Military Government of the Philippine Islands

The Military Government of the Philippine Islands (Spanish: Gobierno Militar de las Islas Filipinas; Tagalog: Pamahalaang Militar ng Estados Unidos sa Kapuluang Pilipinas) was a military government in the Philippines established by the United States on August 14, 1898, a day after the capture of Manila, with General Wesley Merritt acting as military governor.[4] General Merrit established this military government by proclamation on August 14, 1898.[5]

Military Government
of the Philippine Islands
Gobierno Militar
de las Islas Filipinas
 (Spanish)
1898–1902
Motto: "E pluribus unum" (Latin)
"Out of many, one"
Anthem: "Hail, Columbia"
Philippines in 1901
Philippines in 1901
StatusUnited States military occupation (1898–1899)
Unincorporated, unorganized territory[a] (1899–1902)
Capital
and largest city
Manila
Common languagesSpanish, Tagalog, English,
other Languages in the Philippines
GovernmentMilitary-occupied
transitional government
President 
• 1898–1901
William McKinley
• 1901–1902
Theodore Roosevelt
Military Governor 
• 1898
Wesley Merritt
• 1898–1900
Elwell S. Otis
• 1900–1901
Arthur MacArthur, Jr.
• 1901–1902
Adna Chaffee
(jointly with Civil Governor William Howard Taft)
LegislatureMartial law
(1898–1900)
Philippine Commission
(1900–1902)
History 
August 14, 1898
December 10, 1898
February 4, 1899
March 31, 1899
March 16, 1900
March 23, 1901
April 16, 1902
July 1, 1902
Population
• 1898
See below
CurrencyPhilippine peso
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Captaincy General of the Philippines
Insular Government of the Philippine Islands
  1. In 1901, a civil governor was appointed, but the military retained authority in disturbed areas.
  2. An 1898 census is reported by some sources to have yielded a count of 7,832,719 inhabitants.[1] However, the National Statistics Office of the Philippines reports that no census was conducted in that year.[2] Another well regarded source estimates a population of seven million in 1898.[3]

During military rule (1898–1902), the U.S. military commander governed the Philippines under the authority of the U.S. president as Commander-in-Chief of the United States Armed Forces. After the appointment of a civil Governor-General, the procedure developed that as parts of the country were pacified and placed firmly under American control, responsibility for the area would be passed to the civilian.

General Merritt was succeeded by General Elwell S. Otis as military governor, who in turn was succeeded by General Arthur MacArthur. Major General Adna Chaffee was the final military governor. The position of military governor was abolished in July 1902, after which the civilian office Governor-General became the sole executive authority in the Philippines.[6][7]

Under the military government, initially with soldiers as teachers;[8] civil and criminal courts were reestablished, including a supreme court;[9] and local governments were established in towns and provinces. The first local election was conducted by General Harold W. Lawton on May 7, 1899, in Baliuag, Bulacan.[10]

Capture of Manila

edit
 
Photo of American soldiers guarding a bridge over the Pasig River after the battle, August 13, 1898

By June, U.S. and Filipino forces had taken control of most of the islands, except for the walled city of Intramuros. Admiral Dewey and General Merritt were able to work out a bloodless solution with acting Governor-General Fermín Jáudenes. The negotiating parties made a secret agreement to stage a mock battle in which the Spanish forces would be defeated by the American forces, but the Filipino forces would not be allowed to enter the city. This plan minimized the risk of unnecessary casualties on all sides, while the Spanish would also avoid the shame of possibly having to surrender Intramuros to the Filipino forces.[11] On the eve of the mock battle, General Anderson telegraphed Aguinaldo, "Do not let your troops enter Manila without the permission of the American commander. On this side of the Pasig River you will be under fire."[12]

 
"Insurgent (Filipino) soldiers in the Philippines, 1899"(original caption)

On August 13, with American commanders unaware that a ceasefire had already been signed between Spain and the U.S. on the previous day, American forces captured the city of Manila from the Spanish in the Battle of Manila.[13][14][15] The battle started when Dewey's ships bombarded Fort San Antonio Abad, a decrepit structure on the southern outskirts of Manila, and the virtually impregnable walls of Intramuros. In accordance with the plan, the Spanish forces withdrew while U.S. forces advanced. Once a sufficient show of battle had been made, Dewey hoisted the signal "D.W.H.B." (meaning "Do you surrender?),[16] whereupon the Spanish hoisted a white flag and Manila was formally surrendered to U.S. forces.[17] This battle marked the end of Filipino-American collaboration, as the American action of preventing Filipino forces from entering the captured city of Manila was deeply resented by the Filipinos. This later led to the Philippine–American War (1899–1902),[18] which would prove to be more deadly and costly than the Spanish–American War (1898).

