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History
of Binangonan
Its
name in English means, “The first established town around the
lake.” A first class municipality, Binangonan lies between the
foothills of Sierra Madre and the shores of Laguna de Bay. It is composed
of 23 mainland and 17 island barangays.
This town of 255,949 people was separated and became an independent
parish in 1621 through the initiatives of the Franciscan missionaries.
The town was established in 1737 and conquered by the Spaniards in 1763.
It became a town in 1900 during the American colonial period. Binangonan’s
major historical landmark is the 200 year-old Santa Ursula Parish, located
at the heart of the town.
Binangonan is a major supplier of freshwater fishes from Laguna de Bay
like dulong, ayungin, biya, kanduli, and gurami to Metro Manila, Laguna,
Cavite and Batangas.
Through the
combined efforts of former Mayor and Gov. Casimiro M. Ynares, Jr. and
its Municipal Mayor Cesar M. Ynares, Binangonan obtained the title as
“The Education Center of Rizal.” This recognition was achieved
by the existence of Rizal National High School, the University of Rizal
System, and the Technical Education Skills Development Authority (TESDA)
center, educational institutions that secure and offer quality education
to Rizal’s inhabitants where even the less fortunate can achieve
quality education including technical and vocational knowledge.
Binangonan’s major source of income comes from agriculture, where
49 percent of its total land area are devoted to agriculture and livestock
industries, while the source of income of residents in its coastal barangays
are mainly fishing and aquaculture industry. Other sources of income
come from manufacturing, commercial establishments, real estate, and
public utility services.
Brief Origin
A
number of theories has been advanced on the origin of Binangonan
yet none could exactly point to the real beginning of this town. Some
observations can be noted thus:
a) Binangonan is a pure
Tagalog word for the place where something or someone has voluntarily
risen.
b) All barangays and sitios from
Tayuman to Talim, with the exception of Janosa, have pure Tagalog
names indicating that these places could have existed even before the
Spanish rule.
c) A village in Infanta, Laguna
was called Binangonan de Lampon which led some historians to
theorize that settlers of the lake region could have originated from
this place.
d)The history of Taytay includes
a place called Batasin whose inhabitants were believed to be
the ancestors of the few remaining tribes of Negritoes.
There is no Batasin in Taytay at present but
there is one in Binangonan.
Aetas inhabited Binangonan until
1928. Evidence of their culture are found in Lungga Ita
in Pila-Pila and in Aeta words like Wawa and Ithan.
Historical
Background
According to the records of Huerta Cavada, Binangonan, originally a
visita of Morong, was separated and became independent parish in
1621. Another version stated, however, that Binangonan was separated
from Morong in 1737.
Binangonan was first under the ecclesiastical administration of the
Franciscans. A treaty between the Franciscans and the Jesuits in 1679
assigned Binangonan to the latter in exchange of the former dominion
over Baras.
After 18 years, the Jesuits transferred their power over Binangonan
to the Calced Augustinians in 1697. Forty years later, the
Calced Augustinians restored it back to the Franciscans in 1731.
In 1766, the Superior Gobierno licensed Angono as an independent
parish separating it from Binangonan. Angono’s ecclesiastical
activities were placed under the care of the secular clergy.
In 1835, Binangonan was separated from the province of Laguna and
incorporated in the newly created Districts de los Mateo,
later on renamed Distrito Politico Militar de Morong.
On August 6, 1898, the natives of Binangonan joined the revolutionary
government of General Emilio Aguinaldo against the Spanish rule.
Under the American regime, Binangonan became an independent municipality
under General Order No. 40 of March 29, 1900. On June 11, 1901,
Act No. 137 of the Philippine Commission incorporated this town with
the newly created province of Rizal.
Binangonan temporarily lost independence when it was combined with Morong,
Baras and Cardona by virtue of Act. No. 942 in 1903.
Act. No. 948 of November 6, 1903 restored independence to Binangonan
and made Angono a part of Binangonan again. On January 1, 1939,
Angono was made an independent town and part of the province of Rizal.
