I missed being placed on a detail
of twenty-five men to serve on a gunboat; I wished
to get out on some kind of service and leave the regular
and dull service in Manila. I missed this detail
in all probability by being out in the town when the
detail was being made out. I tried to get on
when I returned, but failed, the detail having been
made out already. This detail from my company
saw much more service than those remaining in the
company.
Their discharges show a record of
more than a dozen engagements. They served in
this detail five months, and had plenty of hard service.
They were only paid once during the five months; a
few of them, however, were not paid until discharged,
if I was correctly informed. Their descriptive
list was lost, causing two men to have to serve ten
days longer than they enlisted to serve.
Much “kicking” was done
by men in other parts of the service who were not
paid for a year or more, but all to no purpose.
I was on the alert for another detail
to be made and to get on. At last I succeeded,
on the tenth day of April, in getting on a detail of
only ten men to perform guard duty on a dredge boat
that was dredging at the mouth of the Malabon river.
This was twenty miles from Manila. The object
of the dredging was to make a channel in the shallow
water at the river’s mouth sufficient to enable
gun boats to enter the river, which was deeper after
leaving its mouth. This was very slow work, requiring
a great deal of time and labor to perform it.
This dreging had been going on for a month. We
were on duty there for ten days, and, judging by what
I saw, it must have required two months’ more
work to open the desired channel.
From our station numbers of natives
could be seen on shore, and passing up and down the
river. It seemed that the country was full of
Filipinos.
We watched them a great deal.
Their methods of catching fish was very interesting
to us. They never used a pole, hook and line as
we would. At night great crowds could be seen,
each one in a boat, and carrying a big torch.
They would be near the beach, going out but a little
way from the edge of the water; they would beat and
splash in the water, and drive the fish into large
traps or nets, just like a hunter driving quail into
a net, only the fishermen were more noisy.
After beating the water and banks
until it was supposed the fish had gone into the net,
or trap, they were left in it until next day, when
they were seined out. Great quantities were caught
in this way.
Another method of fishing was to get
in a boat with a long gig and move the boat slowly,
and when a fish was near enough gig it. The large
fine fish were only caught in this way.
Our detail returned to Manila in the
evening of April tenth, and remained there until that
portion of the 23d Regiment was ordered to the Island
of Jolo, where we started on the seventeenth day of
May. I had been in the old walled city of Manila
a little more than six months; part of my regiment
had been there ten months. We had had very hard
service there, and the close confinement, almost like
imprisonment, made us glad to change, and held out
a hope that we would find easier service and more
interesting.
The wall of the old city of Manila
extended entirely around the old city. The sally
ports and all the streets were always guarded until
no soldier could go outside without exhibiting a pass
to the guards signed by the company and commanding
officers. All the time that I was stationed there
I was never out without the required pass.
Guards were stationed on top of the
wall, and made it unsafe to try to climb it to get
out, although I have seen this done by means of a rope;
men would pass out this way and stay out as late as
they wished to and return.
This was not safe. Even the guards
did not discover the attempt, for the wall was not
less than thirty feet high, some places even higher,
and forty feet wide. Stone houses are built in
this wall, and used for military stores. On top
of the wall on the sea-side were three hundred large
cannon when the city was surrendered to the Americans.
Around the old Spanish arsenal about two acres were
covered with cannon balls, guns, bayonets and rifles,
all scattered about in a mass until it was difficult
to get over the ground. It required two months
of the American’s time to pile up and arrange
these munitions of war surrendered by the Spanish.
After the treaty of peace all these
were returned to Spain.
A great many Spaniards live in Manila,
and are subjects of Spain. They have some very
peculiar customs. One that came to my notice is
that of the courtship of a Spanish youth and his sweetheart.
The young man is not permitted to
enter his sweetheart’s home, but stands on the
outside and makes love to her though the iron bars
of a window. I saw a great deal of this before
I learned what it all meant.
The Spanish seemed to have a very
bitter hatred for all Americans just after the fall
of Manila. When we first entered the city the
Spanish women would throw anything that menaced us
in passing the streets, from their windows. They
would do anything to harass and endanger the lives
of Americans that they could think of without exposing
themselves too much. Starvation was staring them
in the face when the city was surrendered. They
had been reduced to rice almost wholly for sustenance.
The pay of the Spanish soldiers was very small.
I was informed that it was only six dollars Spanish
per month, equivalent to only three dollars of United
States currency. Yet this meagre sum had not been
paid for several months.
A Spaniard is not a very frank, attractive
looking fellow to an American soldier. He has
a sneaking countenance, and a disposition out of harmony
with that of the American. However, this opinion
may be modified somewhat with those able to speak
Spanish and become better acquainted with them.
Being unable to speak their language I was barred from
this possibility.
Luzon and some other large islands
are very fertile, and under proper agricultural management
would yield millions and blossom as the rose, but
as yet they are blighted by the uncivilized natives.
A man would be taking his life in his hands to go
out into the country and try to engage in anything.
As conditions existed when I was there, bands of hostile
Filipinos were scouring the whole interior, and frequently
were bold enough to raid near the American posts,
leaving devastation wherever they went. The soil
is very fertile, a warm temperature and plenty of
water to irrigate with if desired for that purpose.
