|
MOUNTAIN PROVINCE
For
decades, the whole Cordillera region was identified by this one
name-MOUNTAIN PROVINCE.
Mountain Province lies at the heart of the
cordillera mountain ranges in Northern Luzon. The province is
bounded on the north by the provinces of Kalinga, Apayao and
Abra; on the south by Benguet; on the east by Ifugao and Isabela;
and on the west by Ilocus Sur.
The province is inhabited by hard-working
people of the sturdy Malayan race referred to as "Igorots".
Scholars differ in their theory on the origin of our people. A
prominent number though support the contention that the various
tribes came from the South East Asia mainland. According to
existing records, Spanish exploratory efforts on this area
started as early as 1663 up to 1665 which were unsuccessful
because of the harsh terrain and hostility of the Igorots.
Succeeding forays into these mountains were abandoned for some
time because this proved to be an economic burden to the Spanish
government. On the later part of the 1850's, a famous Spanish
explorer, Guillermo Galvez and Antonio Hernandez, a mining
engineer, explored as far as Lepanto, Bontoc and Kiangan
territories. In 1859, the tribes of Bontoc, Western Ifugao an
Southern Kalinga were placed under one "commandancia" in the
Bontoc-Lepanto area while the rest resettled in Amburayan,
Cabuagan, and Northern Kalinga, Kiangan, Ifugao and Benguet were
under another "commandancia". In1890, Christianity was
established on Igorot soil.
In 1898, a
number of Bontoc Igorots joined the fight against the Americans
but being superstitious, they were easily awed by the American
"magic sticks" prompting them to retreat to their mountain
abodes. Towards the end of the war, Flipino forces were driven
northward to the Cordillera Mountains. General Gregorio H. Del
Pilar with some 300 Igorot braves defended Tirad Pass to enable
Generl Emilio Aguilnaldo to escape through Bontoc. The
Bontoc-Lepanto area was eventually occupied by the Americans.
Temporary headquarters were established in Cervantes. Major
Rice, the commanding officer, became acting military Governor
until the establishment of a civil government in 1901.
After the Spanish-American war, the mountain region were
reestablished and the Bontoc-Lepanto area was recognized as a
province in 1902 with Bontoc, Lepanto , Amburayan as the
sub-provinces and Cervantes as the capital of the new province.
Dr. Hunt was made the acting Governor, but he stayed in Bontoc,
not in Cervantes.
In 1903, All Saints' Mission, the first Episcopal/Anglican
Church in Mountain Province, was opened by Bishop Charles and
father Walter Clayton Clapp at the present Poblacion Bontoc.
In 1904, Father John Armitage Staunton, Jr. and his wife
established Saint Mary the Virgin, the Episcopal Mission Center
in Sagada. Ten years after, twenty buildings were
constructed. Among them is Saint Mary's High School.
That same year, the first government school in Bontoc was put up
under the supervision of Provincial Governor William Reed.
The following year, other schools were established in Alilem,
Angaki, Besao, Kayan, Sabangan and Sagada. Alilem and
Sagada had American teachers while the rest were non-Igorot
Filipinos.
In 1907, the mountain regions were organized as the Mountain
Province and became a special province of the Philippines with
the following sub provinces: Bontoc-Lepanto-Amburayan,
Ifugao, Kalinga, Benguet and Apayao. Mr. Samuel Kane, the
Provincial Supervisor, was appointed as the Governor and Bontoc
became the Provincial Capital. The only building that
existed in Bontoc at that time was the twenty-year old Spanish
garrison which became the temporary quarters and office of the
Governor and his staff. The construction of other
government buildings among them a hospital, a provincial jail
and several school houses started at that time.
In 1908, this former Mountain Province was again sub-divided
into seven sub-provinces: Benguet, Bontoc, Ifugao, Lepanto,
Amburayan, Kalinga and Apayao. Later Amburayan and Lepanto
were in cooperated by the sub-province of Bontoc and Benguet,
respectively leaving the five sub-provinces known as BIBAK.
In the early part of 1908, two Belgian missionaries of the
Immaculate Heart of Mary, Fr. Constancio Jurgens and Fr.
Sepulchre, took the Spanish trail from Candon through
Conception, Tirad Pass, Angaki, Kayan, Sagada to reach Bontoc to
re-spread the word of God.
