Apalit
', officially the ', is a of the Philippines| in the province of,. According to the, it has a population of people.
The town is famous for its Apo Iru Fluvial Procession, which is listed as one of the most significant water-based intangible cultural heritage of the Philippines. The festival happens every June 28–30.
Geography
Apalit is from Manila, from the provincial capital, San Fernando, and from Angeles.Apalit is surrounded by Macabebe, Masantol, Minalin and San Simon in Pampanga, and Calumpit, Pulilan, and Baliuag in Bulacan.
Barangays
Apalit is politically subdivided into 12 barangays:- Balucuc
- Calantipe
- Cansinala
- Capalangan
- Colgante
- Paligui
- Sampaloc
- San Juan
- San Vicente
- Sucad
- Sulipan
- Tabuyuc
Climate
Demographics
In the, the population of Apalit, was people, with a density of.Religion
Most inhabitants of Apalit are Christian, with a majority professing Catholicism, due to Spanish colonialism and imperialism from the 15th to 19th centuries.Other prominent Christian groups include Members Church of God International.
Catholicism
Apalit was first established as one of the visitas under the administration of Convento de Calumpit.In 1597, the Augustinian chapter accepted Apalit as House of Order under the advocacy of San Pedro Apostol where Fray Pedro de Vergara OSA as its first parish priest In conjunction with the annual town fiesta, the Libad was established by the Capitan del Pueblo, Don Pedro Armayan-Espíritu y Macam, on June 28, 1844.Libad fluvial procession also reaching Calumpit even today to signify the old relationship of Apalit to its mother town Calumpit where San Juan Bautista is the patron of the Town.
The first church and convento was constructed under the tenure of Fray Juan Cabello as parish priest from 1641 to 1645. Fray Simón de Alarcia built another church made of concrete and tile in 1854-1860, but it was destroyed by a strong earthquake in 1863. The present neo-classical church was built under Fray Antonio Redondo, who was assigned to Apalit from 1873 to 1886.
Father Gallende wrote in La Iglesia de Apalit:
It was officially inaugurated with solemn ceremonies held successively during the town fiesta from 28 to 30 June of the same year. The chronicler remarks that when there was no more sand or bricks, Fr. Redondo would ask the fiscal to go around town pealing the bells. Preceded by the town bands, he would lead the way towards the riverside with an azafate on his head. Unquestioning, the whole town would follow him, and in less than two hours, the masons would have enough sand for two months. "The whole town of Apalit helped either with monetary donations, personal service, or with their good wishes." The church measures 59 meters long and 14 meters wide. The painting was done by a native of Apalit, an industrious pupil of Alberoni. The church possesses the qualities of good construction: "solidity, capacity, light and artistic beauty."
The towers were completed under the guidance of Rev Toríbio Fanjul in 1896. In 1989, a major church renovation was initiated by Monsignor Rústico G. Cuevas.
Feast of Saint Peter
The Libad, a fluvial procession in honour of the town's patron saint Peter the Apostle, is annually from 28 to 30 June. The event, where a centuries-old ivory image of the apostle is paraded along the Pampanga River, is one of the more famous religious processions in Pampanga.History of the image
The life-sized, seated image of "Apung Iru" is an heirloom of the Armayan-Espíritu y Macam clan of Sitio Alauli, San Vicente, Apalit. The image, with its ivory face and hands, dates from the last quarter of the 1700s. Family tradition has it that Don Pedro Armayan-Espíritu y Macam –or his parents Don Calixto Armayan-Espíritu and Doña María Macam, acquired the image from an aunt, Doña Máxima Santos–in exchange for a considerable parcel of agricultural land in Apalit. During the Spanish colonial era, Spanish friars shrewdly assigned the ownership of the town's patron saint to wealthy families, so that the former could be spared the expenses of its upkeep and annual fiesta. The first Libad was held in 1844.Custody of the image of Apung Iru has passed to the direct descendants of Don Pedro Armayan-Espíritu y Macam, who married three times: first to Doña Dorotea Arnedo; then Máxima Santa Rita; and finally Ysabel Dungo y Nocom. Don Pedro originally bequeathed the image to his favourite, his youngest daughter Doña Ysidora "Orang" Espíritu y Dungo, but she did not want the responsibility of being the image's camarera. She passed it on to her elder, spinster sister Doña Aurea "Ondeng" Espíritu y Dungo. After Doña Aurea's early death, Don Pedro's eldest daughter Doña María "Maruja" Espíritu y Dungo became the image's camarera. In 1928, Doña María translated the image of Apung Iru from the Armayan-Espíritu ancestral home in Sitio Alauli in Barangay San Vicente to her house in Barrio Capalangan, where it has remained since.
