Someone please forward to Dr. Norman G. Owen, Ph.D., retired historian somewhere in NC-USA [Re: Setting the record straight]
- From: Dirty Sick Pig <drtysicpig@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 02 Dec 2007 14:37:58 GMT
Pietro E Reyes, III wrote:
*Setting the record straight*
By GEMMA CRUZ ARANETA
Manila Bulletin
29NOV2007
IF you are ever in St. Paul, Minnesota, make it a point to visit the State Capitol and look for two commemorative plaques at the Capitol Rotunda. The first plaque of 1948 vintage glorifies the Minnesota 13th Volunteer Regiment for its valiant role in the Spanish-American War. "They served the cause of humanity and freed the oppressed people of the Philippine Islands from the despotic rule of Spain ...", proclaims the first plaque. The second plaque corrects the distortions contained in the first one. That there is a second plaque is in itself historical.
The "tribute" in the first plaque makes reference to ..." the Philippine Insurrection under Chief Aguinaldo…" and lists all the battles gloriously won by the Volunteer Regiment. To those totally ignorant of Philippine history (as most Americans are) the military feats of Minnesota’s 13th Volunteer Regiment sound most impressive, but, the truth is the only battle fought by the Minnesota Volunteers against the "despotic rule of Spain" was that mock naval skirmish, on 13 August 1898, glowingly called "Battle of Manila Bay."
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Dr. Owen disputes this battle being a mock skirmish, along with my assertion that Admiral Dewey's quip, "You May Fire When Ready, Gridley," being an impossibility because such order was against naval practice and traditions, and would have been a slap on the face of the flagship's (USS Olympia) own captain.
Firing Even When Not Ready Pig
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The other battles fought by the Minnesota volunteers were not to "free the oppressed people of the Philippine Islands" but were against the Filipino people themselves whom they branded as "insurgents." They were fighting the Philippine Revolutionary Army and the First Republic of the Philippines headed by a President, not a chieftain. How many more commemorative plaques in the USA bear such a plethora of historical distortions?.
Interestingly enough, the Minnesota 13th Volunteer Regiment was supposed to have been sent to Cuba but at the last minute, they were ordered to board a train bound for San Francisco from where they were sent to the Philippines. Records attest that the commander, surgeon and chaplain of the Minnesota volunteer regiment asked Gov. John Lind to recall the volunteers due to atrocities committed during the war. If only for that they should not have been honored with an adulatory plaque at the State Capitol.
For thirty four long years, the Filipino community in Minnesota waged a relentless campaign to have a corrective plaque installed beside the erroneous one. They had hoped that by the Philippine Centennial in 1998, the gross historical distortions would have been corrected, but it was not possible. Far from discouraged, the Philippine Study Group of Minnesota and the Minnesota Historical Society set up an unprecedented "Philippine-American War" exhibit right at the Capitol that ran from June, 1998 to December 30, 1998. There were newspaper clippings that reported war atrocities, revolutionary flags from that period, artifacts, pictures, as well as letters written from the field by the Minnesota volunteers revealing unbecoming conduct during the war. There was also an autographed picture of President Emilio Aguinaldo.
Finally, on February 4, 2002, the 103rd anniversary of the Philippine-American War, Gov. Jesse Ventura ( a Vietnam War veteran), signed a bill funding the second plaque that effectively corrects the first one . At the unveiling, members of both Houses of the Minnesota Legislature were in attendance, so was the Philippine Ambassador and the Commander of the Minnesota National Guard who solemnly declared that there was an urgent need "to set the record straight." (Source: Adelbert Batica, originally from Samar, now US resident) (talkingpointsgca.blogspot.com)
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