In March 1911, the Saint Vincent's School was formally
established under the direction of four missionary sisters of he
Canoness of Saint Augustine from Belgium. (Photo
credit: Saint Vincent's High School)
Historical records show that there was a brewing disenchantment
among the people of these mountain regions in the manner the
national government treated a larger mass of the old Mountain
Province. This triggered the tide for the clamor for a
better and workable political and geographical grouping.
In 1925, the Honorable Henry A. Kamora, Benguet Representative
to the Lower House of Congress, filed a House Bill proposing the
first sub-division to pare down the old Mountain Province into
two separate provinces. The Bill did not take off the
ground and was reintroduced in 1933 and was again presented in
the 1935 Constitutional Convention, but met the same fate as the
Kamora Bill.
In the year 1928, Dr. Hilary P. Clapp,
the first Bontoc-Physician educated in the United States was
appointed District Health Officer of the Mountain Province.
In 1931, after years of laborious planning and working, the
Bontoc-Baguio road was finally opened to traffic and was
rehabilitated by the Lepanto Mining Corporation and the Dangwa
Development Corporation in 1946.
Hon. Felix Diaz, Sr. was the first Igorot to be appointed as
Governor and as Assemblyman for Mountain Province in 1934.
Honorable Diaz's administration immersed in the rehabilitation
and reconstruction from the ashes of past devastation and
conflict. He was also a delegate to the 1935
Constitutional Convention in Manila. He was then replaced
as Assemblyman by a former Public School Supervisor named George
Tait. Mr. Tait was the first Bontoc to be elected as
Assemblyman of Mountain Province during the Commonwealth
Government in 1935.
In February 1942, the dreaded Japanese Army arrived in Bontoc
via Nueva Vizcaya and Kiangan route. A garrison was
established in the town. The Anglican Mission dormitories
were made quarters for officers. Dr. Hillary Clapp was
made Governor of Mountain Province.
During the country's fifth Congress in 1962, the Honorable
Alfredo G. Lamen and the Honorable Luis Hora authored House Bill
4600 which proposed the subdivision of the old Mountain Province
into five (5) new provinces, it also failed to pass muster.
In 1965 the province was divided into 3 Congressional Districts
under the administration of Hon. Bado Dangwa. The First
District of Mountain Province (excluding Besao, Tadian and Bauko),
Kalinga and Apayao represented by Congressman Juan Duyan; Second
district was composed of Baguio and Benguet under Congressman
Ramon Mitra; and the Third district was comprised of Ifugao,
Tadian and Bauko with Hon. Luis Hora as the Congressman. Hon.
Duyan with Hon. Hora authored House Bill 1526. The resolutions
drawn up by the constituents of Bontoc and other parts of the
old Mountain Province, from political leaders down to civic
leaders, were forwarded to the national legislative body to
drumbeat for the immediate approval of the said bill.
This time, the lobby won for Mountain Province its first
birth pangs. The bill was passed by the Senate and on June 18,
1966, the bill was approved by then President Ferdinand Marcos
and became Republic Act 4695, otherwise known as the Division
Law of Mountain Province. The 4 distinct provinces of Benguet,
Kalinga-Apayao, Ifugao and Mountain Province were finally born.
The new Mountain Province under the aforesaid Republic Act which
was once comprised of the sub-province of Bontoc has now the
following municipalities: Barlig, Bauko, Besao, Bontoc, Natonin,
Paracelis, Sabangan, Sadanga, Sagada, and Tadian. Bontoc
was made the provincial capital.
On Friday, April 7, 1967, a year after the Subdivision Law was
approved; the new Mountain Province was legally and officially
operational with the following first set of provincial officials
being designated to compose the Provincial Board: Hon. Alfredo
G. Lamen-Governor; Hon. Victor S. Dominguez-Vice Governor; Hon.
Pio F. Felwa; Hon. Alfonso Layog and Hon. Alejo Manao as Board
Members. Luis Hora was the Congressman.
In November 1967, the first election in the history of the new
Mountain Province took place. there were only
two political parties at that time, the Liberal Party with
Alfredo G. Lamen and Pio Felwa as candidates for Governor and
Vice-Governor, respectively; and the Nationalista Party with
Timothy Chaokas and Victor Dominguez for Governor and
Vice-Governor, respectively. Atty. Jaime Gomez also vied for the
position of Vice-Governor as an independent candidate.
Alfredo G. Lamen won the gubernatorial race against Timothy
Chaokas while Gomez prevailed over Dominguez and Felwa.
Source:
Lang-ay Festival 2005 Souvenir Program, Mountain Province
|