"BRIEF HISTORY OF BACARRA ILOCOS NORTE"
The original inhabitants of
the area that was become the present day
The Spaniards found that the inhabitants of the area had a
distinctive character and culture such different from their fellow countrymen in
the south – with different dialects although belonging to the mother tongue
Tagalog, it had a different idiosyncrasies making the Ilocano dialect quite
different from the Tagalog.
The name Bacarra has two legendary origins. One legend
tells of a native fisherman who was out fishing in what is now known as the
Another related story was the coining of a by-word of a
farmer and his wife who were making big basket called “Bakar” which was used
as rice basket. From these two legends, the Spaniards associated it with the
town into its present name which is “BACARRA”, the same place where
most of the Bacarreños now live.
Historical files state that an Igorot Baksalandok first
settled the place, which is now Bacarra. Baksalandok was hunting in the
areas near the Bacarra-Laoag boundary when he took notice of the beauty and
vegetation of the place. He made his hut at the site where the Roman Catholic
Church and Convent now stand. Other Igorot settlers followed him, and soon
afterwards, other tribes followed. The settlement was called Baraniw and this
name is retained until now by the barrio just west of the Poblacion. The Eastern
settlement was called Vira and the Middle one was called Parparia. The
settlement started in about 1600AD and it was this kind of settlement, which
greeted the Spaniards when they came to the place a little later.
It was more than one and one-half centuries later, in 1778,
when the Spanish Government officially recognized Bacarra as a municipality. It
was place on the map as a town and was christened Bacarra with Manuel
Paras who laid the foundation of the municipality to its present state. From
1778 to the present that span more than two centuries, Bacarra has
greatly changed metamorphosed and evolved to its present state. During this
period, 127 executives have occupied the highest office of the town. These
executives were been the alcaldes, gobernadorcillos, capitan municipals,
municipal presidents and eventually mayors.