eMindanao Library An Annotated Bibliography (Preliminary Edition) Published online by Center for Philippine Studies University of Hawai’i at Mānoa Honolulu, Hawaii July 25, 2014 TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface iii I. Articles/Books 1 II. Bibliographies 236 III. Videos/Images 240 IV. Websites 242 V. Others (Interviews/biographies/dictionaries) 248 PREFACE This project is part of eMindanao Library, an electronic, digitized collection of materials being established by the Center for Philippine Studies, University of Hawai’i at Mānoa. At present, this annotated bibliography is a work in progress envisioned to be published online in full, with its own internal search mechanism. The list is drawn from web-based resources, mostly articles and a few books that are available or published on the internet. Some of them are born-digital with no known analog equivalent. Later, the bibliography will include printed materials such as books and journal articles, and other textual materials, images and audio-visual items. eMindanao will play host as a depository of such materials in digital form in a dedicated website. Please note that some resources listed here may have links that are “broken” at the time users search for them online. They may have been discontinued for some reason, hence are not accessible any longer. Materials are broadly categorized into the following: Articles/Books Bibliographies Videos/Images Websites, and Others (Interviews/ Biographies/ Dictionaries) Updated: July 25, 2014 Notes: This annotated bibliography has been originally published at http://www.hawaii.edu/cps/emindanao.html, and re-posted at http://www.emindanao.com. All Rights Reserved. For comments and feedbacks, write to: Center for Philippine Studies University of Hawai’i at Mānoa 1890 East-West Road, Moore 416 Honolulu, Hawaii 96822 Email: [email protected] Phone: (808) 956-6086 Fax: (808) 956-2682 Suggested format for citation of this resource: Center for Philippine Studies, University of Hawai’i at Mānoa. eMindanao Library: An Annotated Bibliography, July 25, 2014. Available at: http://www.emindanao.com/eMindanao_Library.pdf. I. ARTICLES/BOOKS 1st Battalion 22nd Infantry. “Mindanao Campaigns 1904-1905 and Jolo Campaign 1905.” http://1-22infantry.org/campaign/campaignpageone.htm. These accounts of the 1st Battalion of the 22nd Infantry provide rich sources of data on US military operations in Mindanao, such as the Mindanao campaigns during 1904-1905, and the Jolo campaign 1905. With photos by Parker Hitt. The accounts in html format are detailed below as follows: 1.1st Battalion -22nd infantry and the Moros. http://1-22infantry.org/history3/moros.htm 2.Mindanao Operations 1904-1905. http://1-22infantry.org/history3/1904-05.htm 3.The Datu Ali Expedition, 1905. http://1-22infantry.org/history3/ali.htm 4. Gunboats on Lake Lanao 1904-1905. http://1-22infantry.org/history3/lanao.htm 5.The Ramaien Expedition 1904. http://1-22infantry.org/history3/ramaien.htm 6.Sgt Grover C. Hart. http://1-22infantry.org/history/hartpageone.htm 7.The Third Sulu Expedition. http://1-22infantry.org/history3/sulu.htm 8.The Taraca Expedition April 1904. http://1-22infantry.org/history3/taraca.htm 1st Battalion 22nd Infantry. “The 22nd Infantry and the Moros – Introduction,” http://1-22infantry.org/history3/moros.htm. A brief narrative of the involvement of the 22nd Infantry in the military campaign on the Moros, particularly in Lake Lanao and Cotabato. Mentions the operation against Datu Ali. Photos of Datu Grande from Lake Lanao, a friend of the American (amigo), and Signal Hill, in Marawi. 1st Battalion 22nd Infantry. “The Datu Ali Expedition -1905,” http://1-22infantry.org/history3/ali.htm. A brief account of the campaign against Datu Ali under the command of Capt Frank R. McCoy. Photos of these two men are shown in this article. The narrator suggests to readers to visit the work of Robert Fulton, author of Moroland: The History of Uncle Sam and the Moros 1899-1920. Oregon: Tumalo Creek Press, Bend, 2007, 2009, for a full account of this campaign. 1st Battalion 22nd Infantry. “Gunboats on Lake Lanao 1904-1905.” http://1-22infantry.org/history3/lanao.htm. This article is a reproduction of the work of Parker Hitt, Amphibious Infantry A Fleet On Lake Lanao, US Naval Institute Proceedings, 1938. It describes the boats sunked by the retreating Spanish troops in Lake Lanao on the eve of the Spanish-American War. The American troops raised these boats and made them operational for use in the Moro campaign around Lake Lanao. Photos of the boats are shown, together with scenes of Marawi and Parker Hitt. A map of Lake Lanao is also found here. 1st Battalion 22nd Infantry. “Operations 1904 – 1905,” 2 http://1-22infantry.org/history3/1904-05.htm. A series of US military operations around Lake Lanao, with body count of casualities, is provided here. Photos of a Moro cotta, gunboat Flake, and soldiers of the 22nd Infantry shown. 