Muñoz, Nueva Ecija Philippines
Brief History of Muñoz
In 1886, Papaya was changed into 'Muñoz' to honor Don Francisco Muñoz,
the province’s alcalde mayor, and the community’s first appointed
gobernadorcillo. Muñoz was annexed as a barrio of San Juan de Guimba
municipality. Settlers trickled in from Bulacan and the Ilocos Region. In 1911,
Factoria (now San Isidro town), the provincial capital, was totally flooded.
Muñoz was then considered a possible new capital of the province.
At about the same time, the people of Barrios Muñoz and San Antonio, also in San
Juan de Guimba town, and Palusapis in Sto. Domingo municipality, together with
Sitios Kabisukulan, Rang-ayan, Mataas na Lupa, Siniguelas, Purok Agrikultura,
and Pulong Maragul in Talavera town, were organizing themselves to be separated
from their three respective municipalities to become a new independent
municipality. They were prepared to construct a municipal hall and a school
building for the emerging town.
Upon recommendation of the Provincial Board of Nueva Ecija, then headed by
Governor Isauro Gabaldon, and with approval of then Acting Governor General
Newton Gilbert, the organized barrios and sitios were granted independence as a
regular municipality on January 10, 1913 under the name of Muñoz. The seat of
the fledgling municipal government was positioned in erstwhile Barrio Muñoz.
Thus, the municipality of Muñoz was born, and steadily grew to become today an
Agricultural Science City in-the-making.
Muñoz owes a tremendous lot to its early leaders — Tranquilino Delos
Santos, and other homesteaders Luis Ramos, Ambrosio Medina, Cayetano Caisip,
Victorino Pornuevo, and Precy Hill Delos Santos. A municipal hall, a church
building, and a small public market were erected in Lumang Bayan (now Poblacion
North). A road linking the young Muñoz town with the national highway from
Barangay Bacal, Talavera was also constructed.
Muñoz continued to attract more settlers. More barrios were established
and were named after their peoples’ ideals and aspirations, landmarks, and
personalities such as Rang-ayan (prosperity), Linglingay (recreation),
Mangandingay (company), Magtanggol (defense), and Villa Isla (in a leader’s
honor).
Muñoz was not spared from the pains of the Second World War. Being the
last stronghold of the Japanese Imperial Army while scampering to the
Cordilleras, the American liberation offensive razed the town to the ground in a
matter of days. But Muñoz has risen from the ashes slowly but surely under its
dedicated leaders, and now, as a first-class town, has the full confidence to
welcome and prosper further in the third millennium.