Vicente Álvarez

Gral. Vicente Álvarez y Solis
1st President of the Republic of Zamboanga
In office
May 18, 1899  November 16, 1899
Preceded by Post established
Succeeded by Isidro Medel
Personal details
Born Vicente Álvarez y Solís
(1862-04-05)April 5, 1862
Magay, Zamboanga, Captaincy General of the Philippines
Died November 22, 1942(1942-11-22) (aged 80)
Labason, Zamboanga del Norte, Commonwealth of the Philippines

General Vicente Álvarez (Spanish: [ˈbiˈsente ˈalβaɾes] : April 5, 1862 - November 22, 1942) was a Zamboangueño revolutionary general who led the revolution in Zamboanga which forced the surrender of the last Spanish Governor-General of the Philippines, Diego de los Rios, effectively ending the Spanish occupation in the Philippines.[1]

Early life

Vicente Álvarez y Solís was born in April 5, 1862 as the fifth child to Don Alejo Álvarez and Isidora Solís in Magay, Zamboanga.

Álvarez studied his elementary course at the Liceo de Zamboanga inside Fort Pilar. When the Spanish government granted him scholarship due to his father's influence, he pursued his military studies at the Spanish Military Academy in Manila. When the academy was closed down, he transferred to the Ateneo Municipal de Manila to which he graduated with a bachelor's degree.[2]

Career

Malacañang Service

Álvarez was later assigned to the Malacañang Palace to serve under the Governor-General of the Philippines in which he rose to the number-two position in the administrative staff as segundo official mayor.

During his service for the Governor-General, he joined the Katipunan when it was established in 1892. He then used his position to pass valuable information to the Katipunan. However, his membership was discovered when the Philippine Revolution erupted in 1896. As a result of his treason, he could have been executed or imprisoned but due to his father's influence, he was punished by sending him into a mission in Sulu to pacify a quarrel between two claimants to the throne of the Sultanate and invite them to join the Spanish Crown.

Because of his hard work of diplomacy, in 1898, the dispute was quickly agreed on a compromise and the new sultan recognized Álvarez's judgment and authority. The Sultan designated him the title Datu Tumanggung or "royal marshall of camp", the first Christian ever to attain the honor and giving him jurisdiction over the constituents of the Sultan in Basilan and Zamboanga. To mark the joyous event, a royal festival was held to which the Sultan gave Sitti Jumlia as bride to Alvarez.

There were conflicting accounts to which what happened to Alvarez after his mission in Sulu:

Zamboanga Revolution

In 1898, prominent Zamboangueños organized a revolutionary group to fight the Spanish that remained in Zamboanga. The council then elected Álvarez as their commanding general. He then organized an army of Christians, Muslims, and Lumads.[5]

Alvarez, as commander in-chief, appointed his following commanders to the towns around Zamboanga:

Under his leadership, Álvarez was able to take control of the peninsula, except the port of Zamboanga and Fort Pilar, which were fortified by remaining Spanish forces led by Governor-General Diego de los Ríos who fled from Iloilo, which was then the capital of the Spanish East Indies after Manila fell to the Americans.

After organizing enough troops, guns and ammunition, he invaded Zamboanga and engaged the Spaniards in fierce fighting. Fightings continued, consisting chiefly of artillery duels across the town and after two weeks of stalemate, General Alvarez laid siege against the Spanish stronghold of Fort Pilar in April 1899. The siege lasted a month, until May, in which the Spanish were compelled to wave the white flag. On May 18, Fort Pilar, symbol of Spanish supremacy in Southern Philippines, was surrendered to the Revolutionary Government of Zamboanga.

Republic of Zamboanga

The flag of the Republic of Zamboanga.

General Álvarez then proclaimed establishment of the Republic of Zamboanga with him as its first president.

A few days before the Spanish fall, two ships boarded an American expeditionary force steamed into the Zamboanga port. Intense bombardment from the fort prevented the Americans to land. Alvarez, at the time, was attempting to recruit more troops to his army to fight the Americans.

Alvarez was even offered a sum of 75,000 Mexican dollars to turn over Zamboanga to the Americans but he turned it down. He already placed his aide-de-camp, Colonel Melanio Calixto to be acting commander of the Zamboanga revolutionary force.

