Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
history

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Alejo Santos

Filipino general and politician

Alejo Santos

Filipino general and politician

FieldValue
honorific-prefixThe Honorable
nameAlejo Santos
imageRep. Alejo S. Santos (2nd Congress).jpg
image_size200px
captionSantos official portrait during the 2nd Congress.
office12th Secretary of National Defense of the Philippines
presidentCarlos P. Garcia
term_startJune 11, 1959
term_endDecember 30, 1961
predecessorJesus M. Vargas
successorMacario Peralta Jr.
title120th and 25th Governor of Bulacan
term_start11951
term_end11957
predecessor1Fortunato Halili
successor1Tomas Martin
term_start21945
term_end21946
predecessor2Jose delos Reyes
successor2Arturo Samaniego
title3Member of the House of Representatives from Bulacan's 2nd District
term_start31946
term_end31946
predecessor3Antonio Villarama
successor3Vacant
term_start4December 30, 1949
term_end4December 30, 1951
predecessor4Vacant
successor4Rogaciano M. Mercado
allegiancePhilippines
branchUnited States Army Forces Far East
Philippine Commonwealth Army
commandsBulacan Military Area
rank[[File:US-O7 insignia.svg20pxBrigadier General]] Brigadier general
battles
birth_nameAlejo de los Santos de los Santos
birth_date
birth_placeBustos, Bulacan, Insular Government of the Philippine Islands
death_date
death_placeQuezon City, Philippines
partyNacionalista (1949–1984)
Democratic Alliance (1946–1949)
spouse
children8

| honorific-prefix = The Honorable Philippine Commonwealth Army

  • World War II
    • Battle of Bataan
    • Liberation of the Philippines Democratic Alliance (1946–1949)

Alejo Santos Santos (born Alejo de los Santos de los Santos; July 17, 1911 – February 18, 1984) was a Filipino soldier, World War II hero and politician. He was the only major candidate opposing Ferdinand Marcos in the 1981 Philippine presidential election.

Early life and public service

The 1860 Imprenta Press printed key revolutionary newspapers and was later used by the "Bulacan Military Area", under Capt. Alejo Santos, against the Japanese during WWII.

Santos was born in Barangay Bonga Menor, Bustos, Bulacan, to farmer Pedro de los Santos y de la Cruz and Regina de los Santos y Francisco. He graduated from the University of the Philippines with an education degree. He first served as Prison Guard with the Bureau of Prisons from 1933 to 1934. Santos married Juanita Garcia of Baliuag, Bulacan in 1934 and they had eight children: Reynaldo, Edgardo, Ravenal, Lamberto, Alexis, Liberty, Daisy, and Nenita. At the outbreak of World War II, he was a captain of the USAFFE. He was among the USAFFE soldiers who retreated to Bataan to make the last stand against the invading Imperial Japanese Army. However, he evaded capture by the Japanese when Bataan fell, escaping instead to his hometown. Santos then agreed to join the fledgling anti-Japanese guerrilla warfare movement under Bernard L. Anderson. He became one of the founders of the Bulacan Military Area, the main guerrilla movement in Bulacan which had 23,000 men under its command. The BMA attracted many patriotic Filipinos chafing under Japanese rule, and was soon organized into eight divisions. For his World War II activities, Santos received numerous citations and awards from the Philippine and American governments.

He was the only Filipino conferred the rank of brigadier general by the American Government.

Political career

Photo of Santos as Bulacan governor

After the liberation of Bulacan by joint Filipino and American ground troops in 1945, Santos was named as its military governor. He was elected as to the House of Representatives in 1946, representing the 2nd District of Bulacan under the banner of the leftist Democratic Alliance, but was almost immediately unseated together with several of his party-mates in a controversial maneuver believed to be related with the looming congressional vote on the approval of the Bell Trade Act with the United States. Nonetheless, Santos was again elected to the House in 1949, and he served in the 2nd Congress until his election as governor of Bulacan in 1951. By then, Santos had affiliated with the Nacionalista Party. Santos would serve as governor until 1957, wherein 705 public works projects were constructed in Bulacan and the national government released for these. From 1959 to 1961, Santos served as Secretary of National Defense in the cabinet of President Carlos P. Garcia. In 1967, he was appointed by President Marcos to head the prison bureau, a post he held until 1971.

