LEYTE | The Provincial Capitol ~ Pomp & History

Friday, April 15, 2016

Leyte Provincial Capitol

Even with my architecture background, I’m not overly fond of visiting provincial capitols. I often find them dull and hollow, their architectural pompousness making up for their lack of historical context. So it was with Leyte’s own provincial capitol, with time to spare and nowhere else to go, my companions dragged me, kicking and screaming, to see one of Eastern Visayas famed capitols.

Leyte Provincial Capitol
THE LEYTE PROVINCIAL CAPITOL’S NEO CLASSICAL FACADE

Without any background on it, I was surprised to find the symmetrically neo-classical building to be quite interesting. Walking around its dark pebble-washed patio, I found a National Historical Committee marker. This building has historical significance after all.

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Leyte Provincial Capitol
A SOLDIER’S STATUE GUARDING LEYTE’S CAPITOL BUILDING

The structure was built in 1907. Who designed it is a toss-up between the Filipino architect Antonio M. Toledo, who also did the Manila City Hall and the similarly-designed Department of Tourism Building, versus Ralph Harrington Doane, a Boston native who became the consulting architect of the Philippines from 1916 to 1918 who’s also credited for designing Pangasinan’s capitol and parts of Malacañang Palace.

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Leyte Provincial Capitol
16TH-CENTURY CANNONS FRONTING THE BUILDING

Leyte’s Provincial Capitol is as American as it get, with its neo-classical and all white façade complete with two 19th-century iron cannons right along its concrete steps. Off its left wing, a bas relief of the first Christian mass held in Limawasa stands, and on its right, Gen. MacArthur’s Leyte landing is depicted. Both of these are later supplements added after its 1964 restoration—and not superbly done, if I might add.

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Leyte Provincial Capitol
OCTOBER 1944 PRESIDENTIAL CEREMONY AT THE CAPITOL

The building became the center of the Philippine Commonwealth Government for less than a year, between October 1944 and up until February the next year, when Sergio Osmeña Sr. was proclaimed president by Gen. MacArthur himself within its rubble-stricken halls. It was said that the general promptly took off right after the ceremonies, leaving the newly-anointed Philippine President beleaguered outside the building—without lodgings, vehicle, and a home.

Leyte Provincial Capitol
LEYTE’S CAPITOL IN A NOT SO GOOD STATE

Now, the place looks as dilapidated as it probably once did during the height of the Second World War. The once immaculate paint is cracking, the fountains reeking with stagnant muck, its once grand patio, stained and in need of a good scrubbing; one of the ghastly ghosts left by Typhoon Yolanda’s wrath, perhaps.

Leyte Provincial Capitol
LEYTE PROVINCIAL CAPITOL’S COLONNADED FACADE

The next time I visit, I hope I could see Leyte’s Provincial Capitol restored to its former glory; holding up the rich history it once was a witness to with honor—standing high and proud, as it once did during the decades past.


Leyte Provincial Capitol
Address: Senator Enage St., Tacloban City, Leyte
Contact Number: (053) 321-3416
Opening Hours: 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM Mon to Fri
Entrance Fee: None
GPS Coordinates Map: 11.250510, 125.003797

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4 comments

  1. Amazing architecture!!! Visit www.venuerific.com/ph to discover more places like this

    ReplyDelete
  2. it has been repainted already

    ReplyDelete