However, all ended in treachery. Colonel Calixto was assassinated by the supposed orders of the commander of Tetuan, Isidio Midel. Midel, who had allied with the occupying Americans, opened the doors of Fort Pilar to the Americans. Álvarez tried regrouping his men but it was to later. On November 16, 1899, Zamboanga was officially under American hands and Midel took over the presidency, which became a protectorate under the United States.[6]

Alvarez, betrayed, did not stopped his resolve to fight back. He then resorted to guerilla warfare and took defense of Mercedes, north of Zamboanga. The Americans, frustrated that they were unable to capture Alvarez resorted to dirty tactics in which they poisoned the water supplies of the rebels which delivered a heavy blow to the revolutionary ranks. Alvarez, in order to save lives from the Americans, fled to Basilan then to Misamis Occidental to continue the Revolution against the Americans.

He was later captured by the Americans in 1902 and sent to Manila to be imprisoned.

Post-War Career

Upon recognizing American sovereignty, Álvarez was then commissioned to head the Mindanao delegation to the 1904 International Exposition held in the St. Louis, United States and was promoted to the rank of Captain in the Philippine Constabulary, said to be the highest rank given to a Filipino at that time.

In 1906, he was assigned to pacify Datu Ali of Cotabato and Salip Akil of Basilan in which he succeeded since his peace campaign in the Sulu archipelago before the War.

He would be later appointed as judge of the Dapitan Tribal Ward and later as its District Governor.

He became Vice-Governor of the Zamboanga District under the Department of Mindanao and Sulu until his retirement in 1917 and was given life pension by the government.

Legacy

Vicente Álvarez died in Labason, Zamboanga del Norte on November 4, 1942, leaving a legacy as revolutionary leader who fought foreign occupation in Zamboanga and in the Philippines. He is responsible for the true and last surrender of the Spanish forces in Las Islas Filipinas to the Zamboangueño revolutionary forces.

For a brief period of an uninterrupted six months of sovereignty, the Republic of Zamboanga remained supreme that the sovereignty of Spain over the remaining portions of the Philippines have been transferred to it by virtue of conquest. Having had a duly constituted government and territorial control over its constituents, its sovereignty was absolute, if not over the entire Philippines, at least in Mindanao.[7]

Shortly before his death, he apparently spoke out against the Japanese occupation in the Philippines.

In strong words he repeatedly said, "We will never surrender Zamboanga and we will fight any foreign invader to the last man."

In recognition for his heroism and contribution to Zamboanga, the Zamboanga City Council approved Ordinance 213 declaring Alvarez as Zamboanga's revolutionary hero.[8] A busy street is named after him at downtown Zamboanga.

In July 3, 2008, the Zamboanga City Council approved City Ordinance 334 declaring May 18 of every year as Dia de General Vicente Alvarez and naming Plaza Roma, situated at the corner of Don Pablo Lorenzo St., Zaragoza St. and Gen. V. Alvarez St., as Plaza Vicente S. Alvarez.[9][10]

See also

References

  1. Malcampo, Hermenegildo (October 2007). Historia de Zamboanga: Antes y Durante el Periodo Español (1400-1900). Zamboanga City, Philippines: Western Mindanao University Press. p. 115.
  2. Bautista, Rolando (1984). Zamboanga Hermosa: Memories of the Old Town. Makati, Philippines: Filipinas Foundation, Inc. p. 88.
  3. Bautista, Rolando (1984). Zamboanga Hermosa: Memories of the Old Town. Makati City, Philippines: Filipinas Foundation, Inc. pp. 89–91.
  4. Malcampo, Hermenegildo (October 2007). Historia de Zamboanga: Antes Y Durante El Peridio Español (1400-1900). Zamboanga City, Philippines: Western Mindanao University Press. pp. 129–130.
  5. Palafox, Queenie Anne. "Vicente Alvarez and the Battle of Fort Pilar". National Historical Commission of the Philippines. Retrieved 20 May 2014.
  6. Foreman, J. (1906). The Philippine Islands, A Political, Geographical, Ethnographical, Social and Commercial History of the Philippine Archipelago. New York City: Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 532.
  7. Bautista, Rolando (1984). Zamboanga Hermosa: Memories of the Old Town. Makati City, Philippines: Filipinas Foundation, Inc. p. 92.
  8. "Ordinance #213 - An Ordinance Declaring General Vicente Alvarez as the Revolutionary Hero of Zamboanga City" (PDF). Sangguniang Panglungsod. Retrieved 20 February 2013.
  9. Covarrubias, Sheila. "Celso unveils Gen. Alvarez’ dedicatory billboard". The PhilSouth Angle. Retrieved 20 May 2014.
  10. "An Ordinance Naming "Plaza Roma" as "Plaza Vicente Alvarez"" (PDF). Sangguniang Panglungsod ng Zamboanga. Retrieved 20 May 2014.
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