1st Battalion 22nd Infantry. “The Ramaien Expedition 1904,” http://1-22infantry.org/history3/ramaien.htm. An account of the operation in Ramaien (spelled correctly as “Ramain”) that began on December 1903 is given here. Photographs of Pantar bridge (built by the Spanish), soldiers of the 22nd Infantry, and a Moro cotta in Ramain. 1st Battalion 22nd Infantry. “Sgt Grover C. Hart G Company 22nd Infantry,” http://1-22infantry.org/history/hartpageone.htm. Sgt. Grover Hart (with photo) participated in the final campaign against Datu Ali. He is one of the 100 volunteers handpicked by Capt. McCoy, upon instruction from General Leonard Wood. to pursue Datu Ali. A brief account of the encounter is also provided here. The death of Ali is believed to have ended the rebellion in this part of Mindanao. 1st Battalion 22nd Infantry. “The Third Sulu Expedition,” http://1-22infantry.org/history3/sulu.htm. This article narrates the third Sulu expedition on April 1905, with 13 officers and 279 soldiers from the 22nd Infantry participating. Mention is made of the Tausug leader, Pala, who is the object of the pursuit, but no details given. Casualties suffered by the troops are provided. Photos of a Moro cotta, soldiers of the 22nd Infantry. 1st Battalion 22nd Infantry. “The Taraca Expedition April 1904,” http://1-22infantry.org/history3/taraca.htm. This expedition is led by General Leonard Wood. Under his command are the 2nd and 3rd battalions 22nd infantry; four troops 14th cavalry; four companies 17th infantry; six companies 23rd infantry; and one platoon 17th field artillery “The object of this campaign was to subdue the Maciu Moros. Two columns participated in the movement.The plan was for the larger column, under General Wood, to march from Camp Vicars around the southeast corner of the lake (Lanao) and unite with the smaller column from Marahui at a point one mile south of the Taraca river, the latter column to force a landing that could be used as a supply point for the entire command.” Abaya-Ulindang, Faina C. "Huks in the Land of Promise The Rise and Demise of Economic Development Corps," Graduate Forum, Vol 8, Nos. 1,2 & 3 (2010):107-206. Published by the College of Social Sciences and Humanities Graduate Program, Mindanao State University, Marawi City. http://www.mediafire.com/?d0dd9gcos4i4ace. “This study investigates the history of the Economic Development Corporation (EDCOR) settlement project as an instrument of counter-insurgency during the 1950s and its relevance to the contemporary Mindanao unrest. [Three EDCOR sites were established in 1951 in Kapatagan, 3 Lanao, and in Buldon and Alamada, both in Cotabato.] As an instrument of pacification, the governing philosophy of land settlements in Mindanao was traced to the homestead program of the American colonizers or as far back as the Spanish reduccion. Agricultural colonies were established in Cotabato and Lanao provinces during the first decade of American rule. These colonies were intended to assimilate the native Muslims with the Christianized Filipinos, or ‘to make a Filipino out of a Moro,’ according to Governor Carpenter of the Department of Mindanao and Sulu. Settlements were laid in such a way that the Filipino would have a Moro as neighbor. While the initial impetus for these projects were economic in nature, i.e., to increase the interaction between the native Muslims and Christianized Filipinos resulting in ‘cultural amalgamation’ was just as important.” Abaya-Ulindang, Faina C. (Introduction,"Mindanao): John J.Pershing, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress,Washington D.C.” Batis ng Kasaysayan, Vol I, No.1 (2004). Edited by Bernardita Reyes Churchill, Manila: National Commission for Culture & the Arts. Full text will soon be available here. Dr. Ulindang presents a detailed annotation and analysis of the papers of John J. Pershing, currently housed at the Manuscripts Division of the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., based on the materials collected from that repository and deposited to the library of Mindanao State University. Of particular importance to the Moros of Mindanao are Pershing’s diaries and his extended memoirs he intended to publish but never materialized. Also included in the analysis are his Lake Lanao campaigns against recalcitrant Moros shortly after the Bayang Battle of May 1902. In these papers, Pershing narrates how he befriended the Moro datus as he tried to win over to the side of the US colonial government those who resisted and engaged the military in several deadly skirmishes. He also spearheaded the US troops that led to the Bud Bagsak battle in Sulu toward the end of his stint as governor. The papers reveal the insights and strategies of a man who would rise from the rank of Captain to General of the (US) Armies in command of the US Expedition Forces in Europe during World War I, and the third governor of the Moro Province (1909-1913).
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