24 November, 1900
TODAY IN PHILIPPINE HISTORY
General Otis telegraphed Washington that the claim to government by the “insurgents can be made no longer under any fiction”. Otis noted in his cable that, “the treasurer, secretary of the interior, and president of congress are in our hands, its president and remaining cabinet officers are in hiding, evidently in different central Luzon provinces, acting as bandits, or dispersed playing the role of ‘amigos’, with arms concealed”.
In spite of the destruction pictured by Otis, however, resistance to the authority of the United States did not cease. The Filipino troops, which had been disbanded in November 1899, were redistributed and guerilla warfare set in. This mode of fighting continued in the larger islands till 1901 and 1902.
(Ref: Annua1 Reports, Secretary of War, I9oo, vol. i, pt. iv, pp. 208 et seq. MacArthur’s report, Oct. I, 1900, in House Documents, 56th Cong., 2nd Sess., no. 2, pt. iii, pp. 6i-62, via The Philippine republic, Fernandez, Leandro Herberto, New York, 1926; Photo from bit.ly/2f0e1Nc)