I got this set of Colegio San Jose cards from a friend when we
exchanged postcards. The postcards were divided into 2 sets - Serie A and Serie B and printed by FOTOTIPI THOMAS,
Barcelona, Spain in 1910 or earlier. Postcards from SERIE A feature the different parts of Colegio San Jose, while SERIE B shows the Observatories managed by the Jesuits in different parts of the country.
Founded in 1601, Colegio San Jose is the earliest learning
institution opened by the Jesuits, which makes it older than UST. The
school has a very rich history. When the Jesuits were expelled from the Philippines in 1768, the Colegio de
San Jose continued to function under the secular clergy- many of whom were
alumni of the Colegio. In 1875 Colegio de San Jose was endowed to Dominicans of the University of Santo Tomas to
be used by and to support the faculty of medicine and pharmacy. By 1901 Colegio
de San Jose was returned back to the original owners, the Jesuits, which
resulted in a feud between the 2 religious orders.
Below is a brief history narrated by Fr. Miguel A.
Bernad, S.J
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Serie A. Colegio - No. 1 Estatua en la Capilla del Colegio ( Statue in the Chapel of the College ) |
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Serie A. Colegio - No. 3 Capilla del Colegio (College Chapel) |
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Serie A. Colegio - No.10 Sala de visitas (Visiting Room) |
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Serie A. Colegio - No. 11 Patio interior (Inner courtyard) |
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Serie A. Colegio - No. 12 Salon de Estudio (Study Hall) |
COLEGIO DE SAN JOSE [1601 – 2001]
16th Century
September. The newly arrived Jesuits opened the Colegio
de Manila, the first institution of higher learning in the Philippines and the
predecessor of Colegio de San Jose. The support to build the College came from
a donation by Captain Esteban Rodriguez de Figueroa. Latin grammar and “cases
of conscience” were taught to priests and candidates for the priesthood.
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Serie A. Colegio - No. 13 Salon de Actos (Assembly room) |
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Serie A. Colegio - No. 14 Un corredor del Dormitorio (The bedroom corridor) |
17th Century
1601. August. A Residential College. Because of the
“morally unhealthy” climate in Manila, the Jesuits decided to build a separate
residential college for the students of the Colegio de Manila. Fr. Pedro
Chirino, the rector of the Colegio de Manila, was tasked to organize the proposed
Colegio de San Jose. After obtaining civil and ecclesiastical approbation for
the new college, Fr. Pedro Chirino gathered an initial batch of thirteen young
men to become the pioneering student-boarders. The Colegio de San Jose was
opened on August 1st and formally inaugurated on the 25th of August 1601. Fr.
Luis Gomes was the first rector.
1604. An Endowment. Doña Juana, daughter of Captain
Esteban Rodriguez, was lost at sea. The proviso in Figueroa’s will stated that
should his heirs-his wife and daughter die-portions of his wealth should go to
the Jesuit for a college. This legacy came to the Jesuits a few years later, just
in time to bolster the faltering finances of the Colegio de San Jose.
1623. Academic Degrees. There was a great desire on the
part of the students, and of others as well, that their studies might be
rewarded with academic degrees. Endorsed by the governor, a petition to this
effect had been made to the King. On the other hand, it had been opposed by a
very influential person, a Dominican bishop, Miguel de Benavides (founder of
the University of Santo Tomas). However, the Brief issued by Pope Gregory XV
(dated July 9, 1622) officially gave Colegio de San Jose the permission to
confer academic degrees.
1626. The Colegio de Manila conferred the doctorate for
the first time on a scholar of the Colegio de San Jose Jose. San Pedro Tunasan
estate was eventually acquired and used to support the Colegio de San Jose. Fr.
Juan de Aguirre, SJ, rector at that time, directed the purchase.
1648. A Serious Threat. The Rector of Colegio de San
Tomas petitioned the Audiencia to forbid the Jesuit College from granting
academic degrees. After a series of compromises, King Philip IV reiterated the
right of the Jesuits to grant degrees in Manila on March 12, 1653.
