Battle of Mount Puray

The Battle of Mount Puray, sometimes known as Battle of Mount Purog, was fought on June 14, 1897, between the Philippine revolutionaries led by Revolutionary President Emilio Aguinaldo and General Licerio Geronimo and Spanish forces sent under orders by Governor-General Fernando Primo de Rivera. Filipino forces won a victory in this battle in which a Spanish army pursuing them was crushed and routed. The Filipinos' victory in the battle ended the long evacuation from Cavite to Morong, and made possible the setting up of their new revolutionary headquarters in the battlefield's vicinity and then later to Biac-na-Bato in Bulacan.

Battle of Mount Puray
Part of the Philippine Revolution
DateJune 14, 1897
Location
Mount Puray, Montalban, Captaincy General of the Philippines (now Barangay Puray, Rodriguez, Rizal, Philippines)
Result Filipino victory[1][2]
End of the Cavite-Morong Retreat
Belligerents
Filipino Revolutionary Government Spanish Empire
Commanders and leaders
Emilio Aguinaldo
Licerio Geronimo
Fernando Primo de Rivera
Felipe Dujiols
Strength
500 men[3]:186 1,500 men[4]
Casualties and losses
Light Heavy

Prelude

Filipino revolutionaries who joined Aguinaldo and his staff evacuated Cavite after the fall of most of its territory to the Spanish. The retreat commenced from a remote village in Dasmariñas, and it took via Laguna until they reached the hills of Mount Puray which was in the hilly eastern part of the town of Montalban.[5] From there they were met by a Morong-based army led by Licerio Geronimo, and thence set up temporary camp until word reached that a huge Spanish column led by Colonel Felipe Dujiols was on its way to meet them.[6]

Battle

With the oncoming Spanish attack, Aguinaldo then commanded his to dig temporary trenches facing downwards from Mount Puray. Filipino units led by sub-commander Licerio Geronimo were positioned at their appropriate areas of defense. The thick forest of the hills also helped the Filipino defenders from the firepower of Spanish machine guns and artillery present. The Spanish column which is several times larger that of the Filipino force present had now arrived at the foot of the hill and encamped themselves there. Once in position, they were then ordered by Dujiols to promptly attack the hill which they did, although he was under express orders by Primo de Rivera not to engage until he and his reinforcements arrive in the field. For six hours the Spanish though more numerous predictably suffered heavy losses under Filipino enfilade fire coming from the dugouts and thickets, and they retreated back towards their camp.[7] Hours later, when Aguinaldo finally felt the initiative passed to his, he ordered some Filipinos to steal and wear the uniforms of the dead Spaniards and had them pretend to be among them, before sending them to infiltrate the Spanish camp where they caused confusion and then promptly ambushed the camp, suffering even more losses on dead and wounded upon the Spanish who then retreated from the field back as far away as into the town center of San Mateo in disorder.[8]

Aftermath

The Filipinos won their first battle in months, and the battle at Mount Puray proved to be a much-needed morale raiser for them and the revolutionary endeavor. News of Aguinaldo's victory in battle spread to other provinces, as a result by early August the province of Cavite, despite being reverted to Spanish control some months earlier, is once again in open revolt, seriously jeopardizing efforts to pacify the province.

Aguinaldo then set up his temporary headquarters in Mount Puray, and from there revolutionary commanders from across different provinces, including Mariano Llanera of Nueva Ecija and Francisco Macabulos of Tarlac, convened there for a time. The area was deemed too close to the front, however, and the revolutionary headquarters eventually had to be moved out to Norzagaray and then Angat until it was finalized at Biak-na-Bato in Bulacan by June 24 some distance north. Geronimo's force of Morong rebels had to stay behind Mount Puray to check any effort of Spanish pursuit while the revolutionary government relocates to a more secure location up north. From thence, it became the new capital of the Filipino revolutionary government, from which he, as the revolutionary president, would issue orders to be spread across the whole Philippine archipelago for the locals to rise up against the Spanish yoke, thereby extending the revolution from just eight of the original provinces who first rose up in revolt to include all of the Philippines.[9]

See also

References

  1. Ma. Christine Halili (2004). Philippine History. ISBN 9789712339349. Retrieved 20 November 2018.
  2. "Aguinaldo's Long March".
  3. Renato Constantino, Letizia R. Constantino (1975). A History of the Philippines. ISBN 9780853453949. Retrieved 28 March 2021.
  4. Ma. Christine Halili (2004). Philippine History. ISBN 9789712339349. Retrieved 20 November 2018.
  5. "Aguinaldo's Long March". Retrieved 27 March 2021.
  6. United States War Department (1903). Annual reports of the War Department for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1903: Report of the Chief of Engineers; Supplement to the report of the Chief of Engineers. ISBN 9780332735498. Retrieved 3 March 2021.
  7. Ma. Christine Halili (2004). Philippine History. ISBN 9789712339349. Retrieved 20 November 2018.
  8. United States War Department (1903). Annual reports of the War Department for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1903: Report of the Chief of Engineers; Supplement to the report of the Chief of Engineers. ISBN 9780332735498. Retrieved 3 March 2021.
  9. "Aguinaldo's Long March". Retrieved 27 March 2021.

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