"BRIEF HISTORY OF SARRAT ILOCOS NORTE"
Sarrat was settled
in 1721. Before this year, during the late part of the 16th Century, Minangel
(Maingel) Bang’at, a civilized Malay, his wife Sarrah and more than a dozen
families reached Sarrat. Bang’at was the bravest and most influential
man, so he was chosen chief. There were many clumps of bamboos in the
settlement; hence, they called the place Cabayugan. The people built crude
houses, cleared the land and planted rice and some root crops.
The
Banet said, “Sarra’t Nuang”, meaning carabao’s horn,
and so the Spaniards wrote the name Sarrat. Three years later,
Augustinians erected their parish over the place and changed Sarrat’s
name to San Miguel. Coincidentally, it gained its township’s status on
September 29, 1724. In 1916, in accordance with a bill filed by Senators
Santiago Fonacier and Isabelo delos Reyes, the name San Miguel was changed to
what is now known as SARRAT.
The town’s history is largely written in blood. Sarrateños
actively participated during the wine controversy of 1807 which let to a revolt.
In 1815, the town rose in arms again during the Sarrat Rebellion. This
was by the nullification of the liberal Spanish Constitution of 1812 by the
reactionary King Ferdinand VII. When the Filipino war of independence against
the American’s broke out, 500 Sarrateño men braved the strongly fortified
town of