Presidential candidacy

Main article: 1981 Philippine presidential election and referendum

Historical marker installed in Bustos, Bulacan

By 1981, Santos had mostly retired from political life, devoting his activity to veterans affairs; thus, it came as a surprise when he agreed to run for President against Ferdinand Marcos in the 1981 elections. The elections were called shortly after Marcos lifted the nine-year-old declaration of martial law while retaining authoritarian powers at the same time, and were seen as a means of maintaining the veneer of democracy, especially in the international community. However, the anti-Marcos political opposition, which felt it was cheated out of victory in the 1978 parliamentary elections, refused to participate in the presidential elections and successfully called for a boycott. Santos' candidacy, ostensibly under the banner of the then-moribund Nacionalista Party, provided Marcos with at least one other "major" candidate he could run against. Santos, though the sole widely known opponent of Marcos, did not offer a vigorous campaign, and he was trounced in the election, garnering only 8% of the vote as against Marcos's 88%.

Death

Santos died just three years after his presidential candidacy on February 18, 1984 and was buried at the Libingan ng mga Bayani. Later on, his remains were transferred into a memorial park in his hometown in Bulacan. A camp of the Philippine National Police in Bulacan is named after Santos.

Memorials

  • The new General Alejo S. Santos Bridge was inaugurated by Secretary Mark Villar on February 19, 2020. One of the oldest bridges in Bulacan, built in 1968, was renamed on September 25, 1989 by Republic Act No.6762 to honor Santos. It connects Barangay Tibag and Barangay Poblacion along Angat River.
  • For being a World War II hero and founder of the Bulacan Military Area, a National Historical Commission of the Philippines marker was placed on 17 July 2022, at Bustos Heritage Park, Poblacion, Bustos, Bulacan for General Alejo S. Santos.
  • The birth house of General Alejo S. Santos is now the Alejo Santos Memorial Shrine and Museum (Bulacan Military Area, Bustos, Bulacan), erected by the Dr. Jose P. Rizal Memorial Foundation
  • Bulacan Military Area Memorial Park monument stands at Bustos, Bulacan and its historical marker was installed on August 2, 2012 by the National Historical Commission of the Philippines

Notes

References

Bibliography

Filipinos in History: Volume IV, National Historical Institute (Manila, 1994) before= Jose delos Reyes | title= Governor of Bulacan | years= 1945–1946 | after= Arturo Samaniego before= Fortunato Halili| title= Governor of Bulacan | years= 1951–1957 | after= Tomas Martin before= Macario Peralta, Jr.| title= Secretary of National Defense | years= 1959–1961 | after= Jesus M. Vargas before= Antonio Villarama | title= Representative, 2nd District of Bulacan | years= 1946–1953 | after= Rogaciano M. Mercado

References

  1. "Film # 007773259 Image Film # 007773259; ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSMN-LQTS — FamilySearch.org".
  2. "Archived copy".
  3. "Alejo S. Santos : CV". Dnd.gov.ph.
  4. Lapham, R., and Norling, B., 1996, Lapham's Raiders, Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky, {{ISBN. 0813119499
  5. "Alejo S Santos".
  6. Inquirer, Philippine Daily. (2016-11-19). "IN THE KNOW: Libingan ng mga Bayani".
  7. Reyes-Estrope, Carmela. (2016-09-05). "Bato: No abusive cops in fight vs 'state of lawless violence'".
  8. (February 18, 2020). "Bringing past to the future". bulacan.gov.ph.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Alejo Santos — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report