Christianization
of the Natives
The first missionary group to work
in the Philippines in 1574 was the Augustinians.In Rizal province, the
Franciscans, led by Fr. Juan de la Plesencia and Fr. Diego de Oropera,
started evangelical work with the conversion of people from the Morong
region.
The missionaries built a chapel near the lake to gain access in the
native settlements around the lake area. The largest settlement
was Batasin, a tribe of Negritos from Taytay, which
was discovered during Salcedo's first expedition in 1571. This
occupied the rocky terrain overlooking the Laguna de Bay, located west
of the chapel.
Population growth started with families living near the chapel
and added with converts from the outlying villages in the mainland
and Talim Island. The gradual expansion of population around the
chapel area was accomplished through the system of reducciones
designed by Fr. Juan de Plasencia in 1577.
The expansion and increase in population could have been the basis for
the name Binangonan, meaning the place where the new settlement
rose. Unlike other towns which grew from within going outwards,
Binangonan expanded from outside going inwards. The name was given
at a time when the Spanish language had not made its impact yet on the
native tongue.
Political
History
Spanish Period
During the Spanish period, the
town head was the Captain and the seat of government, the Tribunal located
in the heart of the poblacion. The second
highest town official was the Teniente Mayor. Next in rank was the Teniente
de Ganado whose main function was
to register carabaos, horses and
other animals, collecting fees and taxes in the process. The Teniente
de Montera was in charge of real estate matters in the municipality.
In 1772, a Spanish priest from Aliaga, Pampanga requested the Captain
to send delinquent taxpayers to work at the construction of the
church. All male delinquent taxpayers worked until the church’s
completion in 1800. During this period, old folks claimed that
the cross in the Kalbaryo in Libid grew out of the hill’s summit.
In later part of the Spanish period, pirates from the other side of
Laguna de Bay landed in Lunsad and plundered the town. They were
repulsed in 1897 by policemen called Commisarios under
Captain Pedro Capistrano.
When the insurrectos revolted against the Spanish authorities,
Captain Capistrano joined the rebels and changed his name to Tirana
while Pedro Mechilina adopted the name del Rosario to elude arrest.
In 1896, the natives of Binangonan joined the revolutionary government
under General Aguinaldo. The following events might have taken
place between the execution of Dr. Jose Rizal and the enlistment of
Binangonan in the revolutionary government. These were assumed
to be part of the national revolution.
Katipuneros from Binangonan attacked the Spanish headquarters in Casadores
at night when the enemies were asleep. A white handkerchief spread
out at the second floor signalled the invasion that killed many Spaniards.
Dead bodies were loaded in carabao sleds and buried at Kay-Pantina.
Two Spaniards escaped death: Sgt. Francisco Lagarejos sought refuge
from his Filipina wife while Sgt. Arceo was spared because of his kindness
to the Filipinos.
Katipuneros from Binangonan together with the forces from San Guillermo
captured the Spaniards in Morong. The Spaniards were made to walk
barefooted in columns parading amidst the people shouting Viva Garrovillas
in honor of the leader Candido Garrovillas. Called Kumander Kunding,
Garrovillas was believed to have possessed anting-anting which
made him invisible.
American Period
In 1898, the first Americans to
reach Binangonan aboard a steamboat Pagsanjan fired
cannon at the church hitting its bells. A week later, another
boat from Marikina, C Vocals shelled the town proper simultaneous
with Pagsanjan's continued firing in Pritil. More Americans
arrived by land and water after a week-long raid.
The people planned attacks against invading Americans; intercepted horse
riding Americans at Mambog, killing 12 of them. In retaliation,
the Americans captured native males in Malanggam and turned the
place into a concentration camp.
Despite the punishments inflicted on the captured Filipinos, the Americans
failed to squeeze out information
about the natives’ counter activities.
The
Americans stationed bancas at Navotas Strait to guard their camp and
prevent the escape of prisoners using the Laguna de Bay as passageway.
