
spectacular sight of a “tromba marina”, a phenomenal tidal wave. He immediately
informed Fr. Jose de San Rafael of this fact, who after taking the sacred chalice from the
Holy Altar ran to the other side of the mountain with a few townspeople. In a few
moments, the first town of Baler which was two kilometers away from the shore was
wiped out and only the few inhabitants who were able to take refuge behind the
mountain survived. Among those who did not perish with the disaster were the families
of Lumasac, Bitong, Bijasa and Angara.
With the help of the Catholic clergy, the remaining inhabitants founded the
second town of Baler. A new church was rebuilt. The walls made of rocks and stones
were plastered with lime and honey. Missionary activities continued but these activities
were disrupted by piracy attack of the Moors from the Sulu Archipelago. In the summer
of 1798, Moor raiders plundered the towns of Infanta, Polillo, Casiguran and Palanan,
captured the parish priests and the town leaders. In Baler, they kidnapped Fray Benito
Zamudio, OFM, parish priest of Baler whom they held for ransom.
The frequent visit and attack of the Moors made Baler not a safe place to live
during those days. They did not only get the young boys and girls but also robbed the
people of their valuables. There was a reign of terror in the town for almost fifty years
from 1798 to 1847. In 1840, Fray Jose Urbina de Esparragoza , OFM, arrived in Baler. The
fear of the people from the Moors prompted him to construct a watchtower or a
fortress (Castillo) at Sabang and Point Baja (Ermita)to serve as look-out for the people
and to make known the arrival of the marauding pirates. Of the more or less sixty- five
Spanish priests assigned in Baler, it was Fray Jose Urbina de Esparragoza who made
much contribution to the making of the town of Baler. Among his notable
accomplishments aside from the watchtowers was the construction of an irrigation
canal in 1846, extending from Suklayin Creek to Bacong in Kaledian, approximately three
miles long which was calculated to meet the irrigation needs of five to six thousand
people. Barely twenty of the inhabitants, however, took advantage of this public
improvement.
Baler was the scene of another disaster in September 1849. The church steeple
engineered by Fray Jose Urbina de Esparragoza, on the occasion of its inauguration, this
newly erected stone belfry of the church, the tower itself caved in and many people
were buried in the debris of stones, tiers, gravel and lime. It was sort of a miracle,
however, that no one of the victims died. Since then, the townspeople never thought of
building a stone tower for the church of Baler. Fray Jose Urbina de Esparragoza stayed
as parish priest of Baler for thirteen years.
On October 4, 1897, the Katipuneros attacked the town plaza of Baler, killing
seven Spaniards. However, eleven Katipuneros were also killed that their heroism and
patriotism will always be remembered. They were Francisco Angara, Isidro Angara,
Eufracio Bitong, Aurelio Catipon, Julian Espana, Severo Gallegos, Felix Gonzales, Miguel
Huertazuela, Luis Lumasac, Santos Lumasac and Severo Palispis.
At this instance, the church of Baler became the seat of one of the most
outstanding display of Spanish courage and patriotism in the latter part of the Philippine
Revolution. On June 27, 1898, a Spanish garrison of fifty-four (54) men including forty-
nine (49) soldiers, their Captain Enrique delas Morenas, the chief of the detachment
Juan Alonzo Zayas, Second Lieutenant Saturnino Martin y Cerezo, the medical doctor
Rogelio Vigil de Quinones and the Franciscan parish priest of Baler Candido Gomez
Carreno made their last stand in this improvised citadel. Fray Gomez Carreno was the
last Spanish priest of Baler who died of beri-beri inside the church.
On April 12, 1899, Lieutenant James Clarkson Gillmore Jr. with his men aboard
the ship USS Yorktown landed at Baler for a rescue mission at the beleaguered garrison
in the church. The USS Yorktown was mistaken as a Spanish ship by the Balerian rebels
so they were ambushed by Major Nemesio Bartolome and his men in Ubbot, Baler.
