Tuesday, October 11, 2011

History of Mindanao, Part XVII: The Construction of the Iligan-Marahui Road, 1903

In the very first "History" entries, Parts I and II, I offered excerpts from the book, "The Great White Tribe in Filipania," [sic] by Paul T.Gilbert (Cincinatti: Jennings and Pye) (1903). Those two entries concerned memoirs of two leaders of the Northwest Mindanao Insurrectos, General Rufino Delfino and Captain Isidro Rilla. My current entry comes from that same book but concerns the author's experience, observing first hand as the 10th and 28th Infantry Regiments of the US Army managed to hack out the Iligan to Marahui Road, and how life was lived in the American expat colony in what is now Iligan City, circa 1903,



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Chapter XV: "Along the Iligan-Marahui Road":

The recent victories achieved by Captain Pershing over the fanatic Moro Tribes in the vicinity of Lake Lanao have opened up for military occupation a new territory equal in fertility and richness to the famous Cagayan Valley of Luzon. The Moros under the American Administration will be recognized as independent tribes and be restricted probably to reservations similar to those the Indians (NATIVE AMERICANS) now occupy. This means that a great tract of land will someday be thrown open for American development. The soil will yield abundant crops of corn, tobacco, coffee, rice, and other products while the forest wealth appeals to the imagination. Rubber, sugar, hemp, copra are the natural products of the country near the coast. The lake itself is situated on a high plateau with a prevailing temperable climate. Where the mountains do not intervene, the land slopes gradually down to the sea.

One of the most important military operations that was ever undertaken in the Philippines was the construction of the Iligan-Marahui Road, which for some time having been open to the packtrains and the heavy traffic, at present nearing its completion. The the work was planned by members of the Corps of Engineers, all the clearing, grading, and filling in were done by soldiers who had never until then knew what it meant to handle a pick and shovel. The younger officers who, for the first time in theirives, were superintending [SIC] a construction job, went out and bossed the gang as well as many an experienced and seasoned foreman could have done. The soldiers, who deserve no little credit for their work, are members of the 28th and 10th Infantries.

It was about the last of Janurary that I made a trip to Iligan, arriving in a Moro sailboat from another port on the northern coast of Mindanao. Two or Three Army Transports with the Flag of Quarantine flying (for Cholera was still in evidence) lay quietly at anchor in the shy. Along the shore a warm breeze ruffled the green branches of the copra palms. Near the new dock a gang of Moros were at work, perspiring in the hot rays of the tropic sun. A tawny group of soldiers, dressed in khaki, rested in the shade of a construction house and listened dreamily to far off bugle calls.

The Moros were dressed picturesquely in a great variety of costume, ranging from bright colored silk to dirty corduroy. Red Buya juice () dripping from the corners of their mouths. Their turbans, though disgracefully unclean, were silk. Their coats were fastened with military brass buttons and their sashes, green and red, with a long fringe were tied around their waists. Their trousers, like a pair of riding breeches, buttoned up the side.

While spending the first evening at the club, I had seen mingling with the young lieutenants, immaculate in their new olive uniforms, bronzed mud besplattered officers in the blue army shirt and khaki with the Colt six-shooter hanging from an ammunition belt. These were the strangers from the town of white tents on the borders of the woods. At midnite pissibly, or even later, they would mount their horses and go riding through the night to the encampment on the hill. The very next day one of the immaculate lieutenants, laying off the olive uniform, might have to don the old campaign hat and the flannel shirt, and follow his unshaven comrades up the road.

We stretched our army cots that night in the roulette room (this is not a country of hotels) to the rattle of the balls and the monotonous droning of the croupier, "teen and red wins," dropped off to sleep. On the following day the "Doctor Hans" dropped in with Generals Wade and Summer and the jingle of tge calvary was heard as they rode out with a mounted escort to inspect the operations of the road. After a dance and reception at the residence of the commanding officer in honor of the visitors, "guard mount," the social feature of the day, was viewed from the little pavillion in the little plaza where the exercise takes place. Its dignity was sadly marred that evening when q Moro Datu, self important in an absurd, overwhelming hat, accompanied by an obedient old wife on a moth eaten Filipino pony, and a dog, ignoring everybody jogged along the street through the lines.

I walked out to the camp next morning with Lieutenant Harris. Even for this short stretch the road was not considered altogether safe. We forded the small river just beyond the calvary corral, where an old Spanish blockhouse stands, and where a few old fashioned Spanish cannon still lie rusting in the grass. A Moro fishing village- now a few deserted shacks around the more pretentious dwelling of the former datto- may be met near where the roadway joins the beach. Pack trains of army mules, with their armed army escorts, passed us; then an ambulance, an escort wagon, and a mounted officer.

