Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/municipalities-of-negros-oriental

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

Vallehermoso, Negros Oriental

Municipality in Negros Oriental, Philippines

Vallehermoso, Negros Oriental

Summary

Municipality in Negros Oriental, Philippines

FieldValue
name
image_flagFlag_of_Vallehermoso,_Negros_Oriental.png
flag_size120x80px
image_sealVallehermoso Negros Oriental.png
seal_size100x80px
image_map
map_caption
mapframeyes
pushpin_mapPhilippines
pushpin_label_positionleft
pushpin_map_captionLocation within the
coordinates
settlement_type
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_namePhilippines
subdivision_type1Region
subdivision_name1
subdivision_type2Province
subdivision_name2
official_name
nicknameAll-Around Suburb
subdivision_type3District
subdivision_name3
established_titleFounded
established_date
parts_typeBarangays
parts_stylepara
p115 (see Barangays)
leader_titleMayor
leader_nameAloma Monica B. Serion (NPC)
leader_title1Vice Mayor
leader_name1Marianne S. Gustilo (NPC)
leader_title2Representative
leader_name2Emmanuel L. Iway (PFP)
leader_title3Municipal Council
leader_name3{{PH Town Council
1Monika S. Gustilo
2Clark Celso E. Serion
3Oliver S. Bongoyan
4Jeffrey B. Villegas
5Pablo K. Repita
6Janeth S. Caingcoy
7Tita S. Ramos
8Sofronio Altheo Q. Solidarios
abcRey B. Serion
leader_title4Electorate
leader_name4voters (electorate_point_in_time}})
government_type
government_footnotes
elevation_m
elevation_max_m520
elevation_min_m0
elevation_footnotes
area_footnotes
area_total_km2
population_footnotes
population_total
population_as_of
population_density_km2auto
population_blank1_titleHouseholds
population_blank1
timezonePST
utc_offset+8
postal_code_typeZIP code
postal_code
postal2_code_type
postal2_code
area_code_type
area_code
website
demographics_type1Economy
demographics1_title1
demographics1_info1
demographics1_title2Poverty incidence
demographics1_info2% ()
demographics1_title3Revenue
demographics1_info3
demographics1_title4Revenue rank
demographics1_title5Assets
demographics1_info5
demographics1_title6Assets rank
demographics1_title7IRA
demographics1_title8IRA rank
demographics1_title9Expenditure
demographics1_info9
demographics1_title10Liabilities
demographics1_info10
demographics_type2Service provider
demographics2_title1Electricity
demographics2_info1
demographics2_title2Water
demographics2_title3Telecommunications
demographics2_title4Cable TV
blank_name_sec1
blank_info_sec1
blank1_name_sec1Native languages
blank1_info_sec1
blank2_name_sec1Crime index
blank1_name_sec2Major religions
blank2_name_sec2Feast date
blank3_name_sec2Catholic diocese
blank4_name_sec2Patron saint

Vallehermoso, officially the Municipality of Vallehermoso (; ; ), is a municipality in the province of Negros Oriental, Philippines. According to the 2024 census, it has a population of 42,421 people.

Main source of livelihood is through fishing and farming, while the vast majority is still dependent upon third hand expenditures.

History

Former flag of Vallehermoso

The town was the official residence of the revolutionary leader and hero of Negros Oriental, Don Diego de la Viña y de la Rosa. Don Diego de la Viña shaped the beginnings of the municipality, “Valle hermoso” when he saw the beautiful valley. In 1881, Don Diego de la Viña came from Negros Occidental in search of territories to conquer. The land or valley he saw a top the mountain ranges including Kanlaon (pa-unlakan as Bukidnons named) was the wilderness and flats called Bagawines. Bukidnons, known to be unfriendly aboriginals inhabited the area. However, de la Viña sought the tribal chief, named Ka Saniko and his wife Bella Hermoza a truck and bus barter and spotter (citation needed).

