"'These brothers of ours': Poblete's obreros and the road to Baguio 1903-1905".Greg Bankoff, "'These Brothers of Ours': Poblete's Obreros and the Road to Baguio 1903-1905" On July 21, 1903, some two hundred labourers recently recruited to construct the Benguet Road linking the Americans' erstwhile erst·while adv. In the past; at a former time; formerly. adj. Former: our erstwhile companions. erstwhile Adjective former Adverb summer capital of the Philippines Noun 1. capital of the Philippines - the capital and largest city of the Philippines; located on southern Luzon Manila Philippines, Republic of the Philippines - a republic on the Philippine Islands; achieved independence from the United States in 1946 at Baguio with the railhead rail·head n. 1. The farthest point on a railroad to which rails have been laid. 2. A place on a railroad where military supplies are unloaded. railhead Noun 1. to Manila refused to report for work and peremptorily per·emp·to·ry adj. 1. Putting an end to all debate or action: a peremptory decree. 2. Not allowing contradiction or refusal; imperative: marched out of camp. While the incident is barely if at all remembered, it became something of a cause celebre cause cé·lè·bre n. pl. causes cé·lè·bres 1. An issue arousing widespread controversy or heated public debate. 2. A celebrated legal case. at the time. The affair was made much of by a nationalist press owned by Manila-based literati literati Scholars in China and Japan whose poetry, calligraphy, and paintings were supposed primarily to reveal their cultivation and express their personal feelings rather than demonstrate professional skill. deeply involved in non-military confrontation with the new colonial administration. The Americans were equally as anxious to prove they were different to other colonial regimes and that nothing was amiss. The workers, of course, the obreros simply disappear once again into the historical twilight but not before leaving behind them a glimpse at the changes that were taking place in the local labour market. While it may be premature to talk about the dawning of a distinctive worker consciousness as yet, there were significant socio-economic developments in Filipino society at this time that were just as significant as the much more contestable political ones. It is against these wider considerations that the events surrounding the recruitment of labour on the road are played out. Named after the chief recruitment agent, Pascual Poblete, the affair is one of those rare occasions when long term historical developments at work in the less visible strata of late colonial society come to the surface. |
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