Spanish–American War ends

edit
 
John Hay, Secretary of State, signing the memorandum of ratification on behalf of the United States

Article V of the peace protocol signed on August 12 had mandated negotiations to conclude a treaty of peace to begin in Paris not later than October 1, 1898.[19] President McKinley sent a five-man commission, initially instructed to demand no more than Luzon, Guam, and Puerto Rico; which would have provided a limited U.S. empire of pinpoint colonies to support a global fleet and provide communication links.[20] In Paris, the commission was besieged with advice, particularly from American generals and European diplomats, to demand the entire Philippine archipelago.[20] The unanimous recommendation was that "it would certainly be cheaper and more humane to take the entire Philippines than to keep only part of it."[21] On October 28, 1898, McKinley wired the commission that "cessation of Luzon alone, leaving the rest of the islands subject to Spanish rule, or to be the subject of future contention, cannot be justified on political, commercial, or humanitarian grounds. The cessation must be the whole archipelago or none. The latter is wholly inadmissible, and the former must therefore be required."[22] The Spanish negotiators were furious over the "immodist demands of a conqueror", but their wounded pride was assuaged by an offer of twenty million dollars for "Spanish improvements" to the islands. The Spaniards capitulated, and on December 10, 1898, the U.S. and Spain signed the Treaty of Paris, formally ending the Spanish–American War. In Article III, Spain ceded the Philippine archipelago to the United States, as follows: "Spain cedes to the United States the archipelago known as the Philippine Islands, and comprehending the islands lying within the following line: [... geographic description elided ...]. The United States will pay to Spain the sum of twenty million dollars ($20,000,000) within three months after the exchange of the ratifications of the present treaty."[23]

In the U.S., there was a movement for Philippine independence; some said that the U.S. had no right to a land where many of the people wanted self-government. In 1898 Andrew Carnegie, an industrialist and steel magnate, offered to buy the Philippines for $20 million and give it to the Filipinos so that they could be free of United States government.[24]

On November 7, 1900, Spain and the U.S. signed the Treaty of Washington, clarifying that the territories relinquished by Spain to the United States included any and all islands belonging to the Philippine Archipelago, but lying outside the lines described in the Treaty of Paris. That treaty explicitly named the islands of Cagayan Sulu and Sibutu and their dependencies as among the relinquished territories.[25]

Philippine–American War (1899–1902)

edit

Escalatation of tensions

edit

The Spanish had yielded Iloilo to the insurgents in 1898 to trouble the Americans. On January 1, 1899, news had come to Washington, D.C., from Manila that American forces, which had been sent to Iloilo under the command of General Marcus Miller, had been confronted by 6,000 armed Filipinos, who refused them permission to land.[26][27] A Filipino official styling himself "Presidente Lopez of the Federal Government of the Visayas" informed Miller that "foreign troops" would not land "without express orders from the central government of Luzon."[27] On December 21, 1898, McKinley issued a Proclamation of Benevolent Assimilation. General Otis delayed its publication until January 4, 1899, and published a version that had been edited to avoid conveying the meanings of the terms "sovereignty," "protection," and "right of cessation," which occurred in the unedited version.[28] Unknown to Otis, the US Department of War had also sent an enciphered copy of the proclamation to General Marcus Miller in Iloilo for informational purposes. Miller assumed that it was for distribution and, unaware that a politically-expired version had been sent to Aguinaldo, published it in both Spanish and Tagalog translations, which eventually made their way to Aguinaldo.[29] Even before Aguinaldo received the unaltered version and observed the changes in the copy that he had received from Otis, Aguinaldo was already upset that Otis was referred to as "Military Governor of the Philippines" in the unaltered version, which he had received from Otis (the unaltered version said "in the Philippines."). Aguinaldo did not miss the significance of the alteration, which Otis had made without authorization from Washington.[30]