The natives use the most crude implements,
and have but very little knowledge of farming, and
are too indolent to put into practice what little
they do know of soils and crops. It seems to make
little difference what season they plant in.
The climate is always warm, most of the year extremely
hot; too hot for an American or white man, to labor
in. It is just the climate that suits the negro.
Chinese and negroes work for fifty and sixty cents
per day.
A very fine tobacco is raised, and
most of it exported. A cigar factory in Manila
manufactures a great quantity of cigars.
Rice is easily raised, and is the
principal food of the natives.
The rough rice is husked in a very
crude way; a wooden trough, or dug out, is used to
put the rough rice in, and chunks of wood are taken
in the hands, and the rice is pounded with these until
the husks are all broken off, the rice taken out and
separated from the husks.
Sugar is an important crop, and is
extensively raised. No less than fifteen sugar
mills could be counted from the top of the walls of
the city of Manila.
Under improved methods of agriculture
that country would be a wonderful one in the production
of sugar and rice.
The Philippines will, in all probability,
become important in the near future in the production
of minerals, principally gold. There are some
very good veins of gold ore in the mountains of Luzon,
some of which I saw myself. Several pieces of
stone on which gold was easily seen, were picked up
by the men of my regiment. I saw rocks with both
gold and silver in them. The men would not tell
just where they had found them. They probably
thought that at some time, after their service expired,
they would return and work the places found.
I knew one man, an old, experienced
miner, who would spend the Sundays out in the hills
and around the foot of them, where he was not exposed
too much to the enemy, prospecting for gold. He
was successful in finding good indications of rich
minerals. He appeared to make a confidant of
me. At one time he showed me a lot of gold and
some silver that he had found out on his prospecting
tours, but would not tell me where they came from.
He told me that when he was discharged he intended
to return and work the mines. I knew that the
paymaster had considerable money belonging to this
old miner, who told me he should invest it in the
mines, and in purchasing mining machinery.
I saw and heard enough to cause me
to believe that when the natives are civilized, and
when men would be safe in the mountains, that the mines
in the Philippines will attract more people than the
Klondike ever did. There are advantages in the
Philippines which are not found in the Klondike region,
the most important being the climate, not considering
the quality of the mines, which I believe to be equal
to that of the Klondike.
The mountain regions are rich in various minerals.
In the Island of Mindanao coal has
been mined ever since Americans have been there.
This country will find out in a few
years what is in the Philippines. I believe it
is a rich country. Almost anything can be raised
that is desired in the line of field and garden crops;
fine timber is plentiful and saw mills are yet unknown.
I don’t believe there is a saw mill in the Island
of Luzon. All sawed timber is imported that is
used at present; not much is used in building as most
of the houses are built of stone or bamboo. The
frame buildings which we have in America are never
seen there. All the native houses and small towns
are built of bamboo, and covered with grass.
The bamboo grows very large, the joints are two and
three feet long, and some of the larger bamboos are
as large as a common tree. They are the same
thing that people in this country know as canes, the
difference being in their size only. Houses are
built of bamboo without the use of nails. Nothing
for flooring but the naked earth. Split bamboo
is worked into the houses fastening the whole together.
I have seen the natives build houses, and have no other
tool than a large knife. The roof of grass is
fastened on with strips of bamboo, and is three to
four inches thick. This roof is superior, in
point of comfort, in a hot country, to that of anything
I ever saw. I have been in the hot sun and in
metal roofed buildings, and on going into a grass
covered house the difference was noticeable immediately,
the grass roofed house being much cooler.
Manila is built of stone; the buildings
look very old, but are good yet.
One night when the Thirteenth Minnesota
Regiment was on police duty, and no one was allowed
on the streets after seven o’clock at night,
with a fellow soldier I started out to go to a dance
outside of the city walls; we knew that if we were
caught we would be court martialed. To avoid all
the risk possible we went out before seven o’clock,
and took chances on getting back to quarters safely.
We could not return to our quarters without passing
sentinels, that much was certain, but how to pass them
safely was the question then most important to us.
I had an army pistol, and with that in my hand I directed
my friend to play the part of a prisoner and march
before me. We proceeded in that way only a short
distance when a guard halted us. I explained that
I had a prisoner carrying him to headquarters.
The guards were to see orders for a pass or whatever
orders I might have, but this one allowed me to pass
on with my prisoner without showing any orders.
We passed in by all the guards and patrols on the
streets, and were halted and some questions asked and
answered, but none of them asked to see any orders
regarding my prisoner, who all the time was just in
front of me. I was afraid that every guard and
patrol would demand my orders, and then our scheme
would fail, and we would be in trouble. I told
them it was late and I must hurry in with my prisoner,
and so we passed them all and reached our quarters
in safety. The men worked a great many schemes
to get out and in, but it was for my friend and myself
to play the part of prisoner and guard first.
I never tried any more schemes on
the guards, but was always in at night; I did not
like to risk so much just for a little fun. We
were very careful about keeping our little scheme
from the officers, but told some of our comrades about
it, and enjoyed the joke with them.