February 4–
5 – 12,000 American troops advanced through 2 miles of Filipino front at the
Battle of Manila. It was the first and largest battle of the
Philippine–American War, resulting to 60 American dead and 2,000 Filipino dead.
February 10 – A brigade of American soldiers attacked Filipino troops after 3 hours of artillery bombardment at the
Battle of Caloocan. The capture of Caloocan left American forces in control of the southern terminus of the Manila to Dagupan railway, along with five engines, fifty passenger coaches, and a hundred freight cars.[1]
March
March 27 – American troops marched through
Marilao River while being fired upon by Filipino troops on the opposite bank.
March 31 –
Malolos, the capital of the Republic, fell to advancing American soldiers.
April 23 – The
Battle of Quingua was fought between Filipino troops led by General
Gregorio del Pilar and American troops under Major
J. Franklin Bell. There was a short Filipino victory until reinforcements sealed eventual American victory.
May
May 7 –
Local elections were held for provincial and municipal posts throughout the Philippine Archipelago under the American occupation.
May 11 – The country adopts
PHT as its
standard time at exactly 12:00 a.m., prior to the adoption, each location in the country observed its own solar mean time.[2]
November 13 – President Aguinaldo, after a conference in
Bayambang, Pangasinan, declared guerrilla warfare in the continued Filipino struggle against American occupation.[3]
December
December 2 – A 60-man rear guard action led by General
Gregorio del Pilar fought 500 American troops who were pursuing President Aguinaldo in his flight to land's end.
February 4–
5 – 12,000 American troops advanced through 2 miles of Filipino front at the
Battle of Manila. It was the first and largest battle of the
Philippine–American War, resulting to 60 American dead and 2,000 Filipino dead.
February 10 – A brigade of American soldiers attacked Filipino troops after 3 hours of artillery bombardment at the
Battle of Caloocan. The capture of Caloocan left American forces in control of the southern terminus of the Manila to Dagupan railway, along with five engines, fifty passenger coaches, and a hundred freight cars.[1]
March
March 27 – American troops marched through
Marilao River while being fired upon by Filipino troops on the opposite bank.
March 31 –
Malolos, the capital of the Republic, fell to advancing American soldiers.
April 23 – The
Battle of Quingua was fought between Filipino troops led by General
Gregorio del Pilar and American troops under Major
J. Franklin Bell. There was a short Filipino victory until reinforcements sealed eventual American victory.
May
May 7 –
Local elections were held for provincial and municipal posts throughout the Philippine Archipelago under the American occupation.
May 11 – The country adopts
PHT as its
standard time at exactly 12:00 a.m., prior to the adoption, each location in the country observed its own solar mean time.[2]
November 13 – President Aguinaldo, after a conference in
Bayambang, Pangasinan, declared guerrilla warfare in the continued Filipino struggle against American occupation.[3]
December
December 2 – A 60-man rear guard action led by General
Gregorio del Pilar fought 500 American troops who were pursuing President Aguinaldo in his flight to land's end.