On January 5, Aguinaldo issued a counterproclamation that summarized what he saw as American violations of the ethics of friendship, particularly regarding the events in Iloilo. The proclamation concluded, "Such procedures, so foreign to the dictates of culture and the usages observed by civilized nations, gave me the right to act without observing the usual rules of intercourse. Nevertheless, in order to be correct to the end, I sent to General Otis commissioners charged to solicit him to desist from his rash enterprise, but they were not listened to. My government can not remain indifferent in view of such a violent and aggressive seizure of a portion of its territory by a nation which arrogated to itself the title champion of oppressed nations. Thus it is that my government is disposed to open hostilities if the American troops attempt to take forcible possession of the Visayan Islands. I denounce these acts before the world, in order that the conscience of mankind may pronounce its infallable verdict as to who are the true oppressors of nations and the tormentors of human kind."[31]: 356–7 

After some copies of that proclamation had been distributed, Aguinaldo ordered the recall of undistributed copies and issued another proclamation, which was published the same day in El Heraldo de la Revolucion, the official newspaper of the Philippine Republic: "As in General Otis's proclamation he alluded to some instructions edited by His Excellency the President of the United States, referring to the administration of the matters in the Philippine Islands, I in the name of God, the root and fountain of all justice, and that of all the right which has been visibly granted to me to direct my dear brothers in the difficult work of our regeneration, protest most solemnly against this intrusion of the United States Government on the sovereignty of these islands.

I equally protest in the name of the Filipino people against the said intrusion, because as they have granted their vote of confidence appointing me president of the nation, although I don't consider that I deserve such, therefore I consider it my duty to defend to death its liberty and independence."[32]: 357 

Otis, taking both proclamations as a call to arms, strengthened American observation posts and alerted his troops. In the tense atmosphere, some 40,000 Filipinos fled Manila within a period of 15 days.[33]

Meanwhile, Felipe Agoncillo, who had been commissioned by the Philippine Revolutionary Government as Minister Plenipotentiary to negotiate treaties with foreign governments and had attempted to be seated at the negotiations between the US and Spain in Paris, was now in Washington. On January 6, he filed a request for an interview with the President to discuss affairs in the Philippines. The next day, the government officials were surprised to learn that messages to Otis to deal mildly with the rebels and not to force a conflict had become known to Agoncillo and had been cabled by him to Aguinaldo. At the same time, Aguinaldo's protest against General Otis signing himself "Military Governor of the Philippines" arrived.[26] On January 8, Agoncillo stated, "In my opinion the Filipino people, whom I represent, will never consent to become a colony dependency of the United States. The soldiers of the Filipino army have pledged their lives that they will not lay down their arms until General Aguinaldo tells them to do so, and they will keep that pledge, I feel confident."[26]

The Filipino committees in London, Paris, and Madrid around that time telegraphed to President McKinley: "We protest against the disembarkation of American troops at Iloilo. The treaty of peace still unratified, the American claim to sovereignty is premature. Pray reconsider the resolution regarding Iloilo. Filipinos wish for the friendship of America and abhor militarism and deceit."[26]

On January 8, Aguinaldo received the following message from Teodoro Sandiko to the President of the Revolutionary Government, Malolos, from Sandico, Manila. January 8, 1899, 9.40 p.m., "In consequence of the order of General Rios to his officers, as soon as the Filipino attack begins the Americans should be driven into the Intramuros district and the walled city should be set on fire. Pipi."[34]

The New York Times reported on January 8 that two Americans who had been guarding a waterboat in Iloilo had been attacked, one fatally, and that insurgents were threatening to destroy the business section of the city by fire and that on January 10, a peaceful solution to the Iloilo issues may result but that Aguinaldo had issued a proclamation threatening to drive the Americans from the islands.[35][36]

By January 10, insurgents were ready to assume the offensive but desired, if possible, to provoke the Americans into firing the first shot. They made no secret of their desire for conflict but increased their hostile demonstrations and pushed their lines forward into forbidden territory. Their attitude was well illustrated by this extract from a telegram sent by Colonel Cailles to Aguinaldo on January 10, 1899: "Most urgent. An American interpreter has come to tell me to withdraw our forces in Maytubig fifty paces. I shall not draw back a step, and in place of withdrawing, I shall advance a little farther. He brings a letter from his general, in which he speaks to me as a friend. I said that from the day I knew that Maquinley (McKinley) opposed our independence I did not want any dealings with any American. War, war, is what we want. The Americans after this speech went off pale."[37]

