Filipinos in Vallejo
By Mel Orpilla
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About this ebook
Mel Orpilla
Author and lecturer Mel Orpilla corrects that oversight with this fascinating insider�s look at the Filipino community in Vallejo. A second-generation Filipino American, founder of the Filipino American National Historical Society of Vallejo, and journalist who writes a popular column in the Vallejo Times-Herald, Orpilla has collected many never-before-published images from private collections, as well as the collections of the Vallejo Naval and Historical Museum.
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Filipinos in Vallejo - Mel Orpilla
told.
INTRODUCTION
Twenty years ago, in an Ethnic Studies class taught by Wayne Maeda at California State University, Sacramento, I discovered that Filipinos did indeed have a history in America. It was a revelation to me to know that my father, who came to America in 1926, experienced the most tragic era in Filipino-American history when he and many others faced discrimination and oppression upon arriving in this country. Up until that time, I took his experience and those of the Manongs,
(Filipino old-timers) for granted. More importantly, learning about Filipino-American history strengthened my connections to my family, community, and Filipino roots.
As a photographer, I have taken thousands of rolls of film. As a photo collector, I have almost as many images in my vast collection depicting Filipinos in America. I knew that eventually I would need to compile them into a book. For years people had been encouraging me to write a book about Filipino-American history. Finally that time has come.
It was important for me to feature Vallejo’s Filipino history because there is almost no mention of it in any textbook. Having been born and raised in Vallejo, I knew that a Filipino community had thrived there since almost the turn of the last century. My collections started with my father’s photos taken before and after World War II. The images depicted a vibrant city, with handsome Pinoy
(Filipino) bachelors who were planting the seeds of a strong cultural, economic, and political community.
Throughout the pages of this book are images of children, teenagers, young families, and parties. The Filipino community is family-oriented; however, Filipinos have large extended families that may or may not be related by blood. The pages of this book also depict Filipinos assimilating or trying to assimilate into the broader community. Sometimes they were successful, as in the case of Lucy Dizon, and sometimes they were not, such as the Filipino Brownie troop, formed because little Filipina girls were not allowed to join white
Brownie troops.
In any case, Filipinos have had a presence in Vallejo since right after the Spanish-American War. They established a Manilatown on lower Georgia Street with restaurants, bars, barbershops, pool halls, and other gathering spots. Filipinos were stationed at Mare Island Naval Shipyard during and after World War II and brought their families with them to Vallejo. In 1965, relaxed immigration laws led to an explosion in the Filipino population with professionals, medical personnel, and Navy men making Vallejo their permanent home in America. At the time this book was written, the Filipino population in Vallejo accounted for about a quarter of the overall population, or approximately 25,000 Filipinos.
Filipinos in Vallejo is about family, community, and home. The images represent the lives of Vallejo’s pioneer Filipino families and the new generation of Filipinos who call Vallejo home today. To them and their ancestors still living in Vallejo, this book is a testament to the Filipino community’s bamboo
spirit—of taking root, spreading out, and of bending in the wind but never breaking.
One
BACHELOR SOCIETY
Thousands of single Filipino men immigrated to America between 1906 and 1934. They came looking for work, adventure, and a new life in America. Because the Philippines were an American territory, Filipinos were classified as American Nationals
and were allowed to immigrate without restrictions. Many ended up in Vallejo, where good-paying jobs at Mare Island were plentiful. Pictured c. 1953, the Big Five
from South Vallejo are, from left to right, Roy Marinas, Zacarias Cordero, Ted Soriano, Maurice Ancheta, and George Banez. (Courtesy of Zacarias Cordero.)
Like many Filipino bachelors, Daniel Jose Tiburcio came to America in 1927. He began work at the Mare Island Naval Shipyard before World War II, then joined the U.S. Army, serving in the historic First Filipino Battalion. Mare Island was the economic magnet that attracted Filipino workers to Vallejo. Mare Island provided Filipinos with good-paying, steady employment with paid vacations, sick leave, and health benefits. (Courtesy of Daniel Tiburcio.)
Bernardo Bolao Bacol (middle) poses c. 1920 with some of his bachelor friends. He worked at Mare Island Naval Shipyard as a laborer for 32 years before retiring from Shop 72 in 1979. (Courtesy of Pat Bacol Mendoza.)
Many bachelor Filipinos lived in boardinghouses run by other Filipinos. Mary Hullana operated a boardinghouse at 46 Carolina Street. Pictured in this c. 1949 photo outside the boardinghouse, from left to right, are Nazario Orpilla, Mary Hullana, and Bernard Hullana. The Filipino maleto-female ratio in America during this time period was approximately 14:1. (Courtesy of Nazario Orpilla.)