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Manuel Acuña Roxas

Also Known As: "Manoling"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Capiz (present-day Roxas City), Capiz, Western Visayas, Philippines
Death: April 15, 1948 (56)
Clark Air Base, Mabalacat, Pampanga, Central Luzon, Philippines (Heart attack)
Place of Burial: Manila, Metro Manila, Philippines
Immediate Family:

Son of Gerardo Luis Roxas and Rosario Villaruz Acuña
Husband of Trinidad Roura de Leon
Partner of Private
Father of Private; Gerry Roxas; Rosario Roxas-Moran; Private and Consuelo McIlvain Roxas
Brother of Mamerto Acuña Roxas; Leopoldo Acuña Roxas and Margarita Acuña Roxas
Half brother of Consuelo Acuña Picazo; Ines Acuña Picazo; Evaristo Acuña Picazo and Private

Occupation: 5th President of the Philippines
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Manuel Roxas

Manuel Acuña Roxas was the fifth President of the Philippines. He served as president from the granting of independence in 1946 until his abrupt death in 1948. Roxas was born on January 1, 1892 in Capiz, Capiz, a city that was renamed in his honor, to Rosario Acuña. His father, Gerardo Roxas, Sr., died before he was born. Roxas studied college in University of Manila, and law at the University of the Philippines and was the Bar topnotcher. He was a career politician who started as a provincial fiscal. In 1921, he was elected to the Philippine House of Representatives and in the following year he became speaker.

After the Commonwealth of the Philippines was established (1935), Roxas became a member of the unicameral National Assembly, and served (1938-1941) as the Secretary of Finance in President Manuel L. Quezon's cabinet. After the amendments to the 1935 Philippine Constitution were approved in 1941, he was elected (1941) to the Philippine Senate, but was unable to serve until 1945 because of the outbreak of World War II.

Having enrolled prior to World War II as an officer in the reserves, he was made liaison officer between the Commonwealth government and the United States Army Forces in the Far East headquarters of General Douglas MacArthur. He accompanied President Quezon to Corregidor where he supervised the destruction of Philippine currency to prevent its capture by the Japanese. When Quezon left Corregidor, Roxas went to Mindanao to direct the resistance there. It was prior to Quezon's departure that he was made Executive Secretary and designated as successor to the presidency in case Quezon or Vice-President Sergio Osmeña were captured or killed. Roxas was captured (1942) by the Japanese invasion forces. After a period of imprisonment, he was brought to Manila and eventually signed the Constitution promulgated by the Japanese-sponsored Philippine Republic. He was made responsible for economic policy under the government of Jose P. Laurel. During this time he also served as an intelligence agent for the underground Philippine guerrilla forces. In 1944 he unsuccessfully tried to escape to Allied territory. The returning American forces arrested him a Japanese collaborator. After the war, Gen. Douglas MacArthur cleared him and reinstated his commission as an officer of the US armed forces. This resuscitated his political career.

When the Congress of the Philippines was convened in 1945, the legislators elected in 1941 chose Roxas as Senate President. In the Philippine national elections of 1946, Roxas ran for president as the nominee of the liberal wing of the Nacionalista Party. He had the staunch support of General MacArthur. His opponent was Sergio Osmeña, who refused to campaign, saying that the Filipino people knew his reputation. However, in the April 23, 1946 election, Roxas won 54 percent of the vote, and the Liberal Party won a majority in the legislature. When Philippine independence was recognized by the United States on July 4, 1946, he became the first president of the new republic. In 1948, Roxas declared amnesty for those arrested for collaborating with the Japanese during World War II, except for those who had committed violent crimes.

Manuel Roxas was married to Doña Trinidad de Leon and had two children Ruby and Gerardo "Gerry" Roxas, Jr. who became congressman and a leader of Liberal Party. He died on April 15, 1948 at the age of 56, after suffering a fatal heart attack after delivering a speech at Clark Air Base in Angeles, Pampanga. He was succeeded by his vice president, Elpidio Quirino.

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Manuel Roxas's Timeline

1892
January 1, 1892
Capiz (present-day Roxas City), Capiz, Western Visayas, Philippines
1924
August 25, 1924
Manila, Metro Manila, Philippines
1927
September 3, 1927
Manila, Metro Manila, Philippines
1928
November 19, 1928
1948
April 15, 1948
Age 56
Clark Air Base, Mabalacat, Pampanga, Central Luzon, Philippines
April 25, 1948
Age 56
Manila North Cemetery, Santa Cruz, Manila, Metro Manila, Philippines