The battle of the famous siege of Baler lasted for three hundred thirty- seven
(337) days. On June 2, 1899, the Spanish garrison at Baler Church surrendered to Filipino
forces. At the end of the struggle, only one officer, the medical doctor and thirty- one
(31) soldiers came out alive out of the original fifty- four (54) Spaniards. The officer
Lieutenant Martin Cerezo survived to tell the story in his book entitled ‘’El Sitio de
Baler’’.
Several months later, the situation changed drastically in favor of the Americans
as they began the colonization of the whole country. In 1902, a civil government was
established. Baler was transferred from the jurisdiction of El Principe, a district created
by Spanish Governor Manuel Crespo y Cebrian in the province of Nueva Ecija and was
made part of Tayabas (now Quezon). In 1910, the first popular elections were held
which saw the election of Benito Angara as Municipal President of Baler.
Meantime, from provincial fiscal of Mindoro, Baler’s native son Manuel Luis
Quezon stepped toward political prominence and assumed the governorship of Tayabas
province in 1906. On December 14, 1918, Manuel Quezon and Aurora Aragon were
married civilly at the American Consulate General in Hongkong. In 1935, Quezon was
elected as the first president of the Philippine Commonwealth. It was until 1939 that
Baler boasts of a modern church laid with concrete foundations. It has been constructed
through the painstaking efforts and support of Dona Aurora Aragon Quezon.
On December 14, 1941, the Japanese forces attacked the town of Baler. The
Japanese made the Baler Elementary School (now Central School) as their garrison.
Honorable Juan C. Angara was the town mayor at that time. Guerillas were organized
with the support of the Americans. After the submarine USS Narwhal found a secret
landing place in Dibut, a sitio of Baler, another submarine, the USS Nautilus surfaced at
Dibut Bay off-landing supplies and other war materials for the guerillas on October 20,
1944. The Japanese forces evacuated Baler after they had not successfully resisted the
successive attacks of the organized guerillas under Major Robert B. Lapham of the 205 th
Squadron. Baler was then liberated from the Japanese occupation on January 28, 1945.
The Carmelite priests arrived in Baler to minister the town’s parish under Father
Leo MCrudden on February 1948, through the invitation of Dona Aurora Aragon
Quezon. Months later, on June 23, 1948, the Mount Carmel High School was
inaugurated. This educational institution was founded by Father Gabriel Gates who sold
his Cessna plane to finance the school’s construction.
On July 6, 1948, Fr. Leo MCrudden with his companions perished at sea in search
of the two fishermen who had not returned from the night’s fishing trip at Baler Bay.
The casualties with Fr. MCrudden were Lope Grasparil, Pio Imperial, Igmidio Sindac,
Rudolfo Valenzuela, Pastor Grasparil and Anastacio dela torre. The Saga of Baler Bay was
retold by Bro. Vincent Scheerer.
After typhoons Violeta and Yoyong wiped out Villa Aurora in November 2004,
the route Baler-Canili-Pantabangan road become an easy access of road travel for the
townspeople.
Today, Baler is not only known as the birthplace of the Quezon couple. It is also
known of its notable and tragic events, one of it is the historic Siege of Baler. In view of
the three centuries Spanish legacy, Republic Act No. 9187 was initiated and authored by
Senator Edgardo J. Angara and was signed into law by President Gloria Macapagal
Arroyo in 2003. It proclaimed June 30 each year as Philippine-Spanish Friendship Day. It
was the day in 1899 that President Emilio Aguinaldo signed a decree declaring as
friends, not prisoners of war, the Spanish soldiers who surrendered to the Filipino
soldiers after the siege, of almost a year at the Baler Church.
The law also declares June 30 a national special working holiday throughout the
Philippines and a special non-working holiday in Aurora Province. We commemorate
this historic event again and again not only to recall but also to learn from the past, to
derive inspiration for the present, and to serve as a beacon for the future.