[12] Blount, p. 43.
[13] A term, more or less corresponding to mayor, then applied to the ranking munic.i.p.al officer of a _pueblo_ or town.
[14] Eight hundred thousand Mexican dollars, the actual value of which constantly fluctuated.
[15] The Ilocanos are one of the eight civilized peoples who collectively make up the Filipinos. They number 803,942, and inhabit certain provinces in northern Luzon.
[16] I have not felt at liberty to correct spelling, capitalization, punctuation or grammar in quotations, except in the case of perfectly evident printer's errors. It should be remembered that the results of Taylor's work were left in the form of galley proof.
[17] Taylor, 42 F Z-43 F Z.
[18] For the history of this doc.u.ment, see p. 51.
[19] P.I.R., 1300.2.
[20] Senate Doc.u.ment 62, part 1, Fifty-fifth Congress, Third Session, P. P. 341 _et seq_.
[21] Senate Doc.u.ment 62, part 1, Fifty-fifth Congress, Third Session; also P.I.R., 496.
[22] Blount, pp. 11-12.
[23] Pratt.
[24] P.I.R., 516. 4.
[25] "The Consul--after telling me that, before arriving in Hongkong harbor, a launch would be sent by the Admiral to secretly take us to the North American squadron, a secrecy which pleased me also, as it would avoid giving publicity to my acts--then advised me that I should appoint him the representative of the Philippines in the United States to promptly secure the official recognition of our independence. I answered that whenever the Philippine government should be formed, I would nominate him for the office he desired, although I considered that but small recompense for his aid, and that in case of our having the good fortune to secure our independence I would bestow upon him a high post in the customs service besides granting the commercial advantages and the partic.i.p.ation in the expenses of the war which the Consul asked for his Government in Washington, since the Filipinos agreed in advance to what is here stated, considering it a proper testimonial of grat.i.tude."--P.I.R., 1300. 2.
[26] Blount, p. 12
[27] Blount, pp. 8-9.
[28] Ibid., p. 9.
[29] The following is one of them:--
"_H. Kong_, May 16, 1898.
"Senor Don Jose Enrique Basa:
"My Dear Enrique: As an aid to the American policy in the Philippines,--America being the most liberal and humanitarian nation in the world,--I earnestly recommend the widest possible circulation of the proclamation which I send herewith in order that the Americans may be supported in the war against the tyrannical friars and the Spaniards who have connived with them, and that public order, so necessary under the present conditions, be preserved.
"Thy relative, twenty-six years an emigrant.
(Signed) "_J. M. Basa_."
--P.I.R., 1204-10.
[30] P.I.R., 1204-10.
[31] Ibid., 1204-10.
[32] P.I.R., 53-2.
[33] Teodoro Sandico, an influential Tagalog leader, who spoke English well and afterward served as a spy while employed by the Americans as an interpreter.
[34] Senor Garchitorena was a wealthy Tagalog of Manila, and, at this time, a prominent member of the Hongkong junta.
[35] Dr. Galicano Apacible, a very intelligent and rather conservative Tagalog physician. After Aguinaldo left Hongkong, he was the leading member of the junta.
[36] Sr. Graco Gonzaga, a prominent Filipino lawyer of the province of Cagayan.
[37] There is an illegible word in the original.
[38] P.I.R., 406-5.
[39] P.I.R., 398. 9.
[40] "_Hongkong_, 12 Jan. 1899,--2 P.M.
"_Senator h.o.a.r_, Washington.
"As the man who introduced General Aguinaldo to the American government through the consul at Singapore, I frankly state that the conditions under which Aguinaldo promised to cooperate with Dewey were independence under a protectorate. I am prepared to swear to this. The military party suborned correspondents are deceiving the American nation by means of malevolent lying statements. If your powerful influence does not change this insensate policy there will be a hopeless conflict with the inevitable results disastrous for the Americans.
"_Bray_."
--P.I.R., 853-4.
[41] "Then Aguinaldo had an interview with the United States consul in Hongkong, in which he told him that he was anxious to become an American citizen, but this being impossible, he desired to be allowed to return to the Philippines and place himself under the orders of Commodore Dewey. According to the brother of that Consul, who certainly must have had opportunities for knowing the facts in the case, he made no demands for independence, but said that he hoped that the Americans would not leave the Filipinos to their fate, but would annex the Philippines and protect them against the Spaniards. He promised the Consul that he would fight with the Americans and not attempt to foment a revolution against the United States. His highest expressed aim was to throw off the Spanish yoke, and, that once accomplished, he would abide by the decision of the United States as to the ultimate disposition of the Philippines. If Aguinaldo had expressed his real intentions of obtaining arms and using them only for his own purposes, and, if he found it expedient, against the United States, it is not to be thought that he would have been returned to the Philippines on a United States vessel."--Taylor, 44 F Z.
[42] P.I.R., 471. 7.
[43] P.I.R., 1300. 2.
[44] Admiral Dewey's testimony, from which I quote extracts, will be found in Senate Doc.u.ments, Vol. 25.57 Congress, 1st session, pp. 2928, 2941.
[45] P.I.R., 1300.2.
[46] P.I.R., 1300.2.
[47] Taylor, 4 MG., E.
[48] Report of the Philippine commission to the President. January 31, 1900. Vol. I, p. 121.
[49] P.I.R., 396. 3.
[50] Ibid., 396. 3.
[51] P.I.R., 461.4.