PARISH OF ST. JOSEPH ALAMINOS 1766 This town, with the original name of Sarapsap, was founded in 1766 by the Augustinian Recollects. The first church of the town built in 1770 was burned to-Gether with the convent and the tribunal by a fire that razed the town in 1814. The First parish priest of the town was Fr. Toribio Raymundo (1778-1815). In 1875 the name Alaminos was adopted in ho or of the Spanish Governor General, who visited the town. Between the years 1837-1849, Fr. Manuel Busquete, the Recollectos parish priest started the construction of the present church and the convent of Alaminos. Fr. Jose Tornos (1849-1878) continued the work. Fr. Victoriano Vereciano (1879-1893) changed the nipa roofing and installed the wooden flooring. He also painted the church. Fr. Toribio Macazo (1998-1926) established the INSTITUTE OF SAN JOSE in the town, Fr, Tomas Changco (1926-1915) improved the church tower, donated three bells and roofed the church with galvanized iron. PARISH OF ST.
Pangasinan Capital Town During periods of crises, when a government is fighting for its survival, necessity sometimes demand that it moves its seal of power from place to place. To most Pangasinanses, Lingayen has always been the capital town of the province. The contrary is also true. Pangasinan, as a province, antedates the Spanish conquest, Long before Ferdinand Magellan, the Portuguese navigator who discovered the Philippines for Spain was born, Pangasinan was already having her commercial relations with China, particularly during the time of the Chinese emperor Yung-Lo in 4th century of the Christian era. Ling Ah Yen In fact, in years 628-636 A.D., in the course of the trade and diplomatic relations between China and Pangasinan, a Chinese nobleman named Ling Ah Yen, migrated to the province and settled in a coastal area which later came to be known as Lingayen. Lingayen, the cradle of Chinese culture in Pangasinan, which gave the province six Governors of Chinese extraction (Sison
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