Aguinaldo approved the hostile attitude of Cailles since a reply in his handwriting stated, "I approve and applaud what you have done with the Americans, and zeal and valour always, also my beloved officers and soldiers there. I believe that they are playing us until the arrival of their reinforcements, but I shall send an ultimatum and remain always on the alert.--E. A. Jan. 10, 1899."[37]

On January 31, 1899, the Minister of Interior of the revolutionary First Philippine Republic, Teodoro Sandiko, signed a decree stating that President Aguinaldo had directed that all idle lands be planted to provide food for the people in view of impending war with the Americans.[38]

Outbreak of general hostilities

edit

Worcester gave General Otis' account of the opening of active hostilities,[39]: 96 

On the night of February 2 they sent in a strong detachment to draw the fire of our outposts, which took up a position immediately in front and within a few yards of the same. The outpost was strengthened by a few of our men, who silently bore their taunts and abuse the entire night. This was reported to me by General MacArthur, whom I directed to communicate with the officer in command of the insurgent troops concerned. His prepared letter was shown me and approved, and the reply received was all that could be desired. However, the agreement was ignored by the insurgents and on the evening of February 4 another demonstration was made on one of our small outposts, which occupied a retired position at least 150 yards within the line which had been mutually agreed upon, an insurgent approaching the picket and refusing to halt or answer when challenged. The result was that our picket discharged his piece, when the insurgent troops near Santa Mesa opened a spirited fire on our troops there stationed.

The insurgents had thus succeeded in drawing the fire of a small outpost, which they had evidently labored with all their ingenuity to accomplish, in order to justify in some way their premeditated attack. It is not believed that the chief insurgent leaders wished to open hostilities at this time, as they were not completely prepared to assume the initiative. They desired two or three days more to perfect their arrangements, but the zeal of their army brought on the crisis which anticipated their premeditated action. They could not have delayed long, however, for it was their object to force an issue before American troops, then en route, could arrive in Manila.

Thus began the Insurgent attack, so long and so carefully planned for. We learn from the Insurgent records that the shot of the American sentry missed its mark. There was no reason why it should have provoked a hot return fire, but it did.

The result of the ensuing combat was not at all what the Insurgents had anticipated. The Americans did not drive very well. It was but a short time before they themselves were routed and driven from their positions.

Aguinaldo of course promptly advanced the claim that his troops had been wantonly attacked. The plain fact is that the Insurgent patrol in question deliberately drew the fire of the American sentry, and this was just as much an act of war as was the firing of the shot. Whether the patrol was acting under proper orders from higher authority is not definitely known.

Dean Conant Worcester. 1914. The Philippines: Past and Present. p. 96.[39]: 96 

Other sources name the two specific US soldiers involved in the first exchange of fire as Privates William Grayson and Orville Miller of the Nebraska Volunteers.[40]

After the war had ended, and he had analyzed captured insurgent papers, Major Major J. R. M. Taylor wrote, "An attack on the United States forces was planned which should annihilate the little army in Manila, and delegations were appointed to secure the interference of foreign powers. The protecting cloak of pretense of friendliness to the United States was to be kept up until the last. While commissioners were appointed to negotiate with General Otis, secret societies were organized in Manila pledged to obey orders of the most barbarous character to kill and burn. The attack from without and the attack from within was to be on a set day and hour. The strained situation could not last. The spark was applied, either inadvertently or by design, on the 4th of February by an insurgent, willfully transgressing upon what, by their own admission, was within the agreed limits of the holding of the American troops. Hostilities resulted and the war was an accomplished fact."[41]

On February 4, Aguinaldo declared, "That peace and friendly relations with the Americans be broken and that the latter be treated as enemies, within the limits prescribed by the laws of war."[42] On June 2, 1899, the Malolos Congress enacted and ratified a declaration of war on the United States, which was publicly proclaimed on that same day by Pedro A. Paterno, the President of the Assembly.[43]

As when they had fought the Spanish, the Filipino rebels did not do well in the field. Aguinaldo and his provisional government escaped after the capture of Malolos on March 31, 1899, and they were driven into northern Luzon. Peace feelers from members of Aguinaldo's cabinet failed in May when the American commander, General Ewell Otis, demanded an unconditional surrender. In 1901, Aguinaldo was captured and swore allegiance to the United States, which marked an end to the war.

