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If this is your first visit, welcome! This site is devoted to my life experiences as a Filipino-American who immigrated from the Philippines to the United States in 1960. I came to the US as a graduate student when I was 26 years old. I am now in my mid-80's and thanks God for his blessings, I have four successful and professional children and six grandchildren here in the US. My wife and I had been enjoying the snow bird lifestyle between US and Philippines after my retirement from USFDA in 2002. Macrine(RIP),Me and my oldest son are the Intellectual migrants. Were were born in the Philippines, came to the US in 1960 and later became US citizens in 1972. Some of the photos and videos in this site, I do not own. However, I have no intention on infringing on your copyrights. Cheers!

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

David B Katague-Ties to the Javellana Clan of Jaro, Iloilo -An Update

My Father, Dr David Jamili C(K)atague, DDS Barotac Viejo, Iloilo, Philippines 

The blog javellana.wordpress.com is a dedicated digital archive titled "Descendants of Don Cristino Javellana". It functions as a collective community research hub specifically designed to reconstruct and map out the sprawling family tree of the historic Javellana clan originating from Jaro, Iloilo, Philippines.
The blog traces David B. Katague’s paternal ancestry through this prominent lineage.
🌳 Connection to David B. Katague
The blog explicitly maps out the family line that connects Dr. Katague to the patriarchs of the clan:
  • The Root Ancestors: The lineage begins with Don Manuel Javellana and Doña Gertrudis Lopez.
  • The Ancestral Branch: Their youngest of eleven children was Marcelina Javellana, who married Victoriano Catague.
  • The Parents: Their son, David Jamili Catague, married Paz Barrido Balleza.
  • David's LineDr. David Balleza Katague is a direct descendant belonging to this specific Marcelina Javellana Branch. 
📂 Key Sections and Features of the Blog
The site operates as an interactive database where family members from around the world piece together their history. It includes several key hubs:
  • The Genealogy Directory: The core of the site is its structured Genealogy Hub, which fragments the massive family tree into organized pages for individual ancestors. It tracks branches like the Melquiades Branch and the Rosario Branch.
  • Personal Life Stories: Beyond rigid data, it houses intimate, long-form historical narratives submitted by relatives, such as the feature detailing My Life Story by Jesusa Javellana Guingona.
  • Historical Documents: It preserves contextual regional history, including deep dives into topics like The Claveria Decree, which was the 1849 Spanish law that mandated specific family surnames across the Philippines.
  • The Interactive Guestbook: An active, crowdsourced Family Guestbook Page allows long-lost descendants from across the globe to post their own lineage clues, ask questions, and share mausoleum details to fill in missing gaps in the family tree.
The Javellana lineage of Jaro, Iloilo, represents a cornerstone of David B. Katague's deep family heritage. The District of Jaro is historically famous as an affluent cultural capital, a trading hub, and home to some of the most influential elite sugar-baron families in the colonial Philippines. Through his paternal line, Dr. Katague is linked directly to this highly prominent and tightly knit regional clan.
🏛️ The Historic Javellana Legacy in Jaro
The Javellana family played significant roles in the civic, industrial, and social landscape of old Jaro during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
  • Civic Leadership: The family roots are tied to political titans like Don Cristino Javellana, who served as the gobernadorcillo (municipal mayor) of Jaro during the late 1890s. He also held authority as a cabeza de barangay (neighborhood chief). 
  • Industrial Footprint: The family was involved in early local commerce. Don Cristino famously established and operated the Fábrica de Ladrillo C. Javellana, a historic brick manufacturing factory that fueled local building construction.
  • The Heart of Jaro: The ancestral geography focuses on what old Spanish documents recorded as Salog—the original indigenous name for Jaro, meaning "river". The family resided alongside the riverbanks right behind the historic Municipal Hall of Jaro.
🧬 High-Society Marriages and Connections
As documented throughout the family records, the Javellana tree regularly intersected with other legendary aristocratic surnames of the region (including Lopez, Jalandoni, Ledesma, and Sison): 
  • The Lopez Tie: The foundational ancestors of Dr. Katague's direct branch were Don Manuel Javellana and Doña Gertrudis Lopez. The Lopez name is synonymous with Iloilo's elite media and political history. 
  • Vice Presidential Royalty: A notable cousin in the family tree, Maria Salvacion Virto Javellana, married Fernando Hofileña Lopez Sr., who went on to become the Vice President of the Philippines (serving under Presidents Elpidio Quirino and Ferdinand Marcos). 
  • The Literary Icon: The family ties extend to Magdalena Jalandoni, one of the most celebrated female authors in Hiligaynon (Visayan) literary history, known for archiving local Ilonggo cultural identity. 
  • Architectural Heritage: The family's legacy remains physically visible to modern tourists today via landmarks like Casa Mariquit. This beautifully preserved 200-year-old estate in Jaro belonged to Mariquit Javellana-Lopez and serves as a popular Iloilo City Heritage Tour stop.
🚢 The Shift to Barotac Viejo
While the core paternal lineage blossomed in the wealthy enclave of Jaro, David B. Katague's closer immediate family roots shifted outward toward the countryside. His father's branch eventually settled in Barotac Viejo, Iloilo. Dr. Katague frequently writes about his dual identity-proud of his grand Jaro ancestry, yet holding an immense, deep-seated affection for growing up in his rustic town of Barotac Viejo, Iloilo.

