The History of Towns in Region VIII, Philippines
These histories were taken from the book Leyte Towns, Histories/Legends by Francisco S. Tantuico Jr of Tacloban City. Click on a town and view the history below the menu.
Inopacan
Inopacan is a tiny western coastal municipality occupying a
mere 182 square kilometers of green rolling hills bordered by
narrow coastal plains. From the sea, it looks like a little
coconut-covered rural community with a backdrop of high
blue-greenish mountains. Beyond these mountains are the
boundaries of Mahaplag and portions of
Sogod, Southern Leyte and Hilongos. To
the north is the progressive town of Baybay and to the south is
the equally small and peaceful Hindang town. The rich Camotes Sea
bound the western part.
The town has twenty barangays, eight of which, including the
poblacion, are along the coast. One is an island barangay and the
rest are in the interior part. Sixty-five percent of the people
live along the coast.
It is believed that the early settlers of Inopacan came from
Cebu and Bohol. The present site has been its original location
because it had never been subjected to attacks from the moros.
This was because of a dragon-sized snake that once lived in a
cape located at the western sea approach to the town. This huge
reptile would reportedly attack boats that would pass by it, so
it prevented moro "pangkos" from landing at the
settlement.
After the snake was killed, the settlement continued to enjoy
a life of peace and safety because there appeared another
protector of the people, a legendary hero by the name of
"Inong." The hero was said to be a leader of a
well-trained band of men who successfully defended the pueblo
from depredating moros. Believed to have possessed supernatural
powers, Inong was said to be able to jump from hill to hill or
from moro boat to boat wreaking havoc on the invaders' so much so
that he was commonly believed to have some kind of wings. Wings
in the dialect means "pako" so that one who possessed
wings is called "pak-an." Inong therefore was known far
and wide as Inong Pak-an, the winged Inong - which has been
transformed to its present Inopacan for easier pronunciation.
Unfortunately, the town has lost all records and documents
that could be make as the basis of a historical account since the
archives of the parish church and the records of the municipal
building were burned during the war years. From the scanty and
fragmentary records and references available. However, the town
began its organized existence, then as a barrio sometime in 1852.
The barrio was under the jurisdiction of Hindang. As one of the
most progressive barrios of Hindang, its inhabitants petitioned
for its establishment as a municipality. With the help of an
"ilustrado" from the town of Baybay - the late Don
Quirimon Alkuino - the town's leaders finally succeeded in
convincing the Spanish authorities to create the municipality of
Inopacan. On October 22,1885, the petition was granted.
In 1887, the new municipality was erected as an independent
parish.
During the years of the revolution, Inopacan enjoyed the fame
of being selected as the site of the headquarters of the Filipino
nationalist forces at one time or another. Shortly after the fall
of Spanish rule in the archipelago and especially during the
fight against the Americans, Inopacan was selected several times
as the site of the conference between the pacifists and leaders
of the resistance movement in the campaign for peace.
Just after the outbreak of the Second World War, long before
the invading Japanese forces arrived at the municipality, the
townspeople of Inopacan experienced a reign of terror that
presaged the coming years of occupation. A certain Julia
Manapsal, wife of an American and self-styled as the "Joan
of Arc of Inopacan" terrorized the municipality and
neighboring towns and barrios. With a following of well-armed
men, she took complete control of the town and instituted a
veritable "juez de cuchillo" where her word was law.
Judge and executor at the same time, she cowed people with a
brutality that matched that of the Japanese. Men and women of any
age were liquidated at the merest suspicion of non-cooperation.
Many were condemned without trial. Security of property was
unheard of and everything that the bandits wanted, were taken.
Fortunately, government forces quelled the movement that
threatened to grow into an uprising.
Just before the Japanese, a faction of the Leyte Area Command
occupied Inopacan, a guerrilla force under General Kangeleon used
the town for its headquarters. At this time, the unfortunate
struggle for supremacy between the guerrilla forces took place.
The Japanese occupation did not bring any notable change in
the town other than the fact that public buildings were denuded
of records and furniture which the Japanese used as fuel to form
some kind of barricade for their trenches.
Inopacan was one of the few towns that suffered heavily from
the bombing of liberation forces. The shelling took a heavy toll
of lives and property. American shells reduced the public
buildings, particularly the church and the municipal building to
rubble. On December 8,1944, three years after the Philippines
became involved in the Second World War, Inopacan was a miserable
heap of ashes an stone.
Shortly after the war, a slow period of recovery took place. A
Catholic school was founded by the prominent citizens of the town
through the efforts of Fr. Emiliano Sudario, the parish priest
and the late Judge Borneo. A short period of relative prosperity
reigned in the town.
Then, in 1951, a strong typhoon destroyed a great portion of
the town. Before the people had hardly recovered from the effects
of the typhoon, a big fire in 1953 razed the center of the
community, reducing to ashes almost all of the homes in the heart
of the town.
Inopacan is primarily an agricultural town. The residents are
proud of the fine abaca produced in the region, about 50,000
kilos of which are shipped to Cebu every month.
The fish supply of the town comes form its own fishing grounds
along the coast or in the waters around and near the islands of
Apid, Mahaba, and Digyo.
Another source of livelihood of the people is from business.
There are business establishments like dry goods stores,
hardware, drug stores and eateries, among others. The town has
six rice mills and has a wharf under construction.
On the educational aspect, Inopacan has the Inopacan
Institute, a private high school established 30 years ago. There
are four rural high schools and eleven elementary schools.
These and many other achievements have considerably promoted
the growth of the town and the fact that it has been chosen as
the site of the first cooperative rural bank in Leyte is a sign
of its continuing progress.
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