For lands on coastal Bagawines, de la Viña offered wondrous articles from Iloilo, such as fine canes, well-crafted bolos and colorful patadyongs. Ka Saniko then moved further to Pinokawan. De la Viña with a number of Bukidnons cleared the land and constructed his residence, a casa tribunal and a chapel. In less than five years they transformed the valley into a hacienda of sugar cane, tobacco, coconut, rice and corn. He called it the “beautiful valley,” Vallehermoso. De la Viña bought, bartered and did everything else possible to enlarge his landholdings until it stretched from Molobolo on the boundary of Guihulngan, north to Macapso on the boundary of San Carlos and west to the slopes of Canlaon where he pastured his cattle and horses. He opened a road to Negros Occidental, which paved the way for his historic involvement in the local revolution against Spain. Don Diego de la Viña was an illustrado being born from a Spanish-Chinese parentage.

He grew up in Binondo, Manila but went to Basque, Asturias in Spain to earn his bachelor's degree in arts. Upon his return to Manila, he married a “Tagala” with whom he had four children. He brought them with him when he settled in Negros. Endowed with a pioneering spirit he searched for a place where he could establish a residence and fulfill his dream to carve out fortune. When he resided in Bagawines, he influenced the way of life of the bukidnons. They became civilized and tempered their warring tendencies. He inculcated with them the love of work and the idea of religion. He frowned on laziness. In the hacienda that De la Viña established, unemployment was not known. His work in the plantation made him physically strong and spiritually active. When his wife died, he remarried an Ilongga Doña Narcisa Geopano from the landed Geopano Clan.

He sired three children with his second wife. It was in the last quarter of 1898 when Don Diego de la Viña became involved in the revolution. His brother, Dr. Jose de la Viña was one of the delegates to the Malolos Congress. Dr. de la Viña regularly informed Don Diego of the latest development of the Republic government under Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo. Gen. Aguinaldo duly commissioned Don Diego de la Viña with the rank of General de Brigada, Commandante del Ejercito Filipino, Provincia de Negros Oriental. His son was also commissioned Lieutenant Colonel of the Infantry. He secretly trained his peasants how to handle a rifle. He turned their plowshares into bolos, “pinuti, “talibong”, “bahi”, spears and lances. Soon more and more men joined the group of de la Viña. He was soon around riding on a big white spotted horse during the “revolucionario”. De la Viña became known as the “Tigulang or the Grand Old Man”. He was considered a “cacique”, for he had the say in all appointments. He became the judge of local conflicts and designed the improvements for the place (source Negros Historian Prof. Penn Tulabing.Villanueva Larena, MPA a descendant of the Hermoso/ Olladas/ Serion and Bernus Clan an old Spanish family of this Town).

;The Arrival of Iloilo's Lopez Clan

During the depression years of the Sugar industry in the 1920s, a Spanish company named Tabacalera foreclosed haciendas which could not pay their credits. One of them was the Hacienda of Don Diego de la Viña clan. According to Zaffy Ledesma, a historian in the Lopez clan, the foreclosed property was sold to Don Vicente Lopez Sr. around 1924. Don Vicente belonged to the Lopez clan of Jaro. His hacienda was subsequently divided into two farms: Hacienda Dona Elena named after his wife and was inherited by his son, Vicente Lopez Jr. Hacienda Lilia, named after Tiking ( Vicente Jr.) sister, was inherited by Lilia Lopez Jison. Rosario Lopez, niece of Vicente Lopez Jr., married Arthur Cooper and became a landowner in Pinocauan, Vallehermoso.

;Creation of Municipality of Vallehermoso as a separate Municipality The Municipality of Vallehermoso was created by virtue of Executive Order No. 19 signed by former Pres. Manuel A. Roxas. "Upon the recommendation of the Provincial Board of Oriental Negros and the Secretary of the Interior, and pursuant to the provisions of section sixty-eight of the Revised Administrative Code, the twenty-four municipalities of the Province of Oriental Negros, as established by section thirty-eight of the Revised Administrative Code, are hereby increased to twenty-five, by segregating from the municipality of Vallehermoso the barrios of Panubigan, Linothangan, Masolog, and Budlasan with all the sitios composing these barrios, and the sitio of Lucap of the barrio of Malaiba, and organizing the same into an independent municipality under the name of Canlaon, with the seat of government in the sitio of Mabigo, barrio of Panubigan."

;Modern Times

On June 3, 2014, Monsignor Patrick Daniel Y. Parcon was appointed as the Bishop-elect of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Talibon, Bohol. Bishop Parcon, born in Vallehermoso in 1961, is a descendant of the Parcon clan in Sitio Tubod, Barangay Puan. He now holds the record of being the first son of Vallehermoso to be consecrated as Bishop, the first son of the Diocese of San Carlos with Vallehermoso as part of it, to be honored to assume the order of such title by Pope Francis.

