1899 in the Philippines explained
The following lists events that happened during 1899 in the Philippine Republic.
Incumbents
First Philippine Republic
See main article: article and First Philippine Republic.
Emilio Aguinaldo (starting January 23)
-
- President of the Assembly of Representatives
Pedro A. Paterno
U.S. Military Government
See main article: article.
Elwell Stephen Otis
Events
January
February
- February 4–5 – 12,000 American troops advanced through 2 miles of Filipino front at the Battle of Manila. It was the first and largest battle of the Philippine–American War, resulting to 60 American dead and 2,000 Filipino dead.
- February 10 – A brigade of American soldiers attacked Filipino troops after 3 hours of artillery bombardment at the Battle of Caloocan. The capture of Caloocan left American forces in control of the southern terminus of the Manila to Dagupan railway, along with five engines, fifty passenger coaches, and a hundred freight cars.[2]
March
- March 7 – The Provisional Law on the Judiciary is issued to provide for the selection of a Chief Justice.
- March 27 – American troops marched through Marilao River while being fired upon by Filipino troops on the opposite bank.
- March 29 – The First Philippine Republic relocates its capital from Malolos to San Isidro, Nueva Ecija as the government flees an invasion of U.S. forces.
- March 31 – Malolos, the erstwhile capital of the Republic, fell to advancing American soldiers.
April
May
- May 6 – Local elections were held for provincial and municipal posts throughout the Philippine Archipelago under the American occupation.
- May 7 – The capital of the First Philippine Republic is moved by President Emilio Aguinaldo from Manolos to Angeles City
- May 11 – The country adopts PHT as its standard time at exactly 12:00 a.m., prior to the adoption, each location in the country observed its own solar mean time.[3]
- May 16 – The last Spaniards remaining in the Philippine Islands, after the cession to the U.S., depart from the island of Basilan.
- May 17 – U.S. Army troops capture the city of San Isidro, Nueva Ecija, where President Emilio Aguinaldo had moved his capital, but find that the insurgents have already left.
- May 19 – The U.S. Army captures Tawi-Tawi, the southernmost island in the Philippines.[4]
- May 23 – Major General Henry Ware Lawton and his troops arrive in Manolos, capital of the First Philippine Republic, after a 120-mile march in 20 days that captured 28 towns with a loss of only six men.[4]
- May 28 – General Vicente Álvarez forms the short-lived Republic of Zamboanga on a peninsula on the island of Mindanao. The nation exists until 1903 when it is consolidated by the U.S. to the rest of the Philippine territory.
- May 29 – The Spanish system of courts, closed since the American occupation began, is revived under U.S. sovereignty and regulation.
June
July
October
- October 1 – Felipe Agoncillo, dispatched by the Philippine Revolutionary government to lobby for independence, meets U.S. President McKinley, in Washington and his attempt to be part of peace talks between the United States and Spain is rejected.[6]
- October 23 – The Philippine Independent Church is formed at a conference in Paniqui, to separate from the Roman Catholic Church.
November
- November 13 – President Aguinaldo, after a conference in Bayambang, Pangasinan, declared guerrilla warfare in the continued Filipino struggle against American occupation.[7]
December
- December 2 – A 60-man rear guard action led by General Gregorio del Pilar fought 500 American troops who were pursuing President Aguinaldo in his flight to land's end.
- December 11 – Filipino General Tierona surrenders the province of Cagayan to U.S. Navy Captain McCalla of the USS Newark.
Holidays
As a former colony of Spanish Empire and being a catholic country, the following were considered holidays:
Deaths
Notes and References
- Web site: Bohol participation in the Philippine Revolution . . 1999 . Webline Bohol, Philippines . Provincial Government of Bohol . April 16, 2020.
- Book: Linn, Brian McAllister . Brian McAllister Linn. The Philippine War, 1899-1902 . 2000 . University Press of Kansas . 978-0-7006-1225-3 . 56–57.
- Web site: Time Zones in Philippines. live. February 17, 2022. timeanddate.com. https://web.archive.org/web/20160123065344/http://www.timeanddate.com:80/time/zone/philippines . January 23, 2016 .
- Record of Current Events (From May 31 to June 30) The Fighting in the Philippines. The American Monthly Review of Reviews. July 1899. 25-29.
- Book: Worcester, D.C. . The Philippines Past and Present: Volume I . Outlook Verlag . v. 1 . 2018 . 978-3-7326-6485-6 . 86.
- Gregg Jones, Honor in the Dust: Theodore Roosevelt, War in the Philippines, and the Rise and Fall of America's Imperial Dream (Penguin Publishing Group, 2012) p. 108
- Book: Linn, Brian McAllister . The U.S. Army and Counterinsurgency in the Philippine War, 1899-1902. 2000 . UNC Press Books. 978-0-8078-4948-4 . 16.