When the Filipino-American war ended, the Laguna de Bay became the major
mode of transportation in Binangonan. The regular passenger and cargo
vessels were the Margarita and the Nueva York. The Americans were
allowed to use the places they occupied as their headquarters even after
the war.
Municipal Government during the American Regime
In 1901, Don Jose Ynares Y Granados
was appointed Presidente by the American Governor. He won
the first municipal election held in 1902 and served for four years
holding office at his house as the Presidencia. With
help from the Americans, Ynares made remarkable improvements in the
town.
The second elected President was Manuel Ison, a former councilor.
Seeing the need for a municipal building, Ison sought the municipal
council’s approval and enlisted financiers for the construction
of the structure. Money collected were deposited in the
local treasury. Ison also approached an American mining engineer
at the San Guillermo quarry for material donations, which were granted
after his term.
The municipal building was realized during the term of Clemente Antiporda.
The house of Maria Cortez and Francisco Fuentes was purchased and remodeled
in 1912 to accommodate the various municipal offices. Antiporda
was also responsible for the construction of public roads, artesian
wells and repair of the public market.
The present site of the Binangonan Elementary School was purchased during
the term of Valentino C. Antazo. A former teacher and Municipal
Secretary, Antazo was responsible for the construction of Home Economics
building, elementary school, Puericulture Center, and improvement of
the Public Market.
The next mayor was Julio Antiporda, son of Clemente Antiporda. His accomplishments
included the construction of additional rooms in the municipal building,
artesian wells, and barrio roads. He even funded, out of his personal
money, the establishment of a school in Janosa.
Mayors During the American Period
Jose G. Ynares - (1901-1905)
First appointed executive of the municipality in 1901 and elected President
the following year.
Manuel Y. Ison - (1906-1907) He raised funds for the construction
of the first municipal building.
Clemente Antiporda - (1908-1912) During his term, a permanent
municipal building was constructed.
Antonio Sisante - (1913-1915) His achievement was the construction of
three artesian wells.
Lorenzo Flores - (1916-1922) Roads and bridges were built and
the old market was repaired during his term.
Valentin Antazo - (1922-1928) He purchased the present Binangonan
Central Elementary School site; built the H.E. Building and the Puericulture
Center for the Women's Club.
Julio Antiporda - (1928-1936) He planned the establishment of
a public market in Pila-pila
Japanese Occupation
During World War II, Binangonan
was one of the evacuation centers for the residents of Manila and neighboring
suburbs. People hid in the mountains and in Talim Island.
The war brought untold difficulties and sufferings. Schools were
temporarys closed; professionals turned to fishing, buy and sell for
living. Many died of starvation, malnutrition and diseases while others
survived by eating camote tops, papaya, corn, coconut and vegetables.
Several people were killed when the Japanese machine- gunned the Rizal
Cement Factory.
Months after the Japanese occupied the town, Faustino Antiporda organized
Bantay Sunog, a brigade tasked in maintaining peace and
order by providing volunteer males as nightly guards against
looters and trouble makers. At that time, Col. Augustin Marking
was recruiting members for his guerilla unit. Thus, the brigade
became the local guerillas secretly affiliated with Marking’s
group.
Major Teofilo Cenido was appointed Mayor of the Provost Marshall of
Military Police. Weapons available then were one Spring Field
Riffle and five Granadora from five USAFFE soldiers who escaped from
Bataan.
In 1942, Japanese troop, guided by two Filipinas, landed in Matikiw
and inspected the Rizal Cement Factory. Resisting local guerillas
were killed by the invaders. Filipino reinforcement retaliated by wiping
out the entire Japanese troop. Dead soldiers, initially
buried in the factory, were dug up and fed to the kiln.
Even Japanese vessels were sunk in the lake to hide the massacre.
Because of this, the Japanese held sona or the screening of all
males in the town. The Japanese Kempetai punished suspected
guerillas. Inspite of the brutal torture inflicted on them, the
Filipinos did not betray the guerilla organization.