Doña María died in 1934, and her second daughter Doña Ysabel "Tabing" Arnedo y Espíritu became the image's "camarera" until her own death in 1970. Doña María's third daughter, Doña Rosario Lucia "Charing" Arnedo y Espíritu became camarera until her death in May 1977. The youngest daughter, Doña Elisa Juana "Ising" Arnedo y Espíritu became the next camarera until her death in May 1987. Doña Elisa's eldest daughter, Dr. Erlinda Crispina "Linda" Arnedo Sazon succeeded her mother as camarera from until her own death in February 2008. Augusto Marcelino "Toto" Reyes González III, Doña Rosario's grandson from her eldest son, Augusto Beda, is the current camarero of Apung Iru, following a stipulation that Doña Rosario and Doña Ysidora made to the family in 1970.
In 1975, Doña Ysidora, Doña Rosario, and the latter's son Brother Andrew Benjamin González, F.S.C., established Saint Peter's Mission, Inc. with the stipulation that Apung Iru and his feast be maintained by the generations to come.
Members Church of God International
The 10-hectare Ang Dating Daan compound in Apalit, Pampanga is the Members Church of God International's headquarters in the Philippines. It houses the ADD Convention Center where major church gatherings are held and the chapel, a multipurpose venue for the community prayer, indoctrination sessions, prayer meetings and worship services. Other structures inside the compound include the baptistry, administration office, museum, transient home, orphanages, mini-hospital, dormitories for church officers and volunteers, houses for church ministers and workers and school buildings of La Verdad Christian College.Local government
Like other towns in the Philippines, Apalit is governed by a mayor and vice mayor who are elected to three-year terms. The mayor is the executive head and leads the town's departments in executing the ordinances and improving public services. The vice mayor heads a legislative council consisting of councilors from the Barangays of Barrios.Municipal officials
Elected officials 2019:- Mayor: Jun Tetangco
- Vice Mayor: Peter C. Nucom
- Councilors:
- *Elias Mendoza III
- *Kenneth Nunag
- *Kriz Mangsal
- *Jed Dalusung
- *Tuks Simon
- *Andrew Manlapaz
- *Mavic Mendoza
- *Pol Nabong
- Mayor: Peter C. Nucom
- Vice Mayor: Augusto D. Manlapaz
- Councilors:
- * Jesus Torres
- * Elias Mendoza III
- * Sanny Mendoza
- * Kenneth Nunag
- * Andrew H. Manlapaz
- * Ma. Ana Theresa Macalino
- * Edmon Simon
- * Fortunato Castro
List of former Town Executives/Mayors
Year | Name |
1713 | Juan Cudia |
1714 | Francisco Canda |
1715 | José Samonte |
1716 | Lucas Catu |
1717 | Baltazar Catu |
1718 | Santiago Vergara |
1719 | Esteban Ramos |
1720 | Nicolas Tupay |
1721 | Lucas Pungsalang |
1722 | Jacinto Tria |
1723 | Juan Capulong |
1724 | Diego Mercado |
1725 | Pedro Pungsalang |
1726 | Francisco Simbulan |
1727 | Juan Mancani |
1728 | Juan Patio |
1729 | Miguel Binuya |
1730 | Cristobal Maggalas |
1731 | Agustín de la Cruz |
1732 | Juan Cudia |
1733 | Lucas Catu |
1734 | Agustín de la Cruz |
1735 | Juan Cudia |
1736 | Pedro Cortez |
1737 | Gregorio Nocum |
1738 | Diosdado Pungsalang |
1739 | Pedro Cortez |
1740 | José Arceo |
1741 | Bernabe Nocum |
1742 | Diosdado Pungsalang |
1743 | Pedro Pangan |
1744 | Lorenzo Mananquil |
1745 | Agustin Torres |
1746 | Adriano Lumba |
1747 | Marcos Cudia |
1748 | Dionisio Pangan |
1749 | Pedro Catu |
1750 | Alfonso Patiang |
1751 | Agustín Gamboa |
1752 | Marcos Cabrera |
