THE OLD PACO STATION 1930s
The Paco Station is one of oldest buildings constructed by the US
government during the American colonial period. Resembling the Penn
Station in New York, the station was designed by William E. Parsons, the
man behind the notable structures of the Philippines under the early
years of American rule which include the Manila Hotel, the Customs
Office in Cebu City, the Manila Army and Navy
Club Building, the Manila Elks Club, Philippine General Hospital, the
Philippine Normal School, the Original Provincial Capitol of Laguna
Province in Santa Cruz, the University Hall of the University of the
Philippines in Manila and The Mansion House in Baguio.
The
Paco railroad station came into being on March 25, 1908 when the Manila
Belt Line from Tutuban to Paco Station and the railroad line from Paco
Station to Binakayan, Cavite was opened. Furthermore, the Paco Railroad
Station to Muntinlupa line was inaugurated on June 21, 1908. With the
closure of the Manila-Dagupan line in the early 1990s, the Tutuban to
Muntinlupa line is now the oldest railroad line still in operation here
in the Philippines. It was constructed starting in 1912 and by 1915, the
station was already complete.
The Paco Railroad Station was
also the scene of a heroic battle during World War II and the recapture
of the station led to the crucial defeat of the remaining Japanese
forces in Manila. In the bid to reclaim Manila from the Japanese during
World War II, Paco became a bloody battleground for hundreds of lives.
On Feb. 7, 1945, the US 149th Infantry Regiment crossed Pasig River and
landed in the suburbs of Pandacan and Paco, where an epic battle took
place around the railway station with some 300 Japanese defending it.
The battle cost 335 American lives before the Japanese resistance was
finally smashed and the enemies annihilated.
On February 9,
1945 Technical Sergeant Cleto Rodríguez's platoon was ordered to
initiate an offensive assault against the Paco Railroad Station that was
being held by the Japanese. While crossing an open field in front of
the railroad station his platoon was stopped 100 yards from the railroad
station by intense Japanese gunfire. Without being ordered to do so
Cleto and a fellow soldier, Private First Class John N. Reese, Jr., left
the platoon and continued forward under heavy Japanese gunfire until
they made it to a house 60 yards from the railroad station. The two
soldiers remained in their position for an hour while firing at targets
of opportunity, killing 35 Japanese soldiers and wounding many others.
After an hour the 2 soldiers moved forward towards the railroad station
where they discovered a group of Japanese replacements attempting to
reach pillboxes. Cleto and Reese opened heavy fire and killed more than
40 Japanese soldiers and stopped any other attempts to reach the
pillboxes. The enemy fire increased as the two soldiers came within 20
yards of the railroad station. Cleto's comrade provided cover fire while
he moved up to the railroad station where he threw 5 grenades through a
doorway killing 7 Japanese soldiers and destroying a 20-mm gun and
wrecking a heavy machine gun. With their ammunition running low the 2
soldiers made their way back to their platoon while each took turns
providing cover fire for the other to move. During the return to their
platoon Private First Class Reese Jr. was killed. During the 2½ hours
of fighting the two soldiers killed more than 82 Japanese soldiers and
completely disorganized the defense of the railroad station, which paved
the way for U.S. soldiers overwhelming the railroad station in victory.
Two days later Cleto again enabled his platoon to advance when he
single-handedly killed 6 Japanese soldiers and destroyed a well placed
20-mm gun. As a result of these actions both Rodriguez and Reese were
presented with the Medal of Honor for their determination to destroy the
enemy, and courage in the face of tremendous odds.
In 1996, a
contractor of a 7-storey mall partly demolished the PNR station but due
to the lack of funds it stopped, leaving behind a skeleton of the first
four floors of the mall and the facade of the station.
Having
such colorful history and the beauty of decades-old structures that
have braved the storms and wars, the National Historical Commission, the
PNR and other governing bodies decided to restore the structure in
celebration of the station's centennial, with the addition of a
historical marker on the structure in 2009.
But on April 27,
2012, Home Guaranty Corporation (HGC) pursued the air rights sale over
the mall despite the ongoing PNR protest, thus stalling the restoration
and re-construction work for the station. As of now, there is no visible
effort to restore this grand structure to its former glory. Years
after its centennial and as the hype over it died down, the ruins remain
as ruins.
This is the sad reality of heritage sites in Manila
or in any parts of the country, they don't find the importance of these
kinds of buildings. Every year, more and more old buildings and homes
like this one disappear to give way to tasteless and unimaginative
architectural pieces such as mall and condos.