By Tara Yap
ILOILO CITY – The country’s first economic museum officially opened at a century-old structure once occupied by a major conglomerate and a government agency along Calle Real, the heritage district of Iloilo City.
Visitors view machinery from sugarcane plantations of Negros Island. These are some of the artifacts displayed at the newly-opened Museum of Philippine Economic History in Iloilo City. (Tara Yap / MANILA BULLETIN)
The National Historical Commission of the Philippines (NHCP) unveiled Monday the Museum of Philippine Economic History.
“We hope to recapture and retell the verve of Filipinos in their will towards self-enterprise and innovation, pushing the limits for their own economic welfare and the overall economic progress of the nation,” said NHCP Chairman Rene Escalante.
Senator Franklin Drilon, who played an instrumental role in the restoration of the once dilapidated structure, said the museum also highlights the rich economic history of Iloilo, which preceded Cebu as the “Queen City of the South”. (Tara Yap)
Visitors view machinery from sugarcane plantations of Negros Island. These are some of the artifacts displayed at the newly-opened Museum of Philippine Economic History in Iloilo City. (Tara Yap / MANILA BULLETIN)
The National Historical Commission of the Philippines (NHCP) unveiled Monday the Museum of Philippine Economic History.
“We hope to recapture and retell the verve of Filipinos in their will towards self-enterprise and innovation, pushing the limits for their own economic welfare and the overall economic progress of the nation,” said NHCP Chairman Rene Escalante.
Senator Franklin Drilon, who played an instrumental role in the restoration of the once dilapidated structure, said the museum also highlights the rich economic history of Iloilo, which preceded Cebu as the “Queen City of the South”. (Tara Yap)