Local History
Local History
Local history is the study of history within a geographically local context and it often
concentrates on the local community. It incorporates historical cultural and social aspects.
Local historical societies or organizations that emerge to protect a historic structure or another historic
site in the area frequently record it. Amateur historians working alone or archivists employed by
various organizations generate several works of local history. The publication and
categorization of materials from local or national archives that are relevant to specific locations are cru
cial to local history.
Learning history through a local lens can be an engaging and powerful way to study the past. Local
repositories of historical resources are the local museum, libraries , and historic sites. Timelines and
maps are invaluable tools to study history. From using a timeline to understand photographs that show
a changing town landscape to using maps to understand settlement patterns, these tools help locate
primary sources in concrete ways and read and analyze these sources. Connections between local
and regional or national events can also be more transparent for students when timelines and maps
are compared.
Museums in Batangas
The Leon and Galicano Apacible Museum is an 18th-century abode that was
renovated in the 1930s, adopting an art deco design. It was later turned into a museum in the
early 1970s and donated to the
government in 1976. The first museum
and the only art deco house in Taal,
Batangas showcase the life and works
of the two brothers—Leon and
Galicano Apacible—and the role they
played during the struggle for
Philippine independence in the last
quarter of the 19th century.
The Museo De La Salle is a lifestyle and decorative arts museum featuring certain
aspects of the 19th-century Philippine lifestyle. It was set up to foster its use in cross-
disciplinary learning and growth in an academic environment and with respect to its
immediate community.
The house where the 'Mother of the Philippine Flag', Marcela Agoncillo, was born was built
by her grandfather, Don Andres Mariño, around the 1780s. It was one of the earliest bahay na
bato in Taal. The ancestral house was then passed on from generation to generation until it
was inherited by Marcela Mariño at the death of her grandfather. Felipe Agoncillo, the first
Filipino diplomat, also lived in this house upon his marriage to Marcela in 1889. On July 6,
1980, the living daughters of Marcela Agoncillo, Gregoria , and Marcela Jr., donated the
Mariño ancestral house along with various furniture and family memorabilia to the then
National Historical Institute. Inside this centuries-old house, together with the ambiance of a
regal Spanish town, is a new and modernized museum
Museums You Can Visit Virtually
https://nhcp.gov.ph/museums/apolinario-
mabini-shrine-tanauan/
https://nhcp.gov.ph/museums/emilio-
aguinaldo-
shrine/wppaspec/oc1/lnen/cv0/ab35/pt42
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https://nhcp.gov.ph/museums/the-
museum-of-philippine-economic-history/