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Serie A. Colegio - No. 15 Sala de Aseo (Lavatory room) |
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Serie A. Colegio - No. 17 Corredor del Noviciado (Novitiate Corridor) |
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Serie A. Colegio - No. 18 Comedor de los Colegiales (College dining room) |
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Serie A. Colegio - No. 16 Corredor principal (Principal corridor) |
18th Century
1722. A Royal Institution. King Philip V, the King of
Spain, conferred upon the Colegio de San Jose the title “royal” (real in
Spanish); hence prided himself on the title “El Real Colegio de San Jose”.
1768. The Expulsion. In 1768, the royal orders arrived in
Manila, issued the previous year by King Carlos III of Spain, ordering the
expulsion of the Jesuits from all Spanish territories and confiscation of their
possessions. The Colegio de San Jose continued to function under the secular
clergy- many of whom were alumni of the Colegio.
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Serie A. Colegio - No. 21 Colegio visto del Sudeste (College seen from the Southeast) |
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Serie A. Colegio - No. 19 Enfermeria (Infirmary / Clinic) |
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Serie A. Colegio - No. 20 Botiquin de la Enfermeria (First-aid kit of the Infirmary) |
19th Century
1875. The Medical Faculty. The Dominican procurator in
Madrid presented a memorial to the King’s Council asking that the building and
endowment of the Colegio de San Jose be applied to the University of Santo
Tomas to be used by and to support the faculty of medicine and pharmacy.
According to the terms of the contract, a certain number of boys were to be
supported in their studies for the priesthood out of the Colegio de San Jose
Estate.
1898. The San Jose Case. During the American Occupation,
the United States inherited from the Spanish Crown all government assets in the
islands, including the administration of the Colegio de San Jose estate. The
Philippine Commission took up the question of the legal status of the Colegio
de San Jose and ended its investigation by enacting a law granting original
jurisdiction of the case to the Philippine Supreme Court.
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Serie A. Colegio - No. 22 Colegio visto del Sud (College seen from the South) |
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Serie A. Colegio - No. 23 Colegio visto del Este (College seen from the East) |
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Serie A. Colegio - No. 23 Colegio visto del Sudeste (College seen from the Southeast) |
20th Century
1907. Taft-Harty Agreement. In 1907, through the
Taft-Harty Agreement, all the parties questioning the legal status of the
Colegio de San Jose estate signed an agreement that the estate should fall
entirely under church jurisdiction with no claims from the government. Since it
was under the jurisdiction of that Holy See, the Supreme Court did not decide
on the San Jose Case.
1910. The Holy See’s Decision. By virtue of a Brief of
Pope Pius X dated May 3, 1910, to the Most Reverend Ambrose Agius, then
Apostolic Delegate to the Philippines, the Colegio de San Jose is detached from
the University of Santo Tomas and returned to the Jesuits to be used according
to the terms of the original endowment.
1910-1915. Five–Year Turmoil. The announcement in May
1910 that the Pope had ordered the restoration of the San Jose estate to the Jesuit
caused an immediate violent reaction at Santo Tomas. It was not until five
years later, in 1915, that the Colegio de San Jose was able to reopen under the Jesuit administration. It had to be housed in borrowed quarters, in a large
building owned by the Jesuit in Ermita-that building along Padre Faura Street.
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Serie A. Colegio - No. 24 Azotea vista del Oeste (Rooftop view from the west) |
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Serie B. Observatorio - No. 1 Pabelion Astronomico, visto del Sud (Astronomical Pavillion seen from the south) |
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Observatorio, Puerta principal (Main Entrance) |
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Serie B. Observatorio - No. 2 Observatorio, visto del Sudeste (Observatory seen from the Southeast) |
1915. At Padre Faura. On June 15, the Colegio de San Jose
once more opened as a seminary, an Escuela Apostolica, for the training of the
secular clergy in the Philippines under the rectorship of Fr. Jose Alfonso, SJ.
In 1928, of those23 boys who entered San Jose in 1915, five became priests:
Rev. Frs. Felix David, Pedro Endoso, Jose Pe Benito, Antonio Radovan and
Eulogio San Juan. San Jose remained in Padre Faura until 1932.
