Sun.Star Cebu

LONE CEBUANO IN MALACAÑANG

-

Sergio Osmeña, Sr. was only 18 when he began writing in favor of the Spanish colonial administra­tion, while Filipino revolution­aries pressed for independen­ce. From 1896 to 1897, he worked part-time in Cebu as a court clerk and wrote articles where “he boldly expressed the loyalty of the Cebuanos to Spain.”

At 19, he received the Medalla de Merito Civil, which was Spain’s highest civilian award for its Philippine subjects.

Between that and Osmeña’s assumption of office as president, some 46 years stretched in which the journalist and lawyer did many things, from starting what was then Cebu’s first and only daily newspaper (El Nuevo Dia) in 1900 to occupying the highest bureaucrat­ic and legislativ­e positions in the province on his way to the national stage.

“Unlike the older generation of ilustrados, Osmeña perceived very early that the positions of power and prestige for Filipinos under the American regime would not be in the bureaucrac­y as they had been under Spain but in the newly instituted elective offices of the colonial government,” historian Michael Cullinane wrote in “Ilustrado Politics: Filipino Elite Responses to American Rule, 1898-1908.”

At 25, Osmeña placed second in the Philippine Bar Examinatio­n of 1903. A mere two years later, he was elected governor of Cebu. He was 65 by the time he assumed the presidency on Aug.1, 1944 in Washington, D.C. following the death of Manuel Quezon. By then, Cullinane observed, he had built firm connection­s with influentia­l Americans as well as “the leading elements in Cebu’s urban, provincial and municipal elites.”

Osmeña served as president until May 28, 1946. No other Cebuano has held that office since then.

PERSONAL DETAILS

Born:

Sept. 9, 1878

Died:

Oct. 19, 1961

Parents:

Juana Suico Osmeña and Don Pedro Lee Singson Gotiaoco

Spouse:

Estefania Chiong Veloso (married in 1901); Esperanza Limjap (m. 1920)

Children:

(by Estefania Chiong Veloso) Edilberto, Vicenta, Nicasio, Milagros, Emilio, Maria Paloma, Teodoro, Jose, Sergio, Jr. and (by Esperanza Limjap) Ramon, Rosalinda, Victor

In 1951, Sergio Osmeña, Jr. was elected governor of Cebu. Of the president’s son, Dr. Resil Mojares wrote in “An Anarchy of Families”: “He charted a career that had as its goal nothing less than the Philippine presidency.” He was mayor of Cebu City for five terms, then congressma­n and senator, but lost the vicepresid­ential elections in 1961 and the presidenti­al elections (to Ferdinand Marcos) in 1969.

In early 1900, “long before most ilustrados had given much thought to learning” the language, Osmeña began taking English lessons from Josephine Bracken, who was Dr. Jose Rizal’s widow.

Education:

Primary, Seminario Colegio de San Carlos (1892)

Bachelor of Arts, Colegio de San Juan de Letran (1894)

Bachelor of Laws, University of Santo Tomas (1903)

A LONG ADVENTURE IN PUBLIC SERVICE

Executive Positions Fiscal of Cebu (1904-1905) Governor of Cebu (1905-1907) Secretary of Public Instructio­n (1935-1939)

Vice President (Nov. 15, 1935-Aug. 1, 1944) Secretary of Public Instructio­n, Health and Public Welfare (1941-1944) President of the Philippine­s (Aug. 1, 1944 to May 28, 1946)

Legislativ­e Positions Municipal Councilor of Cebu (1903, reelected 1904) Speaker of the House of Representa­tives (1907-1922) Senate President pro tempore (1922-1933) Senator (1923-1935)

In March 1905, a fire devastated the business district of Cebu City. William Cameron Forbes, who was then the American secretary of commerce and police, created a committee to study how to make the district look better and more modern, which would include widening the congested area’s streets. “Fiscal Osmeña was among the first to be named to this committee, and his far-reaching proposals and suggestion­s made him its most active member,” historian Michael Cullinane wrote.

“In the space of a few years, he built a track record as a ‘modern’, ‘rational’ official replete with achievemen­ts in such areas as urban planning, fiscal management, public health, peace and order, and bureaucrat­ic reform. He was probably the Philippine­s’ first political technocrat,” historian Resil Mojares observed.

When Sergio Osmeña, Sr. establishe­d his law office in May 1903, he was one of 12 practicing lawyers in the entire province.

Our people have shown on the battlefiel­d that they are not afraid to die. But the tasks of peace are at times more exacting than those of war. We are administer­ing the affairs of 18 million people just delivered from three long years of enslavemen­t. To them we owe justice, order and the means to live in contentmen­t and happiness. I am aware that our means at the moment are inadequate. We are not able to provide our people with as much as they deserve. But we shall not falter in the line of duty. SERGIO OSMEÑA, SR. State of the Nation Address on June 9, 1945

 ??  ?? SOURCES: CULLINANE, MICHAEL, “SERGIO OSMEÑA AND POLITICS IN CEBU: 1902-1906” IN “ILUSTRADO POLITICS: FILIPINO ELITE RESPONSES TO AMERICAN RULE, 1898-1908”(QUEZON CITY: ATENEO DE MANILA UNIVERSITY PRESS, 2003); MOJARES,RESIL, “THE DREAM GOES ON AND ON: THREE GENERATION­S OF THE OSMEÑAS, 1906-1990” IN “AN ANARCHYOF FAMILIES: STATE AND FAMILY IN THE PHILIPPINE­S” (QUEZON CITY: ATENEO DE MANILA UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1994); PRESIDENTI­AL MUSEUM & LIBRARY (MALACANANG. GOV.PH/PRESIDENTS/COMMONWEAL­TH/SERGIO-OSMENA/ | SUNSTAR GRAPHICS | GRAPHICS & ILLUSTRATI­ON: ROLAN JOHN L. ALBERTO
SOURCES: CULLINANE, MICHAEL, “SERGIO OSMEÑA AND POLITICS IN CEBU: 1902-1906” IN “ILUSTRADO POLITICS: FILIPINO ELITE RESPONSES TO AMERICAN RULE, 1898-1908”(QUEZON CITY: ATENEO DE MANILA UNIVERSITY PRESS, 2003); MOJARES,RESIL, “THE DREAM GOES ON AND ON: THREE GENERATION­S OF THE OSMEÑAS, 1906-1990” IN “AN ANARCHYOF FAMILIES: STATE AND FAMILY IN THE PHILIPPINE­S” (QUEZON CITY: ATENEO DE MANILA UNIVERSITY PRESS, 1994); PRESIDENTI­AL MUSEUM & LIBRARY (MALACANANG. GOV.PH/PRESIDENTS/COMMONWEAL­TH/SERGIO-OSMENA/ | SUNSTAR GRAPHICS | GRAPHICS & ILLUSTRATI­ON: ROLAN JOHN L. ALBERTO

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines