The document summarizes the collections held by the Michigan Historical Collections related to American-Philippine relations from the late 19th century to the mid-20th century. It describes how faculty initially became involved in the Philippines for scientific research and then played roles in the colonial administration. The collections include papers of officials, soldiers, missionaries, and others documenting the American colonial period and transition to independence, offering insights into the goals and challenges of the administration and development of the Philippine republic.
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1. des And Indexes > Philippines
American-Philippine Relations: A Guide to the Resources in the Michigan
Historical Collections
Introduction
By Marjorie Barritt
1982
The rich body of Philippine materials held by the Michigan Historical Collections is a reflection
of the extensive involvement of Michigan citizens and members of the University of Michigan
community with the Philippine Islands. The collections document the American colonial
experience and the subsequent relations between the United States and the Commonwealth and
Republic of the Philippines.
Interest in the Philippine Islands by University of Michigan faculty was initially scientific,
though it later broadened into political involvement. Dean Conant Worcester first visited the
Philippines in 1887 with University of Michigan zoology professor Joseph B. Steere who was
then on his second expedition to the Philippines. Worcester headed his own expedition under the
auspices of the Minnesota Academy of Natural Science, 1890-1893, and subsequently published
a book on the Philippine Islands. Following the American victory over Spain and the ratification
of the Treaty of Paris in 1899, the Philippine Islands became an American colony. President
McKinley appointed Worcester to the First Philippine Commission.
Many leading citizens, some of whom had formed the Anti-Imperialist League, had opposed
American involvement in the Philippines. A small number of Anti-Imperialist League papers are
held by the Michigan Historical Collections and attest to the strong anti-colonial feeling of many
Americans.
Manila Opera House, site of first Philippine Assembly, 1907,
from George A. Malcolm papers
2. McKinley hoped that the First Philippine Commission could lay the basis for a progressive
American colonial administration. "The Philippines are ours," he stated, "not to exploit, but to
develop, to civilize, to educate, to train in the science of self-government." Worcester and other
Michigan citizens serving as colonial administrators shared that vision. Documenting the early
period of nation-building are the papers of Worcester, who served as secretary of the interior and
superintendent of public instruction; Harry Bandholtz, chief of the Philippine constabulary; John
Chrysostom Early, teacher and governor of the Mountain Province; and George Arthur Malcolm
who served on the Philippine Supreme Court.
The Philippine American War of 1899-1902 is well documented in the collections. Led by
Emilio Aguinaldo, the uprising was an attempt to secure Philippine independence and thwart
American intentions to retain the Islands. The library holds the papers of men who played major
and minor roles in the military actions to put down the Filipinos, including William Atwood,
Harry Bandholtz, Frank Burton, Charles Carpenter, Russell McPeek, and Owen Tomlinson. Also
held are the papers of Simeon Ola, a brigadier general in the Philippine forces.
Michigan citizens, according to Joseph Hayden, a University of Michigan political scientist,
joined other citizens of the United States in the Philippines "as soldiers, administrators, teachers,
missionaries, businessmen, lawyers, doctors, miners, planters, above all as American pioneers.
Their papers document their experiences, impressions, hopes and misgivings during the
American colonial experiment.
As the American administration of the Philippines was gradually turned over to Filipinos in
preparation for commonwealth status (1935) and eventual independence (1946), it became
apparent that the imposition of the American model on Philippine society and governance was
not totally successful. Joseph Ralston Hayden was a participant and reporter of this critical
period of American-Philippine relations. Hayden, on leave from the University of Michigan's
political science department, taught at the University of the Philippines in 1922-1923 and again
in 1931-1932; he participated in the 1926 survey of economic and internal conditions of the
Islands; he served as vice-governor from 1933-1935 and in the Office of Strategic Services and
as an advisor to General Douglas MacArthur during World War II. His papers provide important
insights into the transitional period.
3. Philippine President Manuel Quezon
and General Douglas MacArthur, ca. 1940,
from Joseph Ralston Hayden papers
Holding the most sensitive position in the years 1933-1936 was Michigan's Frank Murphy who
served as governor-general and as the first United States High Commissioner after
commonwealth status was granted. Murphy's papers, the papers of members of Murphy's family
who served with him, and of Murphy's aides, Norman Hill and Edward Kemp, all provide a
description of the social life and political role of the top American administrator in the
Philippines.
The documentation of the Filipino view of the American colonial administration is slight. Many
Filipinos were trained at the University of Michigan and returned to assume administrative
positions in the Philippine government. Recent acquisitions have strengthened the Filipino voice
in the collections. Of particular note are the papers of Manuel Quezon, Santiago Artiaga, and
Salvador Araneta.
The dislocation and brutality brought about by the Japanese invasion and occupation of the
Philippines is described in the accounts of Eugene C. Jacobs, Jovito S. Abellana, Frederic S.
Marquardt, William P. Oliver, Winifred O'Connor Pablo, and in the letters of Roy S. Swinton
which are found in the Alexander G. Ruthven papers.
On July 4, 1946, forty-seven years after the imposition of American colonial rule, the Philippines
became an independent nation. The close ties between the United States and the Philippines and
between the State of Michigan and the Philippines continued. Former United States Senator
Homer Ferguson of Michigan served as United States Ambassador to the Philippines, 1955-
1956, and was followed by former Michigan Governor G. Mennen Williams who served as
Ambassador, 1968-1969. The papers of both men document their service in the Philippines.
4. Ambassador Homer Ferguson and Philippine President Ramon
Magsaysay, ca. 1955
Ambassador Homer Ferguson (2nd from left) and Philippine President Ramon Magsaysay
(waving) visit U.S. aircraft carrier Shangri-La, ca. 1955, from the Ferguson papers
The postwar concerns of both Philippine and American administrators and political leaders have
centered on establishing economic and political stability within the framework of Philippine
independence. The papers and taped interviews of Salvador Araneta, interviews with Ferdinand
Marcos in the Stanley Swinton papers, the articles of Frank Gould, and other collections reflect
this preoccupation.
The complexity of American-Philippine relations is amply documented in the holdings of
Philippine manuscript material in the Michigan Historical Collections. These collections provide
a key to understanding the goals and policies of the American colonial administration, and to the
understanding of the Philippine Republic that emerged from that rule. The collection continues to
grow both in size and importance and continues to reflect changing American-Philippine
relations.
Introduction
Introduction (1982)
Balita mula Maynila (1971)
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