1932 – Present. Four Locations. In August 1932, the
Ateneo in Intramuros burned down. San Jose Seminary was temporarily housed in
the Mission House at Intramuros, adjacent to San Ignacio Church. There, it
remained for four years until its new building was erected. It was at this time
that the name Colegio de San Jose was dropped, and the institution became known
as San Jose Seminary.
At Balintawak. In 1936, the Seminary moved to its new
building- a fine large, and well-equipped structure, built on a parcel of land
bought in a newly opened housing subdivision at Balintawak. The seminary
remained there for five years, until the outbreak of war in 1941 when the
entire seminary community moved into the Ateneo compound on Padre Faura Street,
where classes in theology were resumed.
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Serie B. Observatorio - No. 5 Biblioteca del Observatorio (The Observatory Library) |
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Serie B. Observatorio - No. 3 Pabelion Magnetico Antiguo (Old Magnetic Pavillion) |
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Serie B. Observatorio - No. 4 Corredor del Observatorio (Observatory Corridor) |
In 1943, the Japanese authorities insisted on the
evacuation of the Padre Faura site. The Paules fathers accommodated both
Josefinos and Jesuit Scholastics San Marcelino.
At Santa Ana. During the Liberation period from 1945 to
about 1950, the seminary reopened at Santa Ana in several rented houses beside
the grounds of La Ignaciana.
At Highway 54. In 1951, the seminary moved to its new
location on what was then officially called MacArthur Boulevard but popularly known
as Highway 54, now renamed EDSA. It was a much large building but poorly
constructed. It was there that in 1957 the first Filipino rector was appointed,
Fr. Antonio Leetai, SJ succeeding the last American rector, Fr. Gaston
Duchesneau, SJ.
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Serie B. Observatorio - No. 6 Ecuatorial e Interior de la Cupula (Equatorial and Interior of the Dome) |
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Serie B. Observatorio - No. 8 Antipolo. Pabelion Magnetico (Magnetic Pavillion) |
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Serie B. Observatorio - No. 9 Casa de Antipolo (Antipolo House) |
At Loyola Heights. In 1964, Father Leetai was succeeded
by Father Jesus Diaz, SJ who, the following year, presided over the transfer to
Loyola Heights. With the creation of the Loyola House of Studies and School of
Theology and Philosophy in 1965, San Jose Seminary was divided into two
separate colleges, each with its own rector. The minor seminary remained at
Highway 54 and later moved to Novaliches and was finally dissolved. The Major
seminary moved out of the Loyola House of Studies building until the present
seminary building was completed. With this relocation to Loyola Heights, San
Jose Seminary has reverted to the original status of the Colegio de San Jose in
Intramuros under the Jesuits. It has once again become a residential college
where the seminarians live a community life and undergo spiritual and pastoral
formation, but they attend classes at the Ateneo de Manila or at the Loyola School
of Theology.
As for the Colegio de San Jose as an institution,
established in 1601 four hundred years ago, it exists today as San Jose
Seminary, celebrating the four hundred anniversary of its foundation.
That in brief is the history of the Colegio de San Jose.
Source:
Fr. Miguel A. Bernad, S.J.: “Colegio de San Jose (1601-2001): A Quick
Survey of the Turbulent 400-year History of an Educational Institution”
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Serie B. Observatorio - No. 10 Ambulong. Vista General (General View) |
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Serie B. Observatorio - No. 10 Ambulong. Pabelion Sismico (Seismic Pavillion) |
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Serie B. Observatorio - No. 10 Ambulong. Lago e Isla Volcan Taal (Taal Volcano Lake) |
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Serie B. Observatorio - No. 13 Bagio. Capilla (Chapel) |
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Serie B. Observatorio - No. 14 Estatua del Sagrado Corazon (Statue of the Sacred Heart) |
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Serie B. Observatorio - No. 15 Baguio. Gruta de la Virgen de Lourdes (Our Lady of Loudes Grotto) |
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Serie B. Observatorio - No. 17 Baguio. Vista General (General View) |
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Serie B. Observatorio - Fachada principal, desde el Oeste (Main facade, from West)
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Serie B. Observatorio - No. 18 Pabelion Astronomico visto del Oeste (Astronomical Pavillion seen from West) |
I would like to know where the building on Serie A No. 21 was located. Was this in Intramuros? Thank you.
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