1753 | José Payabyab |
1754 | Pedro Yumul |
1755 | Nicolas Tolentino |
1756 | Nicolas Pungsalang |
1757 | Lorenzo Mananquil |
1758 | Gerónimo Padilla |
1759 | Tibúrcio Padilla |
1760 | Pablo Binuya |
1761 | Juan Bautista de Tabora |
1762 | Nicolas Ventura |
1763 | José Umali Centeno |
1764 | Bonifacio Pungsalang |
1765 | Pedro Arceo |
1766 | José Mariano |
1767 | Felipe Zaplala |
1768 | Agustín Soliman |
1769 | José Binuya |
1770 | Marcos Mananquil |
1771 | Nicolas Ventura |
1772 | Simón de Torres |
1773 | Agustín Gutierrez |
1774 | Felipe Cuyugan |
1775 | Pablo Dungca |
1776 | Francisco Pangan |
1777 | Estanislao Pagpayo |
1778 | Matias Bolus |
Year | Name |
1779 | Blashite Balagtas |
1780 | Fausto Binuya |
1781 | Leonardo Mamangun |
1782 | Gregorio Alejo |
1783 | Lucas Pungsalang |
1784 | Pedro Joaquin |
1785 | Pablo Binuya |
1786 | Bernabe de la Cruz |
1787 | Pedro Cabrera |
1788 | Domingo Dungca |
1789 | Alejo Pangan |
1790 | Martín Carlos Padilla |
1791 | Juan Manlapaz |
1792 | Francisco Binuya |
1793 | Pablo Zaplala |
1794 | Diego Mercado |
1795 | Francisco Binuya |
1796 | Tomás Lacandula |
1797 | Nicolas Bautista |
1798 | Alejandro Gutierrez |
1799 | Fernando Gutierrez |
1800 | Feliciano Mananquil |
1801 | Juan Arcilla |
1802 | Vicente Cabrera |
1803 | Pablo Torres |
1804 | Vicente Atienza |
1805 | Vicente Ponca |
1806 | Agustín Cabrera |
1807 | Juan Serrano |
1808 | Domingo Ponce |
1809 | Pablo Mercada |
1810 | Marcelo Nabal |
1811 | Victorio Sarmiento |
1812 | Pantaleón Atienza |
1813 | Jacinto Pangan |
1814 | Pedro Mercado |
1815 | Marcelo Nabal |
1816 | Mariano Pangan |
1817 | Anastacio Pablo Yabut |
1818 | Isidro Ponce |
1819 | Pablo Mercado |
1820 | Fulgencio de la Cruz |
1821 | Manuel Lumba |
1822 | Pantaleón Tenensa |
1823 | Felipe García Timbol |
1824 | Pedro Bonduc |
1825 | Felix Marcelo García |
1826 | Juan Serrano |
1827 | Ambrosio Pungsalang |
1828 | Feliciano Pangan |
1829 | José Sioco |
1830 | Juan de la Cruz |
1831 | Guillermo Yambao |
1832 | Manuel Ponce |
1833 | José Macapagal |
1834 | Juan Macalino |
1835 | Vicente Yumul |
1836 | Luis Dungca |
1837 | Miguel Cuyugan |
1838 | Pedro Cabrera |
1839 | Florentino de la Cruz |
1840 | Paulo Carlos |
1841 | Pedro Mamangun |
1842 | Pedro Balboa Enriquez |
1843 | Ceferino López |
1844 | Geronimo Yumul |
Year | Name |
1845 | Mariano Cabrera |
1846 | Francisco Dungca |
1847 | José Esteban Yamson |
1848 | Cayetano Pascual |
1849 | Francisco Mercado |
1850 | Florentino Yumul |
1851 | Tiburcio ? |
1852 | Nicasio Vergara |
1853 | Lauriano Vergara |
1854 | Cayetano Dalusung |
1855 | Mariano Enriquez |
1856 | Manuel de la Cruz |
1857–1858 | José Sioco |
1859 | Joaquín de la Cruz |
1860 | Bernardino Dalusung |
1861 | Juan Arnedo Cruz |
1862 | Ignacio Balboa |
1863–1864 | Crisanto Mercado |
1865–1866 | Alberto Dalusung |
1867–1868 | Pedro Espíritu |
1869–1870 | Antonio García |
1871–1872 | José Medina |
1873–1874 | León Timbol |
1875 | Vicente Enriquez |
1876–1878 | Braulio Pangan |
1879–1880 | Francisco Vergara |
1881–1882 | Paulino Dalusung |
1883–1884 | Balbino Mercado |
1885–1886 | Pedro Espiritu |
1887–1888 | Eleuterio Pascual |
1889–1890 | Cayetano Dalusung |
1891–1892 | Francisco Pascual |
1893–1894 | Domingo Carlos |
1895 | Eleuterio Pascual |
1896 | Luis Espiritu |
1897 | Casimiro Medina |
1898 | Cayetano Dalusung |
1899 | Casimiro Medina |
1900–1901 | Macario Arnedo |
1902–1907 | Cayetano Arnedo |
1908–1912 | Tiburcio Mercado |
1913–1916 | Cayetano Arnedo |