Two companies of the 10th Infantry were camped in a small clearing near the sea. Leaving the camp, we went along the almost indistinguishable Moro trail to where the mighty Agus River plunges in a greenish torrent over an abrupt wall into the deep, misty cavern far below. The rushing of the waters guided us in places where we found the trail inadequate. Arriving at the falls, we scrambled down by means of vines until we reached a narrow shelf near where the cataract began its plunge. Upon the opposite side an unyielding precipice was covered with a damp green coat of moss and fern. It took 5 seconds for a falling stone to reach the seething cloud of mist below.

The trail back to the camp was very wild, it led through jungles of dense underbrush, where monkeys scolded at us, and where wild pigs, with startled grunts, bolted precipitously for the thicket. A deep ravine would be bridged by a fallen tree. The Iligan-Marahui Road now pentrates the wildest country in the world, and the most wonderful. Turning abruptly from the coast about 5 miles from Iligan, it winds among the rocky hills through forests of mahogany and ebony, through jungles of rattan and young bamboo, and spanning the swift Agus River with a modern steel bridge, finally connects the lake and the sea. It has been built to meet the military road from the south coast, thus making possible, for the first time, communication from the interior. The new roads practically follow the old Moro trails.

The scene at early morning on the road was one of great activity. Soon after the revellie the men are mustered. Armed with picks and shovels in place of the more customary "Krag," and long before the tropic sun has risen over the primeval woods, the chatter of the monkeys and the crow of the jungle-cock is mingled with the crash of trees, the click of shovels, and the rumble of a dump-cart. The continued blasting on the upper road, near the "Point of Rocks," disturbs the colonies of squawking birds that dart into the forest depths like flashes of bright color. As the land is cleared for fifty yards on either side in order to admit the sunlight and keep the Moros at a proper range, the great macao-trees, with their snaky, parasitic vines, on crashing to the ground, dislodge the pallid fungi and extraordinary orchids from their heavy foilage. Deep cuts into the clay soil sometimes bisect whole galleries of wonderful white ants, causing untold consternation to the occupants.

Each squad of soldiers was protected by a guard besides the officer, who, armed with a revolver, acted as the overseer. The work was very telling on the men, and often out of a whole company, not more than twenty-eight reported. Some grew as strong as an oxen under this unusual routine; others had to take advantage of the sick report. The soldiers were required to work five hours a day, and double time after a day of rain. Considerable Moro labor was employed on the last sections of the road.

A unique feature of the work was the erection of small bridges made of solid logs from the material at hand, and bolted down by long steel bars. The "elbow" bridge which makes a bend along the hillside near the first camp is a triumph in the engineering line. The camps were moved on as the work progressed, and the advance guard ran considerable risk. The Moros had an unexpected way of visiting the scene of operation, and admiring it from certain hiding-places in the woods. As they could hike their thirty or fourty miles a day along the trails, they often came much nearer to the troops than was suspected. Sentry duty was especially a risky one, as frequently at night the Moros used to fire into the camp, only about one hundred yards along the trail a soldier, who had gone into the woods for a "shortcut," received one from a Moro who was waiting for him in the shadow of a tree.

The camp at night, illuminated by the blue light of the stars, the forest casting inky shadows on the ground, seemed like some strange, mysterious domain. The officers around the tent of the commanding officer were singing songs, accompanied by the guitar and the mandolin. The soldiers also from a distant tent- it was their own song, and the tune "The Girl I Left Behind Me"- practicing close harmony, began:

"O, we're camped in the sand in a foreign land
Near the mighty Agus River,
With the brush at our toes, the skeeters at our nose,
The jimjams and the fever.

We're going up to Lake Lanao,
To the town they call Marahui;
When the road is built and the Moros killed,
We'll none of us be sorry.

We're blasting stumps and grading bumps;
Our arms and backs are sore, O!
We work all day just a dreamin' of our pay,
And damn the husky Moro!"

When Taps sounded, we turned in beneath two blankets in a wall-tent lighted by a feeble lantern. All night long the restless jungle sounds, the whispering of the mysterious forest, and the distant booming of the sea, together with the measured tread of the night sentry, made a lullabye which ought to have worked wonders with the "Jim-Jam" and the fever patients of the 28th.

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I will continue with yet another excerpt from this book in a following entry

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