Talim Island was also subjected to Japanese sona. On August
7, 1942, bombs were dropped in the neighboring towns killing four in
Janosa and claiming a number of casualties in Cardona. Suspected
guerillas were brought to Sta. Cruz, Laguna. Even the parish priest
at that time, a Columbian Fr. Martin Strong, was held in Los Banos concentration
camp.
Late in 1944, the Makapilis, a group of pro-Japanese Filipinos,
occupied the convent and served as Japanese interpreters. They
were instruments in the cruelties suffered by the Filipinos.
In January 1945, the Japanese took the convent from the Makapilis
and put up their headquarters. But they only stayed there for
one week, scared of the nightly apparitions of a white lady believed
to be the ghost haunting the convent.
Mayor Emerenciano Unida was killed by the Japanese when he refused to
reveal the guerilla organization.
Mayors during the Japanese Period
Felix Katipunan - (1936-1942) He
built roads and artesian wells and added rooms to the municipal building.
Emerenciano M. Unida - (1942-1945) He was the deputy mayor when Katipunan
got ill. He supplied starving residents with foods and worked
for the release of captured Filipinos.
Juan Jerusalem - (1945) He took over as Mayor after Unida's death.
He was shot in the Rizal Cement Compound before the Americans liberated
the country.
Period of Independence
Binangonan was liberated from the
Japanese forces in February 25, 1945, the feast day of the patroness
of the town, Sta. Ursula. The Japanese' plan to burn the town was prevented
by the timely arrival of American forces on the eve of the feast day.
The local guerillas, with Major Ceñido deploying his men in Bunot Mountain,
prevented the escape of Japanese forces. The Japanese peacefully retreated
and pulled their forces out.
The liberation was quite peaceful for no fighting ever took place.
It was also a glorious celebration as barrio folks rode on top of tanks
and jeepneys with the Americans. People lined along the streets,
jumping with glee, weeping tears of joy while shouting "Victory".
The American commander instructed the guerillas led by Major Ceñido
to set up temporary headquarters in poblacion and to do surveillance
work. When the American troops proceeded to Angono, they left
the command under the local Military Police, composed of all units
in Binangonan.
Napoleon Antazo, the town commander of the ROTC Hunter guerillas, was
appointed Mayor through the orders of the 43rd Infantry Division of
the U.S. army. Next to be appointed town mayor from 1945 to 1946
was Casimiro Ynares, Sr., son of Don Jose Ynares. When the Philippines
became a Republic in 1946, the municipal government was allowed greater
autonomy.
Post -War Accomplishments (1946 - 1951)
The first Mayor after World War
II was Dr. Jose Pacis. Among his accomplishments were:
1.Construction of wharf linking
the Muella de Sta. Ursula to Pritil.
2.Construction of a modern public market, a self-liquidating project
funded by the Rehabilitation Finance Corporation.
3.Construction of combined basketball courts and tennis courts
in the town’s plaza.
4.Beautification of the Kalbaryo.
5.Additional artesian wells.
6.Construction of a new street extending from Munting Bundok to
M. H. del Pilar Street.
7.Construction of a double market tienda, the only one in eastern Rizal
at that time, which was completed with the P25,000.00 funds donated
by ex-
Senator Vicente Madrigal to Mayor Jose Pacis.
Mayors
of Binangonan
Casimiro Ynares, Sr.was elected Mayor and served from 1952 to 1956.
Other officials were Vice Mayor Pedro Fineza, Councilors Bonifacio Gahol,
Policarpio Aralar, Aniano Bautista, Bonifacio Capre, Antonio Antiporda
and Alfredo Bonifacio.
Dr. Jose Pacis was the Mayor for two consecutive terms. Antonio
Antiporda was the Vice-Mayor while the reelected councilors were
Mariano Cervo, Francisco Matematico and Romulo de los Reyes. Newly
elected councilors were Zoilo Estacio, Monico Tirana, Graciano Plegaria,
and Lucio Cenina. During Pacis’ term, a resolution
specifying the construction of new municipal building in Calumpang was
approved.
