Professional Documents
Culture Documents
1898 – 1901
On May 28, 1898, days after the return of General Emilio Aguinaldo from exile in
Hong Kong, Filipino troops were once again engaged in a battle against Spanish
forces in Alapan, Cavite. It was in this skirmish that the Philippine flag was first
unfurled as the revolutionary standard. Sewn in Hong Kong by Filipino expatriates
and brought to the country by Aguinaldo, the flag was a tri-color featuring red and
blue with a white triangle framing three yellow stars and an anthropomorphic eight-
rayed sun.
Half a month later, on June 12, 1898, following the proclamation of independence
from Spain, the same flag was waved by at Aguinaldo’s residence in Kawit, Cavite, as
the Marcha Nacional Filipina played.
Throughout the Filipino Revolutionary War until the capture of Aguinaldo that
precipitated the end of the Philippine-American War, the flag of the same design was
flown with the red field on top to denote a state of war. Aguinaldo wrote about this
unique feature of the Philippine flag in a letter to Captain Emmanuel A. Baja dated
June 11, 1925:
Several press representatives called on me then to inquire as to how the Flag should
be flown. I answered them that it should be always hoisted with the blue stripe up in
time of peace. But on the battlefields and in camps during the past war, first with
Spain and then with the United States of America later, our National Flag had been
hoisted with the red stripe up.
Upon Aguinaldo’s capture, the Philippine Republic was abolished; the American
Insular Government, under the jurisdiction of the U.S. War Department, was
established. With the war over and Philippine leaders officially accepting American
sovereignty over the islands, the Philippine flag was flown with the blue field on top.
It was to be displayed that way henceforth during peacetime.
1901 – 1907
For six years, the Philippine flag and other banners and emblems of the Katipunan
continued to proliferate. In response, the Philippine Commission, dominated by
Americans, passed Act No. 1697 or the Flag Law of 1907, which outlawed the display
of the Philippine flag and replaced the country’s flag to the stars and stripes of the
United States of America. The same law prohibited the playing of the national
anthem.
1919 – 1936
It took 11 years until the Philippine Legislature, finally in the hands of elected
Filipino representatives and senators, repealed the Flag Law, through the efforts of
Governor-General Francis Burton Harrison, and reinstated the Philippine flag as the
official standard of the nation. Modifications were made to Aguinaldo’s flag: The sun
no longer had anthropomorphic features, and its rays were stylized. This design would
be used from 1919 until the inauguration of the Commonwealth of the Philippines in
1935.
From 1919 to 1941 Flag day was celebrated on October of every year by virtue of
Proclamation No. 18, issued by Governor-General Francis Burton Harrison in
commemoration of the day the Flag Law was repealed.
President Manuel L. Quezon, in 1941, moved the commemoration of Flag Day from
October to June 12. This marks the first instance that June 12, the date of Aguinaldo’s
proclamation, was commemorated.
1936 – 1941
1941 – 1945
Meanwhile, the Second Philippine Republic was established in the islands under the
auspices of the Empire of Japan, with Jose P. Laurel serving as president. The flag
was raised by former President Emilio Aguinaldo and General Artemio Ricarte during
the inaugural of the Second Republic on October 14, 1943. Laurel issued Executive
Order No. 17, s. 1943, which essentially brought back the Aguinaldo design of the
Philippine flag. This flag would eventually be displayed with the red stripe up in
1944, when the Second Republic declared that it was under a State of War.
1943 – 1944
From 1943 until the end of the War in the Pacific, two versions of the Philippine flag
existed: the Commonwealth flag used by the Government-in-exile based in
Washington D.C., as well as by guerrillas in the islands, and the Aguinaldo flag used
by the Japanese-sponsored government. Following the surrender of Japan and the
liberation of the Philippines, the latter’s use would be discontinued with the
dissolution of the Second Republic.
In the aftermath of World War II, the Commonwealth of the Philippines was restored
and with it the specifications of the Philippine flag in accordance with Executive
Order No. 23, s. 1936. On July 4, 1946, Philippine independence was recognized by
the United States, giving birth to the Third Republic of the Philippines. In ceremonies
held at what is now Luneta, United States High Commissioner to the Philippines Paul
V. McNutt and Philippine President Manuel Roxas lowered the American flag for the
last time and in its stead rose the Philippine flag to henceforth fly alone on Philippine
soil, except in military bases still held and occupied by the United States Armed
Forces. Starting May 1, 1957, the Philippine flag was raised beside the U.S. flag in
U.S. military bases in the Philippines.
1985 – 1986
The change in color proved unpopular. After the EDSA revolution of 1986, President
Corazon C. Aquino restored the pre-martial law specifications of the National flag
through Executive Order No. 292, s. 1987, yet again in accordance with
Commonwealth regulations. Under her term, the Philippine Senate rejected the Bases
Treaty with the United States, thus putting an end to more than 90 years of American
military presence in the Philippines—in particular, the sprawling naval base in Subic
Bay and the Clark Airfield in Pampanga. As the American flag was lowered in these
areas, it marked the last time a foreign flag would fly in Philippine territory.
1998 – present