Ohio History Journal

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Taft, MacArthur, and the Establishment

Taft, MacArthur, and the Establishment

Of Civil Government in the Philippines

 

By RALPH ELDIN MINGER*

 

 

 

ON APRIL 17, 1900, a brilliant, golden, sunny day, the

United States Army Transport Hancock with the Second

Philippine Commission on board pulled away from the

crowded dock at San Francisco, California, while whistles

shrieked a shrill farewell and the air rang with enthusiastic

cheers.1 The boat had barely passed through San Francisco

Harbor when the commissioners began to hold their first meet-

ing.2 All of them realized the stern nature of their task. The

physical character of the Philippine Islands, the nature of its

people, the uncertain social and political conditions prevailing,

and a host of other factors made the work of pacifying the

islands and creating a civil government complex. For William

* Ralph Eldin Minger is an assistant professor of history at San Fernando

Valley State College.

1 Herbert S. Duffy, William Howard Taft (New York, 1930), 86.

2 William Howard Taft was the president of the commission. The other four

members were Vice Governor Luke E. Wright of Tennessee, a Democrat and

former attorney general of that state; Dean C. Worcester of Michigan, a zoologist

on the faculty of the University of Michigan and the only member of the commis-

sion who had ever been in the Philippines; Henry Clay Ide of Vermont, formerly

chief justice of the United States Court in Samoa and therefore a man with some

experience in colonial government; and Bernard Moses of California, a professor

of history at the University of California and a writer of note on the history of

the Spanish colonies in America. W. Cameron Forbes, The Philippine Islands

(Boston, 1928), I, 124-125; Henry F. Pringle, The Life and Times of William

Howard Taft (New York, 1939), I, 165. The appointments of all the members

of the Philippine Commission were dated March 16, 1900. Dean C. Worcester,

The Philippines Past and Present (New York, 1930), 269.

The First Philippine Commission, appointed by President McKinley in Janu-

ary 1899 to study political conditions in the newly acquired islands and make

recommendations for their government, had a life of only one year.