1917–1923 | Vicente Cacnio |
1924–1928 | Ricardo Dalusung |
1924 | Ricardo Dalusung |
1929–1930 | Pablo Pungsalang |
1931 | Román Balagtas |
1932–1934 | Dionisio David |
1935–1937 | Cornelio Sigua |
1938–1942 | Patricio Tanjutco |
1943 | Sotero García |
1944 | Miguel Catacutan |
1945 | Patricio Tanjutco |
1946 | Manuel Reyes |
1947 | Emilio Pascual |
1948–1951 | Cornelio Sigua |
1952–1954 | Moises Catacutan |
1955–1963 | Alfonso Lugue |
1964–1971 | Honorio Mercado |
1972–1980 | Oscar Tetangco |
1980–1986 | Romeo V. Pamintuan |
1986–1998 | Oscar Tetangco |
1998–2007 | Tirso G. Lacanilao |
2007–2016 | Oscar Tetangco, Jr. |
2016–Present | Peter C. Nocum |
Infrastructure
Transportation
Major roads and bridges:- MacArthur Highway - or the National Highway. The major road going to Apalit.
- Apalit-Macabebe-Masantol Road - going to the towns of Macabebe and Masantol
- Dr. Joaquin Gonzalez Avenue -going to municipal hall, barangay sucad, and St. Peter's Parish
- Sulipan-Capalangan-Tabuyuc-Cansinala Road
- Tabuyuc-Balucuc Farm to Market Road
- Arnedo Dike Road
- Sampaloc Road
- Paligui Road
Public transportation
Tricycles are used for short distance travel.
Various jeepney routes also ply the roads between Apalit and neighboring towns in Pampanga, in Bulacan.
While the "FX" and "L300" van taxis, from their terminals, and Provincial Buses, which passes through the MacArthur Highway, takes passengers to key places in Bulacan the "Metro" and to northern provinces.
Hospitals
- ADD Infirmary
- Pampanga Premier Medical Center
- Apalit Doctors Hospital
- ASCCOM-DLSUMC Friendship Hospital
- E.D. Lim Maternity and General Hospital
Telecommunication
Mobile telephony services are provided by Smart Communications, Globe Telecom & Sun Cellular from Digitel.
Internet services are provided through DSL and Cable broadband coverage is provided by PLDT, Digitel and Globe Broadband; and Wireless broadband is provided by Smart Communications.
Cable Television are provided by DATELSAT.
Education
For elementary and high school education, Apalit has numerous schools.Private Schools
- Apalit Christian Ecumenical School/"ACES"
- Dominican School of Apalit
- La Verdad Christian School, Inc.
- Gonzales Memorial College
- Holy Child Academy
- Saint Vincent's Academy
- Saint James School Inc.
Public schools
- San Vicente Central School
- Sampaga Elementary School
- Jose Escaler Memorial School
- Sucad Elementary School
- Sucad National High School
- Cansinala Elementary School
- Cansinala National High School
- Sampaga High School
- Colgante Elementary School
- Sampaloc Elementary School
- Paligui Elementary School
- Balucuc Elementary School
- Balucuc High School
- Calantipe High School
- Galang Elementary Memorial School
- Banag Elementary School
- Macario Arnedo Elementary School
- Tabuyuc Elementary School
- Apalit National High School
- Bro. Andrew Gonzalez Technical High School
- Fausto Sioco Memorial School
- Sulipan Elementary School
Colleges
- Asian Caregiving and Technology Education Centers
- AMA Computer Learning Center College
- Eastwoods International Institute of Science and Technology
- Asian College of Science and Technology
- La Verdad Christian College
Notable residents
- Bro. Eliseo “Eli” Soriano - presiding minister of Members Church of God International notable for his program Ang Dating Daan - Itanong Mo Kay Soriano, Biblia ang Sasagot segment.
- Bishop Federico O. Escaler, S.J. - served as Bishop Ordinary of Prelature of Kidapawan.