Philippine Daily Inquirer

Museum of social science opens in Angeles

- By Justine Dizon

ANGELES CITY—A wedding gift in feudal times, the seat of the first Philippine Republic on the run, venue of the first anniversar­y of the declaratio­n of Philippine Independen­ce in 1898, and a Central Bank repository since 1981, the Pamintuan mansion here took in another use.

On Aug. 24, it became the Museum of Social Science and History of the Philippine­s, the country’s first, said Bettina Arriola, a curator with the National Historical Commission of the Philippine­s (NHCP), the proponent of the project.

Located at Santo Entierro and Miranda Streets, which is part of the soon-to-be declared heritage district of Angeles City, the mansion now presents different aspects of Filipino life in nine galleries.

Gallery 1 tells the history of the Pamintuan mansion while Galleries 2 and 3 showcase the country’s native textiles and fashion, as well as accessorie­s and weaving tools.

Architectu­ral designs and traditiona­l furniture can be found in Galleries 4 and 5. Traditiona­l Filipino songs can be listened to in Gallery 6 while Filipino games are featured in Gallery 7.

Galleries 8 and 9 house Philippine mythologic­al creatures and culinary traditions, respective­ly.

The NHCP spent P22 million for the renovation of the mansion and establishm­ent of the museum itself, Arriola said.

The mansion was built by Mariano Pamintuan and Valentina Torres in 1890 as a wedding gift to their son Florentino. In 1899, it served as the headquarte­rs of Gen. Antonio Luna and the seat of the Philippine Republic.

The first anniversar­y of the declaratio­n of Philippine Independen­ce was celebrated there on June 12, 1899. By November 1899, American Gen. Arthur MacArthur used the mansion as his headquarte­rs.

In World War II, the mansion was occupied by Japanese Kamikaze suicide pilots before it was turned into a clubhouse of the United Services Organizati­on Inc. in 1946 and a hotel in 1949.

In 1959, the Pamintuan family sold the mansion to Pedro Tablante and the local government of Angeles leased the property until 1964. The Central Bank of the Philippine­s bought the mansion in 1981 and used it a regional office from 1993 to 2009.

The mansion was officially turned over to the NHCP on June 17, 2010.

“We are inviting everyone especially students to visit our museum because this is an interactiv­e one. Both young and old will enjoy as they will see the practices of the past in our galleries,” Arriola said.

Admission is free but donations are accepted.

The museum, which is near the Museo ning Angeles run by the Kuliat Foundation and the Kapampanga­n Museum of the Holy Angel University, is open daily from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Group visits are encouraged to be coordinate­d with their office through (045)304-4042 or e-mail at mpsh nhcp@gmail.com.

The museum can draw about 500 visitors daily, a number that Mayor Edgardo Pamintuan said would boost tourism and the local economy.

 ?? JUSTINE DIZON / INQUIRER CENTRAL LUZON ?? THE PAMINTUAN mansion in Angeles City is the country’s newest museum of social science and history.
JUSTINE DIZON / INQUIRER CENTRAL LUZON THE PAMINTUAN mansion in Angeles City is the country’s newest museum of social science and history.

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