To a certain extent, the Philippine Archives Collection documents the activities of Southwest Pacific Area (SWPA) and its component parts, but the primary focus of the collection is not at the command level.

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The Field Museum is home to over 10,000 objects from the Philippines, the largest collection of its kind in the Western Hemisphere. This collection includes textiles, personal adornments, weapons, ritual equipment, basketry, woodcarvings, musical instruments, smoking pipes, and export ceramics. Approximately 75% of the Philippine collection was gathered during anthropological field expeditions between 1907 and 1910 to northern Luzon, central Mindanao, Mindoro, Palawan, and Sulu. After these initial expeditions, the Philippine collection grew with donations from the personal reserves of U.S. soldiers who served in the Philippine-American War during the early 1900s. Since this time the Philippine collection has grown primarily through private donations of mostly mid-twentieth century material. More recently, the Museum is collaborating with communities in the the U.S. and the Philippines to collect contemporary items that tell the diverse stories of Philippine heritage.

A number of disparate primary sources were digitized to make up the Wisconsin Philippines Image Collection, which, along with the accompanying essay Orientalism of the Philippine Photograph: America Discovers the Philippine Islands provide a look into the history of the Philippine Islands. The timespan (late 1800s through 1940s) of the materials in this collection date roughly from the time of the Philippine-American War, through the time of the territorial government by the United States, into the period of the Commonwealth of Philippines as the administrative body of the country, as well as into WWII and Independence in 1946.

This copyright is independent of any copyright on specific items within the collection. Because the University of Wisconsin Libraries generally do not own the rights to materials in these collections, please consult copyright or ownership information provided with individual items.

Besides the three volumes, readers will also find typed and handwritten Romanized transliterations and translations of the bamboo items in the collection. These are mainly of 48 items in the collection (Set 2), and are published in Indic Writings with a few minor orthographic differences.

To complement his extensive collection of Spanish and Indian language manuscripts documenting the early contacts of Europeans with the native peoples of the Americas, Edward E. Ayer (1841-1927) began buying materials on the Philippines in 1898 when he first learned that the United States had acquired the islands from Spain under the terms of the treaty that ended the Spanish-American War. Initially, the core of the collection consisted of items previously owned by the Compaia General de Tabacos in their Barcelona library, which Ayer obtained through the efforts of Madrid bookseller Pedro Vindel, although purchases and gifts over the years have substantially expanded the holdings.

The Philippine portion of the Ayer manuscript collection contains some 430 manuscripts dealing with the Philippines under Spanish colonial rule, from the early exploration and discovery of the islands in 1564 to the Philippine Revolution of 1899, with particular strength in government papers of the eighteenth century. Also included are five volumes of documents from 1578-1792 on Philippine history and politics, transcribed by Ventura del Arco in the Real Academia de la Historia in Madrid between 1859 and 1865.

The bulk of the collection was written by three Mangyan authors: Luyon, Kabal, and Balik. Luyon wrote 48 bamboo slats that cover various topics, ranging from life under Spanish occupation of the Philippines to agriculture, education, and different stages of life (childhood, adolescence, courtship, marriage, and death). Kabal wrote 22 items in verse (called ambahan, a form of poetry with seven-syllable lines and rhyming endings). Balik was responsible for the 6 cylinders in the collection, which are in prose. Only one item (Item A1 of Set 1) in the collection was written by Sikadan, Chief of Pokanin and Pangalkagan.

Carl Guthe was an archeologist and anthropologist who headed the UM expedition to the Philippines from 1922-1925. While he is best known for the collection of Chinese pottery that he amassed during his trip, his archival collection at the Bentley Historical Library is equally important as his reports and journals reveal the resiliency of some pre-colonial cultural practices in the Philippines.

So, it may not be surprising that when researchers collected several Waray dwarf burrowing snake specimens, they were unaware they possessed animals unknown to science. The specimens spent years in the herpetology collection of the University of Kansas Biodiversity Institute and Natural History Museum misidentified as other small, burrowing snakes.

Fans and customers can look forward to reliving the magic together beginning September 19. The new themed collection will be available across 15 markets, spanning Australia, Brunei, Cambodia, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, New Zealand, Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, and Vietnam.

Given the racist attitude towards Indigenous peoples of the Philippines seen in American news reports, the collaboration between Gardner and the Maliwanag brothers stands out as unusual. This partnership produced a body of scholarly work on the Mangyan and their writing, which Gardner sent to the Library of Congress as accompanying documents to the inscribed bamboo items. These unpublished materials have been digitized and include typed and handwritten romanized transliterations and translations of the bamboo items in the collection.

To learn more about the collection, please see a recently published research guide, which is now available online. The guide discusses collection-related topics such as provenance, transliterations, and transcriptions, and also lists all items in the collection with links to the digital presentation.

Dear Winnifred,

Thank you for you kind comments. I felt it was important to credit those who had worked on the collection in the Philippines as they played a major role in putting the collection together.

As for analyzing songs with respect to Mangyan cosmology, that would certainly anchor the songs in a larger cultural context. Some works that touch on Mangyan beliefs and customs are listed in the background information section of the research guide on the collection: //guides.loc.gov/mangyan-bamboo-collection/background.

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Special Collections Research Center. If you have concerns about the inclusion of an item in this collection, please contact Library Information Technology.

Wedding Photo of General and Mrs. Emilio Aguinaldo with original inscription and signature of Emilio Aguinaldo

This collection consists of 1 folder containing a typewritten signed letter from Aguinaldo to Horace F. Lyons (1931), a wedding picture of Emilio Aguinaldo signed by Aguinaldo, and a handwritten document which according to the typewritten letter is a copy of the 1898 Philippine declaration of independence. View the catalog record.

Robert and Willard Clark. Letters from the Philippines to family in New York, 1903-1910

Consists of a collection of 40 handwritten letters, dated 1902-1906, written by Willard and Robert Clark (brothers) in the Philippines. View the catalog record.

Donn V. Hart Letters from Manila, Philippines, 1950

This collection consists of 1 folder containing 150 items including photographs. The collection is primarily comprised of Typewritten with impressions of Hart's first trip to the Philippines, which began in Yokohama (Japan), descriptions of the different provinces of the Philippines, and stories of interactions with politicians, hacienderos and local farmers. View the catalog record.

Parker Hitt photograph collection

Collection consists of seven albumen cabinet cards with portraits of Parker Hitt from infancy through adulthood. From Hitt's tour of duty: seven panoramic photographs of the Mindanao countryside; and fifty photographs depicting members of the Tausug (Moros), sites and buildings of the area in and around Agusan, Lanao, Marawi, and Panta (Pulau, Indonesia), soldiers and officers. View the catalog record.

George Kennan typed Copy of letter of U.S. military's use of water-torture on Philippine prisoners, dated Jan 14, 1902.

This collection consists of a single letter from George Kennan to Mr. J. Leroy Smith. View the catalog record.

Charles J. King Letters, 14 manuscript letters to Grace Shaw, 1901-1903

This collections consists of 14 handwritten letters from Charles J. King of Co. D, 1st Regiment, United States Marines, from Cavite, Luzon to Miss Grace Shaw of Massachusetts. Letters include extensive accounts of combat on the Samar in late in October and early November 1901. View the catalog record. be457b7860

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