'American Filipinos' constitute of
Philippine citizens of
American descent, regardless of ethnic or
racial affiliation and including but not limited to
mestizos.
The Philippines currently has Asia's largest
American and
Amerasian population.
[ Peoples Listing: Americans ]
Early American settlement
Americans came to the Philippines primarily to conduct businesses. During the
Spanish period, Americans owned many businesses in
trade and in the
sugar industry. Although not harassed by Spanish laws, the American inflow to the Philippines was minimal until the
Philippine-American War.
Commencement of major American immigration to the Philippines
American colonial rule in the Philippines has seen major immigrations to the Philippines. Retiring soldiers and other
military-men were among of the first Americans to become long-term Philippine residents and settlers. The Education Act of 1901 authorized the colonial government to recruit American teachers to help establish the new educational system, and 80 former soldiers became teachers. They were soon joined by 48 teachers recruited in America who arrived in June of 1901 on the ship Sheridan, and by 523 others who arrived on August 1, 1901 on the Thomas. Collectively, these teachers became known as the
Thomasites.
[1] Besides
English, the Thomasites taught
agriculture, reading, grammar,
geography,
mathematics, general courses, trade courses, housekeeping and household arts (sewing,
crocheting and cooking), manual trading, mechanical drawing, freehand drawing and athletics (
baseball,
track and field,
tennis, indoor baseball and
basketball). Many of these people settled in the Philippines and had Philippine spouses. By 1930, there were already thriving American and
American mestizo communities.
==
1940 to date==
The
1940s was a period of large scale influx of American immigration to the Philippines. However, this was cut abruptly by the
World War II. Many Americans as well as American mestizos in the Philippines were interred and killed by the
Japanese. After the Philippines gained independence from the United States in
1946, many Americans chose to permanently settle in the Philippines. The Americans until the mid-
1990s had a heavy presence in the cities of
Angeles and
Olongapo, northeast of Manila, due to the presence of large
US military bases there. During the American colonial period (
1898-
1946), a recorded number of more than 800,000 Americans were born in the Philippines. Large concentrations of Filipinos with American ancestry aside from
Metro Manila are located in the areas of the former US Army bases such as the
Subic Bay area in Zambales and
Clark Field in Angeles. The
Philippine Children's Fund for America was created by the US and Philippine governments in
1991 to assist impoverished Filipino children of American ancestry, also known as Amerasians, by providing educational scholarships, employment and working visas to the United States. Around 56,000 children under the age of 16 benefit from the fund today. The
Amerasian Foundation and
Amerasian Family Finder networks with volunteers in the US and the Philippines to help Amerasians and their fathers reunite. Amerasians can be found in the upper class, but also amongst the middle and lower classes as a result of the abandonment of their American fathers upon completion of military service and subsequent withdrawal of US forces. Their physiognomy and facial features are somewhat similar to
Spanish mestizos, with more
Nordic features. There are also many American mestizos who are actually of mixed American and Spanish mestizo descent, and the majority of them does have blue or gray eyes and blonde pigmentation, and can pass as unmixed
Caucasians. Aside from Spanish and Mexican Filipino mestizos who are direct descendants of Spanish settlers (from
Spain and
Mexicans, some of them with
Native American blood) in the Philippines from Spanish political period, there are also many Spanish and Mexican Filipino mestizos who are descendants of
Hispanic American settlers from
Spanish American and
Mexican American origins (There may even Spanish mestizos who have Spanish blood from
Puerto Rican,
Cuban American, and other Hispanic parentages). The majority of Black people in the Philippines who are sometimes classified as African-Filipinos or Afro-Filipino as an umbrella term are of part-
African American descent, mostly descending from
United States army servicemen. (It should be noted that, unlike in the United States, there are no official race classifications in the Philippines.)
Chinese and other
East Asian Filipino mestizos can be of part-
Asian American blood. The number of American mestizos is thought to be between 20,000 and 30,000. Most speak Filipino and English. The majority are to be found in Angeles City, which has the largest proportion of
Amerasians in the Philippines.
[ The Forgotten Angels ]
Today, the
Philippines has a large population of Americans and people with American roots, as well as a burgeoning
Amerasian population.
[ The overwhelming majority of unmixed Americans and American-Filipinos in the Philippines are what would be classified in the United States by the US Census Bureau and the EEOC as “White”.]
The total number of US citizens living in the Philippines is more than 120,000.[ Only about 22,000, however, are permanent settlers. About 81,000 are non-citizen residents, among such are businessmen, missionaries, and educators.]
Prominent American Filipinos
For a list of prominent or noteworthy American Filipinos, see .
References
1. The Thomasite experiment
See also
★ Philippine nationality law
★ Filipino mestizos, Filipinos of part-Austronesian ancestry
★ Amerasians
★ Eurasians
★ Afro-Asian