First Philippine Commission

edit
 
1899 political cartoon by Winsor McCay. Uncle Sam (representing the United States), gets entangled with rope around a tree, labeled "Imperialism," while he tries to subdue a bucking colt or mule, labeled "Philippines," and a figure, representing Spain, walks off over the horizon and carr ies a bag, labeled "$20,000,000."

McKinley had appointed a five-person group, headed by Dr. Jacob Gould Schurman, president of Cornell University, on January 20, 1899, to investigate conditions in the islands and to make recommendations. The three civilian members of the Philippine Commission arrived in Manila on March 4, 1899, a month after the Battle of Manila, which had begun armed conflict between US and revolutionary Filipino forces. The commission published a proclamation containing assurances that the US was "anxious to establish in the Philippine Islands an enlightened system of government under which the Philippine people may enjoy the largest measure of home rule and the amplest liberty."

After meetings in April with revolutionary representatives, the commission requested authorization from McKinley to offer a specific plan. He authorized an offer of a government, consisting of "a Governor-General appointed by the President; cabinet appointed by the Governor-General; [and] a general advisory council elected by the people."[44] The Revolutionary Congress voted unanimously to cease fighting and to accept peace, and on May 8, the revolutionary cabinet, headed by Apolinario Mabini, was replaced by a new "peace" cabinet, headed by Pedro Paterno. General Antonio Luna then arrested Paterno and most of his cabinet and returned Mabini and his cabinet to power. The commission then concluded, "The Filipinos are wholly unprepared for independence... there being no Philippine nation, but only a collection of different peoples."[45]

In the report, which they issued to the president the next year, the commissioners acknowledged Filipino aspirations for independence but declared that the Philippines was not ready for it.[46]

On November 2, 1899, the commission issued a preliminary report that stayted:[47][48]: 183 

Should our power by any fatality be withdrawn, the commission believe that the government of the Philippines would speedily lapse into anarchy, which would excuse, if it did not necessitate, the intervention of other powers and the eventual division of the islands among them. Only through American occupation, therefore, is the idea of a free, self-governing, and united Philippine commonwealth at all conceivable. And the indispensable need from the Filipino point of view of maintaining American sovereignty over the archipelago is recognized by all intelligent Filipinos and even by those insurgents who desire an American protectorate. The latter, it is true, would take the revenues and leave us the responsibilities. Nevertheless, they recognize the indubitable fact that the Filipinos cannot stand alone. Thus the welfare of the Filipinos coincides with the dictates of national honour in forbidding our abandonment of the archipelago. We cannot from any point of view escape the responsibilities of government which our sovereignty entails; and the commission is strongly persuaded that the performance of our national duty will prove the greatest blessing to the peoples of the Philippine Islands."

Report Philippine Commission, Vol. I, November 3, 1899. p. 183.

Specific recommendations included the establishment of civilian government as rapidly as possible (the American chief executive in the islands was then the military governor), including establishment of a bicameral legislature, autonomous governments on the provincial and municipal levels, and a system of free public elementary schools.[49]

Second Philippine Commission

edit
 
William Howard Taft, governor general of the Philippines

The Second Philippine Commission (the Taft Commission), appointed by McKinley on March 16, 1900, and headed by William Howard Taft, was granted legislative and limited executive powers.[50] On September 1, the Taft Commission began to exercise legislative functions.[51] Between September 1900 and August 1902, it issued 499 laws; established a judicial system, including a supreme court; drew up a legal code; and organized a civil service.[52] The 1901 municipal code provided for popularly elected presidents, vice presidents, and councilors to serve on municipal boards. Members of the municipal boards were responsible for collecting taxes, maintaining municipal properties, undertaking necessary construction projects, and electing provincial governors.[49]

Establishment of civil government

edit
 
Governor General William Howard Taft addressing the audience at the Philippine Assembly in the Manila Grand Opera House

On March 3, 1901, the U.S. Congress passed the Army Appropriation Act containing (along with the Platt Amendment on Cuba) the Spooner Amendment, which provided the President with the legislative authority to establish a civil government in the Philippines.[53] Until then, the President had been administering the Philippines by virtue of his war powers.[54] On July 1, 1901, civil government was inaugurated, with Taft as the Civil Governor. On February 3, 1903, the US Congress changed the title of Civil Governor to Governor-General.[55]

A highly-centralized public school system was installed in 1901, using English as the medium of instruction. Since that created a heavy shortage of teachers, the Philippine Commission authorized the Secretary of Public Instruction to bring to the Philippines 600 teachers from the U.S., the so-called Thomasites. Free primary instruction to train the people for the duties of citizenship and avocation was enforced by the Taft Commission, according to instructions by McKinley.[56] Also, the Catholic Church was disestablished, and a considerable amount of church land was purchased and redistributed.