Atty. Pedro Fineza was elected Mayor in 1963. Under his banner,
Vice-Mayor Zoilo Estacio and eight councilors also won. The same
line up made a clean sweep of the elections that followed. A lone
opposition, Reynaldo Aralar, joined the council.
Casimiro Ynares, Jr., the youngest mayor, was elected in 1971. Other
officers were Vice-Mayor Zoilo Estacio and Councilors Mariano Erasga,
Reynaldo Aralar, Pedro Vital, Jr., Felimon Gonzales, Remedios Paralejas,
Lorenzo Barlinan, Pedro San Felipe and Macario Cenidoza. Mayor
Ynares remained unchallenged for 15 years because no elections were
held after President Ferdinand Marcos declared Martial Law in 1972.
Atty. Mariano Cervo was appointed Officer in Charge (OIC) of Binangonan
under the Revolutionary Government of President Corazon Aquino in 1986.
In the 1988 elections, Casimiro Ynares, Jr. won by a landslide
victory over the protégés of the national leaders. Atty. Joaquin
Mendoza was the Vice Mayor. The elected
councilors were Dr. Amos P. Callanta,
Emiliana Rivera,
Longino del Mundo, Ronaldo Cenidoza, Antonio Reyes III, Mauricio A.
Mixto, Jr., Lorenzo Lirio, and Raul Miguel.
In 1992, in the first synchronized national and local elections that
saw the fielding of multi-party candidates, Engr. Isidro B. Pacis won
over six mayoralty aspirants. The Sangguniang Bayan was headed
by Vice- Mayor Amos Callanta with the following member-councilors:
Raul Antazo, Esmer Discimulacion, Manuel Barretto, Jaime Aragones, Reynaldo
Punelas, Jhoulan Aralar, Enrique Lirio and Arnel Chulvo.
Mayor Isidro Pacis was reelected in 1995. Also reeleceted were
Vice-Mayor Callanta along with Councilors Reynaldo Punelas, Manuel Barretto,
Jaime Aragones, Jhoulan Aralar and Esmer Discimulacion.
Newly elected councilors were Allan Sunglao, Rhoniel Rivera and Mar
S.J. Cenidoza.
Engr. Cesar M. Ynares was elected in 1998 by an overwhelming majority
vote against incumbent Mayor Isidro B. Pacis and Raul A. Miguel
was elected as Vice Mayor. Elected Councilor’s were
Alfredo O. Cenidoza, Esmeraldo A. Discimulacion, Allan D. Sunglao, Reynaldo
C. Dela Cuesta, Jaime A . Aragones, Ian P. Cervo, Jhoulan Aralar, and
Miguel P. Manuson.
In 2001 election, Engr. Cesar M. Ynares was reelected against former
Mayor Isidro B. Pacis. Also reelected was Engr. Raul A. Miguel as Vice-Mayor
along with Councilors Alfredo C. Ceñidoza, Allan D. Sunglao, Newly elected
councilors were Jane Z. Apostadero, Cresencio M. Ojoy, Donato O. Paralejas,
Ruben M. Patag, Domingo C. Francisco and Gilderaldo D. Antiporda.
The year 2004 proved to be another victorious year for Engr. Cesar M.
Ynares who was the sole candidate for mayoralty seat. He was again re-elected
together with Engr. Raul A. Miguel as Vice Mayor along with Councilors
Jane Z. Apostadero, Crisencio M. Ojoy, Alfredo C. Ceñidoza,
Donato Paralejas, Ruben M. Patag and Gilderaldo D. Antiporda, newly
elected councilor was Mr. Cecilio M. Ynares.
In 2007 election, Cecilio M. Ynares was elected against Brgy. Captain
Manuel Reyes of Brgy. Lunsad. Former Administrator Engr. Reynaldo dela
Cuesta was elected as Vice Mayor. Re-elected Councilors were Jane Z.
Apostadero, Cresencio M. Ojoy,Donato Paralejas, Ruben Patag, Gilderaldo
Antiporda, Napo Mesa and newly elected Councilors were Ruben Magdalena
and Rodel Cerrero.
Pictures of Binangonan
Mayors
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