THE FIRST CRY OF THE REVOLUTION (AUGUST 1896)
Historical Context
         Philippine Revolution (1896)
         “First Cry”
         Tearing up their cedulas and proclaiming the start of the fight for
          independence.
         Happened after Katipunan was exposed on August 19, 1896 and
          the Spaniards began to crack down on suspected rebels.
         Katipunan Supremo Andres proceed to a designated meeting
          place outside the city to decide on their next move
         Bonifacio found it wise to begin the revolution that day and attack
          Manila at the end of the month
         1911, a monument to the Heroes of 1986 was erected in
          Balintawak where beginning in 1908
         The date and place of the event were later contradicted by
          different Katipunan personalities who claimed that they were
          there at the time
         1963, the National Historical Commission (today’s National
          Historical Commission of the Philippines [NHCP]) decided that,
         Following extensive research of primary sources,
         the First Cry of the Philippine Revolution of 1896 happened on
          August 23, 1896 at Pugad Lawin, now part of Project 8 in Quezon
          City
         The controversy, however, persists, with historians and other
          personalities(especially the descendants of the Katipunero
          witnesses) claiming that the official date and place are wrong
Dr. Pio Valenzuela’s Account
         The official date and place of the First Cry were largely based on
          the account og Cr. Pio Valenzuela, an official of the Katipunan and
          a friend of Andres Bonifacio,
         Who was present during the event
         His account was published as Memoirs of the K.K.K and the
          Philippine Revolution (Manila, n.d)
Santiago Alvarez’s Account
         1927, a pre World War II
         Sampaguita began publishing the Katipunan memoirs of Gen.
          Santiago Virata Alvarez  one of the leaders of the Cavite
          revolution
         Series (36 parts)
         It told the story of the Philippine Revolution starting in March
          1896 until late 1897
         The series was later published as a book, titled The Katipunan and
          the Revolution (QC: ADMU, 1992) with an English translation by
          Paula Carolina Malay
Guillermo Masangkay’s Account
         1932, Guillermo Masangkay, a friend and fellow Katipunero of
          Andres Bonifacion, recounted his experiences as a member of the
          revolutionary movement