Official end to war

edit
 
The town of Jaro in the subdued Philippines prepared for the immediate arrival of Governor-General Taft.

The Philippine Organic Act of July 1902 approved, ratified, and confirmed McKinley's executive order establishing the Philippine Commission and stipulated that a bicameral Philippine Legislature would be established, composed of an elected lower house, the Philippine Assembly, and an appointed upper house, the Philippine Commission. The act also provided for extending the United States Bill of Rights to the Philippines.[49][57]

On July 2, 1902, the Secretary of War telegraphed that the insurrection against the sovereign authority of the U.S. had come to an end, with provincial civil governments established, and so the office of Military Governor was terminated.[7] On July 4, Theodore Roosevelt, who had succeeded to the presidency after the assassination of McKinley on September 5, 1901, proclaimed a full and complete pardon and amnesty to all persons in the Philippine archipelago who had participated in the conflict.[7][58]

On April 9, 2002, Philippine president Gloria Macapagal Arroyo proclaimed that the Philippine–American War had ended on April 16, 1902, with the surrender of General Miguel Malvar, and she declared the centennial anniversary of that date as a national working holiday and as a special non-working holiday in the Province of Batangas and in the Cities of Batangas, Lipa and Tanaun.[59]

Later hostilities

edit

Some sources have suggested that the war unofficially continued for nearly a decade since bands of guerrillas, quasi-religious armed groups, and other resistance groups continued to roam the countryside and to clash with U.S. Army or Philippine Constabulary patrols. The U.S. Army and the Philippine Constabulary continued hostilities against those resistance groups until 1913.[60] Some historians consider these unofficial extensions to be part of the war.[61]

Comparisons with the First Philippine Republic

edit
  United States Military Government   Philippine Republic
Established August 14, 1898[62] January 23, 1899
Constitutional Document War powers authority of the President Malolos Constitution
Capital Manila Malolos, Bulacan
Head of State President of the United States President of the Philippines
Head of Government Military Governor of the Philippine Islands Prime Minister of the Philippines
Legislative Martial Law (1898–1900)
Philippine Commission (1900–1902)
National Assembly
Military United States Armed Forces Philippine Republican Army
Currency Peso Peso
Official Language(s) English Spanish, Tagalog