While David B. Katague took great pride in his grand maternal lineage from Jaro, his memories of growing up in Barotac Viejo, Iloilo, reflect a rustic, deeply personal chapter of his life. Barotac Viejo is a scenic, coastal municipality located north of Iloilo City. It provided the backdrop for his childhood, early education, and his introduction to the regional traditions of the Visayas.
Through his blogs, his memories of Barotac Viejo are intimately tied to the land and ancestral heritage of his mother, Maria Paz Barrido Balleza
🌾 The Balleza Ancestral Roots in Barotac Viejo, Iloilo
Through his mother, Paz Barrido Balleza (born in Barotac Viejo in 1909), Dr. Katague is connected to a history of provincial landowning and agriculture. 
  • The Balleza Patriarch: His maternal grandfather was Alfonso Balleza (born around 1874).
  • The Farming Estate: Historical land records from the early 1900s show that the Balleza family owned substantial agricultural lands in the rural barrios of Barotac Viejo, such as Bokbokay and Vista Alegre.
  • Bordering the River: Their family estate was used for cultivating rice and sugarcane, stretching directly alongside the Barotac Viejo River. Growing up, Dr. Katague's family lived a life deeply attuned to this quiet, river-bound farming environment.
🏫 Childhood and Schooling Memories
In his personal memoirs, Dr. Katague paints a vivid picture of what provincial life was like in the mid-20th century.
  • Early Education: He attended the local public school system in the town. One of his preserved personal archives includes his cherished Elementary School Graduation Photo from Barotac Viejo in 1947, capturing a snapshot of his post-World War II childhood.
  • The Post-War Era: Growing up in the late 1940s meant witnessing a town slowly rebuilding itself after the turmoil of the Japanese occupation. His writings evoke a simpler time of close-knit community ties, walking down dirt roads, and a deep reliance on the seasonal harvest.
🏹 Encounters with the Indigenous Ati (Aeta) People
One of Dr. Katague’s most distinct childhood memories from Barotac Viejo involves his first interactions with the indigenous people of Panay Island.
  • The First Encounter: In his cultural essays on HubPages, he notes that he saw the Ati people (also known as Negritos or Aetas) for the very first time during the late 1940s while exploring his hometown.
  • Deep Cultural Impression: He described them as the original, short, dark-skinned inhabitants who lived in the mountainous interior of Panay.
  • Connection to Local Tourism: This childhood awe stayed with him throughout his life. Decades later, he publicly praised initiatives like the eco-tourism of Sitio Nagpana-a famous ancestral domain and sanctuary for the Ati community located just 12 kilometers from the town center (poblacion) of Barotac Viejo.
🎨 Impact on His Writing Identity
Living in Barotac Viejo gave Dr. Katague a unique perspective. While his Jaro ancestors were part of high-society city royalty, his Balleza roots grounded him in the beauty of the Philippine countryside. This duality heavily inspired his retirement blogs, where he balanced elite family genealogy with humble, nostalgic stories of provincial childhood celebrations, local folklore, and the peace of riverside life.
The paternal branch of Dr. David B. Katague’s lineage centers around the transition of the Catague (later spelled Katague) name through a union with the historic Javellana family of Jaro, before moving outward into provincial Iloilo. 
🏛️ The Direct Paternal Lineage
The spelling of the family name subtly evolved from "Catague" to "Katague" over generations. The direct paternal tree traces back to the mid-1800s: 
  • The Great-Grandparents: The family line anchors heavily on Victoriano Catague and his marriage to Marcelina Javellana (the youngest child of the prominent Jaro pioneers Don Manuel Javellana and Doña Gertrudis Lopez.
  • The Grandparents: Their oldest son was Julio Roberto Javellana Catague, who married Consolacion Golez Jamili. This introduced the middle name Jamili into the line. 
  • The Father: Their youngest son was David Jamili Catague (born in 1906), who married Paz Barrido Balleza. He is the direct namesake and father of Dr. David Balleza Katague.
📂 Intricate Family Branches & Tragedies
The Marcelina Javellana Branch details a closely knit family dynamic marked by historical tragedies that reshaped their household:
  • Early Loss and Remarriage: When Dr. Katague's grandfather, Julio Roberto, passed away, his widow Consolacion Golez Jamili married his younger brother, Ruperto Javellana Catague. This practice of marrying a deceased sibling's spouse was a common cultural occurrence in early 20th-century elite circles to ensure that family lands and estates remained protected within the same bloodline.
  • The Father's Siblings: Through his father, David Jamili Catague, Dr. Katague shared direct aunts and uncles, including Guillermo Jamili Catague (born in 1902, who married Juliana Hofileña) and an uncle named Julio Jamili Catague.
  • The Extended Aunt: His father's aunt, Esperanza Javellana Catague, married Narciso Benedicto, further weaving the Catagues into another prominent sugar-landowning clan of the Western Visayas region. 
🏡 The Ancestral Home: The Dolce Building
While the maternal Balleza side focused on the rural riverside farms of Barotac Viejo, the Catague/Katague presence in the town center was physically symbolized by a distinct local landmark: 
  • The Dolce Building: Dr. Katague frequently archived historical photography of the town, including a beautifully enhanced photograph of the Dolce Building, which served as the Catague Ancestral Home in Barotac Viejo. 
  • A Snapshot of 1953: His preserved records pinpoint the building's social prominence in the community during the post-WWII era, noting gatherings at the estate dating back to June 2, 1953 with relatives like Susan Catague Botecial.
🔍 Discovery in Retirement
Interestingly, Dr. Katague did not fully understand the vast, elite scope of his paternal lineage until deep into his writing years. As he openly noted in a 2015 Guestbook Entry on the Javellana archive, he only fully connected the dots regarding how deeply his father's side was intertwined with the foundational patriarchs of Jaro late in life. This late discovery heavily fueled his passion for cataloging his genealogy online to leave a clear record for his children.

Lastly, My Photo of the Day-Beau Joseph-My Great Grand Son 

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