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City of Roxas, once known as the municipality of Capiz
is the capital of the province of Capiz.
In 1569, Captain Diego de Artieda who
was sent by Miguel Lopez de Legazpi from Cebu, landed
on the town of Pan-ay and proclaimed it as the capital.
Later the capital was moved to its present site upon
discovering that the town of Capiz was near the sea
where they can have better docking facilities. The Spaniards
saw the long coastal cover and envisioned a trading
and shipping center. Ports were constructed in Libas
and later in Culasi.
A river meanders across the town, cuts
it at the heart and divides it almost equally into two.
Tributaries from the mountains flowed into the head
of Panay River through settlements formed along its
shores, irrigating and fertilizing the land to provide
food to the people. Following its course into the sea,
it provides water to fishponds during high tide.
In 1590, the Navy of Acapulco, Mexico
made Capiz port its arsenal (naval yard) where they
can seek shelter when the sea was rough. Capiz then
eventually grew into a bustling port and several houses
of stones were built. The social and political status
enjoyed by the native chieftains of Capiz often resulted
in mixed marriages with the Spaniards. The mestizo descendants
became the base of the principalia or influential citizens.
Their privileged positions allowed them to build houses
around the favored square of the poblacion - around
the church and the government complex. Their children
became the beneficiaries of the Augustinian mission
in 1593.
In 1746, Capiz was made the seat of
the politico-military government, although it was ecclesiastically
controlled by the Bishopric of Cebu. In the latter part
of 1795, under Gobernadorcillo Miguel Bautista, the
old road to Baybay Beach was built as an extension of
San Roque Street.
The town of Capiz was frequently attacked
by Muslims that in 1814, stone forts at Baybay Beach
(Baluarte) were built through the initiative of Gobernadorcillo
Jose Consolacion.
In 1870, the ground was broken for the
foundation of the Cathedral of Capiz under the guidance
of Reverend Apolonio Alvarez. It was built by sturdy
hands, sweat and blood of Capizeños who were
victims of forced labor.
In 1876, the diocese of Jaro in Iloilo
was erected and Capiz came under its jurisdiction. In
1877, the cathedral was finally finished. Prior to its
construction, a chapel was built in Burgos Street beside
the municipal building.
In August 1899, the Spanish colonial
government represented by Governor Juan Herrero formally
surrendered to General Ananias Diokno in Baybay Beach.
Economic debacle hit the town of Capiz
in 1914 when the Ayala Distillery grounded to a halt.
What could have been an ambitious forerunner of nationalized
industrialization became the victim of the Internal
Revenue Law under American control.
In 1917, Division Superintendent of
Schools F.E. Hemingway founded Capiz Trade School for
intermediate pupils and offered woodworking as the only
vocational course. The next division superintendent
opened Capiz High School.
In 1926, Division Superintendent Arthur
Wittman authorized teaching of complete secondary curriculum
in the Capiz Trade School. In the same year, Culasi
Port was built to accommodate inter-island ships.
On February 15, 1951 the diocese of
Capiz became a separate ecclesiastical jurisdiction
from Jaro. Its first bishop was Msgr. Manuel Yap. In
the same year, former Vice Mayor Libertad Conlu became
the first female mayor of Capiz.
Capiz became a chartered city on May
12, 1951 through House Bill 1528 sponsored by Ramon
Acuña Arnaldo, the representative of the First
District of Capiz. It was approved by President Elpidio
Quirino on April 11, 1951 as Republic Act 608. Consequently,
the town was named Roxas City after her greatest son,
President Manuel Acuña Roxas, the last president
of the Commonwealth and the first president of the Philippine
Republic.
The first appointed mayor was Lorenzo
Acuña Arnaldo followed by Ramon Berjamin Blanco,
Jose Dorado and Juliano Alovera Alba. In 1959, Lorenzo
Acuña Arnaldo again became the head of the city
as the first elected mayor. The next mayor was Teodoro
Roxas Arcenas who was succeeded by Juliano Alovera Alba
who was also the representative of the First District
of Capiz at the House of Congress when Martial Law was
declared.
Hon. Antonio A. Del Rosario, who is now the Congressman of the 1st District of Capiz, was elected to three terms as mayor of Roxas City, serving from 1998 to 2007.
The incumbent mayor of Roxas City is Mayor
Vicente B. Bermejo, who
is the former governor of the province of Capiz.
The most notable people of Roxas include:
- Manuel
Acuña Roxas - First president
of the independent Republic of the Philippines
- Josefa
Abiertas - The first woman bar
topnotcher and proponent of the Women's Suffrage Bill
- General Esteban Contreras - Fought
for the freedom of the Capiznons, was never captured
by the Americans.
- Jose "Tabai" Altavas
- Municipal Councilor of Capiz (1903 – 1906);
member of the provincial board of Capiz (1906 - 1907);
Delegate to the First Philippine Assembly (1907 –
1909); Provincial Governor of Capiz for two terms
(1910 – 1916); Senator from Iloilo, Capiz and
Romblon (1916 – 1922); and Representative from
the second district of Capiz (1925 – 1928).
He was a member of the “goodwill” Legislative
Delegation to Japan in 1917 and was elected Delegate,
from the first district of Capiz, to the constitutional
convention in 1934.
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