See also

edit

References

edit

Citations

edit
  1. ^ "PHILIPPINES: More People Practice Tribal Religions Today, than in 1521. However…". The ASWANG Project. October 22, 2016. Retrieved December 25, 2016.
  2. ^ "Population of the Philippines : />Census Years 1799 to 2010". National Statistics Office of the Philippines. Archived from the original on July 4, 2012. Retrieved June 27, 2012.
  3. ^ Tucker, Spencer (2009). The Encyclopedia of the Spanish-American and Philippine-American Wars: A Political, Social, and Military History. ABC-CLIO. p. 719. ISBN 978-1-85109-951-1.
  4. ^ Halstead 1898, pp. 110–112
  5. ^ Faust 1899, p. 103-104
  6. ^ Elliott 1917, p. 509.
  7. ^ a b c "General Amnesty for the Filipinos; Proclamation Issued by the President" (PDF). The New York Times. July 4, 1902.
  8. ^ Otis 1899, p. 152
  9. ^ Otis 1899, pp. 145-146
  10. ^ Zaide 1994, p. 279 Ch.21
  11. ^ Karnow 1990, p. 123
  12. ^ Agoncillo 1990, p. 196
  13. ^ The World of 1898: The Spanish–American War, U.S. Library of Congress, retrieved June 15, 2014
  14. ^ The World of 1898: the Spanish–American War, U.S. Library of Congress, retrieved October 10, 2007
  15. ^ "Our flag is now waving over Manila", San Francisco Chronicle, retrieved December 20, 2008
  16. ^ Trask 1996, p. 419
  17. ^ Karnow 1990, pp. 123–24, Wolff 2006, p. 119
  18. ^ Lacsamana 2006, p. 126.
  19. ^ Halstead 1898, pp. 176–178 Ch.15
  20. ^ a b Miller 1984, p. 20
  21. ^ Miller 1984, pp. 20–1
  22. ^ Miller 1984, p. 24
  23. ^ Kalaw 1927, pp. 430–445 Appendix D
  24. ^ "Andrew Carnegie timeline of events at PBS.org". PBS. Archived from the original on November 24, 2016. Retrieved September 17, 2017.
  25. ^ "Treaty between Spain and the United States for Cession of Outlying Islands of the Philippines" (PDF). University of the Philippines. November 7, 1900. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 26, 2012.
  26. ^ a b c d Halstead 1898, p. 316
  27. ^ a b Miller 1984, p. 50
  28. ^ The text of the amended version, published by General Otis, is quoted in its entirety in José Roca de Togores y Saravia; Remigio Garcia; National Historical Institute (Philippines) (2003). Blockade and siege of Manila. National Historical Institute. pp. 148–50. ISBN 978-971-538-167-3.
    See also Wikisource:Letter from E.S. Otis to the inhabitants of the Philippine Islands, January 4, 1899.
  29. ^ Wolff 2006, p. 200
  30. ^ Miller 1984, p. 52
  31. ^ Agoncillo 1997
  32. ^ Agoncillo 1997, p. 357
  33. ^ Agoncillo 1997, pp. 357–8.
  34. ^ Taylor 1907, p. 39
  35. ^ "Bloodshed at Iloilo; Two Americans Attacked and One Fatally Wounded by Natives." (PDF), The New York Times, January 8, 1899, retrieved February 10, 2008
  36. ^ "The Philippine Climax; Peaceful Solution of the Iloilo Issue May Result To-day. Aguinaldo's Second Address He Threatened to Drive the Americans from the Islands – Manifesto Was Recalled" (PDF), The New York Times, January 10, 1899, retrieved February 10, 2008
  37. ^ a b Worcester 1914, p. 93 Ch.4
  38. ^ Guevara 1972, p. 124
  39. ^ a b Worcester 1914, p. 96 Ch. 4
  40. ^ Blitz 2000, p. 32, Blanchard 1996, p. 130
  41. ^ Taylor 1907, p. 6
  42. ^ Halstead 1918, p. 318 Ch.28
  43. ^ Kalaw 1927, pp. 199–200 Ch.7
  44. ^ Golay 1997, p. 49.
  45. ^ Golay 1997, pp. 50–51.
  46. ^ Worcester 1914, p. 199 Ch. 9
  47. ^ "The Philippines : As viewed by President McKinley's Special Commissioners". The Daily Star. Vol. 7, no. 2214. Fredericksburg, Va. November 3, 1899.
  48. ^ Report Philippine Commission, Vol. I, p. 183.
  49. ^ a b c Seekins 1993
  50. ^ Kalaw 1927, p. 453Appendix F
  51. ^ Zaide 1994, p. 280 Ch.21
  52. ^ Chronology for the Philippine Islands and Guam in the Spanish–American War, U.S. Library of Congress, retrieved February 16, 2008
  53. ^ Piedad-Pugay, Chris Antonette. "The Philippine Bill of 1902: Turning Point in Philippine Legislation". National Historical Commission of the Philippines. Retrieved July 9, 2013.[permanent dead link]
  54. ^ Jernegan 2009, pp. 57–58
  55. ^ Zaide 1994, p. 281 Ch.21
  56. ^ Historical Perspective of the Philippine Educational System, RP Department of education, archived from the original on July 16, 2011, retrieved March 11, 2008
  57. ^ The Philippine Bill of July 1902, Chan Robles law library, July 1, 1902, retrieved July 31, 2010
  58. ^ Worcester 1914, p. 180 Ch.9
  59. ^ "Presidential Proclamation No. 173 S. 2002". Official Gazette. April 9, 2002.
  60. ^ "PNP History", Philippine National Police, Philippine Department of Interior and Local Government, archived from the original on June 17, 2008, retrieved August 29, 2009
  61. ^ Constantino 1975, pp. 251–3
  62. ^ Philippines; United States Philippine Commission (1904). "Military Proclamation, August 14, 1898". Public Laws Enacted by the Philippine Legislature: During the Period from Sept. 1, 1900 to Nov. 14, 1935; Comprising Acts Nos. 1 to 4275. Bureau of Printing. p. 567.

Bibliography

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ The Philippines belonged to, but were not a part of, the United States. See the page for the Insular Cases for more information.