Padre Burgos is administratively divided into 22 barangays.
Barangay name
PSGC code
pop.
Cabuyao Norte
045629001
922
Cabuyao Sur
045629002
1005
Danlagan
045629003
1,564
Duhat
045629004
761
Hinguiwin
045629005
1,495
Kinagunan Ibaba
045629006
1,344
Kinagunan Ilaya
045629007
452
Lipata
045629008
580
Marao
045629009
2,372
Marquez
045629010
324
Burgos
045629011
978
Campo
045629012
731
Basiao
045629013
657
Punta
045629014
596
Rizal
045629015
1,271
San Isidro
045629016
1,003
San Vicente
045629017
809
Sipa
045629018
1,900
Tulay Buhangin
045629019
782
Villapaz
045629020
236
Walay
045629021
1,855
Yawe
045629022
823
Demographics
Climate
History
Padre Burgos was formerly known as Laguimanoc due to the shape of the coastline which resembles the bill of a chicken or “manok”. Another version is that chickens were so abundant in the town that hawks swept down on the place to snatch chicks from their mothers. When hawks flew overhead, as warning to their neighborhood, people shouted “Hawk Manok” or “Lawin-Manok”. On January 1, 1917 the village of Laguimanoc, which was formerly a barrio of Atimonan, became a municipality. Ten years after, the town’s council changed the name to Padre Burgos, in honor of one of the country’s martyrs, Fr. Jose P. Burgos. The streets were named after local leaders who rendered valuable services to the community. Because of the physical and topographic conditions of the town, four sitios where clusters of houses were became the main district of the town namely Campo, Burgos, Basiao and Bundok-Punta. The community converged to be in this particular spot because of its sea which made this town as port of Laguimanoc. In the early days this port offered a good wharf for vessels plying between Manila and southern Luzon. This was also a port of call for ships exporting lumber to Europe during the Spanish regime. In this town was the residence of the “Alcalde Mar” or Port Officer. Business and other industries prospered and people conglomerated in this spot. Spots of the historical interest are the wharf symbol of commercial progress, the old church with the old-fashioned “canyon” markers of the people’s religious faith, the Bag Cement Slabs and Stone quarries mute testimonies of the effervescent power and grandeur of the early foreign settlers, the hills near the railroad station where the Japanese tortured and massacred civilians in the barrios of Marao and Polo where the Hunter’s guerillas built their camps.
Laguimanoc Festival
A festival celebrated on February 17 every year. This feast explains the history of the municipality. Laguimanoc was the former name of the municipality before it was renamed to Padre Burgos.
Popular culture
This island was also set from the movie Alkitrang Dugo in 1975.