Geography

Vallehermoso is located right along the border with Negros Occidental. It is also roughly equidistant to three cities: north from Guihulngan, south from San Carlos, and east from Canlaon. Vallehermoso is 145 km from Dumaguete and 115 km from Bacolod.

Barangays

Vallehermoso is politically subdivided into 15 barangays. Each barangay consists of puroks and some have sitios.

Climate

| access-date = 6 May 2020 }}

Demographics

People in Vallehermoso are mostly farmers and fishermen while the minorities are average earners dependent upon the employment opportunities yielded by the government and the business sector. At least half of the residents in the Central Vallehermoso are graduate in secondary education while a considerable number are professionals in the fields of Education and basic civic services.

Language

Cebuano is the main dialect of Vallehermoso but Hiligaynon is also spoken as the municipality borders Negros Occidental.

Economy

Vallehermoso is composed mostly of Agricultural lands typically good for growing almost all kinds of crops although much of the uses of these agricultural areas are invested on Sugarcane Farming. Corn is also another product in the area hence the people are largely dependent upon corn as their staple food. Coconut is also another source of income for most of the farmers through “tuba” or Coconut Wine, Vinegar and Lambanog. Ingenious materials such as broomsticks, bags and fashion accessories are also being made by the town's people as another source of income. Some other agricultural products such as; Banana, Cassava, Rice and coffee are also abundant in the area.

Tourism

  • Annual Town Fiesta: May 15
  • Chartered day celebration: January 1 and 2

Education

The public schools in the town of Vallehermoso are administered by one school district under the Schools Division of Guihulngan City.

Elementary schools:

  • Bairan Elementary School — Bairan
  • Banban Elementary School — Sitio Banban, Guba
  • Cabulihan Elementary School — Cabulihan
  • Dominador A. Paras Memorial Elementary School — Tagbino
  • Don Esperidion Villegas Elementary School — Don Esperidion Villegas
  • Don Julian dela Viña Villegas Elementary School — Sitio Bay-ang, Tabon
  • Don Vicente Lopez Sr. Memorial School — Bagawines
  • Guba Elementary School — Guba
  • Macapso Elementary School — Macapso
  • Maglahos Elementary School — Maglahos
  • Malangsa Elementary School — Malangsa
  • Molobolo Elementary School — Molobolo
  • Paliran Elementary School — Sitio Paliran, Pinocawan
  • Pinucauan Elementary School — Pinocawan
  • Puan Elementary School — Puan
  • Puti-an Elementary School — Sitio Puti-an, Pinocawan
  • Tabon Elementary School — Tabon
  • Tolotolo Elementary School — Sitio Tolotolo, Ulay
  • Ulay Elementary School — Ulay
  • Vallehermoso Central Elementary School — D. dela Viña Street, Poblacion

High schools:

  • Guba High School — Guba
  • Pinucauan High School — Pinocawan
  • Rafaela R. Labang National High School (formerly Tagbino NHS) — Tagbino
  • Tagbino Senior High School — Tagbino
  • Vallehermoso National High School — Nat'l Highway, Poblacion

Private Schools

  • St. Francis High School — Nat'l Highway, Poblacion

Notable people

  • Bishop Daniel Patrick Yee Parcon - current bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Talibon in Bohol

References

  • Vallehermoso, Maria Teresa Z. Lopez 2011 Retrieved 12 October 2019
  • life story of Don Diego de la Vina, Leonaga Larena, Tulabing, 1990,Retrieved 12 October 2019
  • Larena, Josefino Jr. T. Historia Politica de Vallehermoso 2011,Retrieved 18 October 2018

References

  1. {{DILG detail
  2. (July 17, 2024). "2024 Census of Population (POPCEN) Population Counts Declared Official by the President".
  3. (31 March 1986). "Don Diego de la Vina and the Philippines Revolution in Negros Oriental". Philippine Studies: Historical and Ethnographic Viewpoints.
  4. (11 October 1946). "Executive Order No. 19, s. 1946 | GOVPH".
  5. Vatican Information Service (VIS)Other Pontifical Acts June 3, 2014
  6. Other Sources
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 Vallehermoso, Negros Oriental — 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