Philippines Archives and Libraries

This section describes repositories other than the FamilySearch Library that can help you in your research. The FamilySearch Library has copies of many but not all of the records at these archives.

Archives collect and preserve original documents of organizations such as churches or governments. Libraries generally collect published sources such as books, maps, and microfilm. When you need the address of a library or archive, return to this section.

Before you visit, contact the archive or library. Ask about their collection, hours, services, and fees. Send a well-worded letter of introduction and intent. This will increase your chances to use the records.

Archives in the Philippines

 * National Archives Government Website

Libraries in the Philippines
The National Census and Statistics Office (NCSO). The National Census and Statistics Office has the major civil records after 1932 and is currently responsible for all civil registration. Unfortunately, most documents from 1932 to 1945 were destroyed in World War II. Prior to 1974 the office was known as the Bureau of Census and Statistics.

Most vital records should be available at the FamilySearch Library and FamilySearch Centers. The microfilmed records include birth certificates, death certificates, marriage contracts, and notarial records.

Employees of the Philippine National Census and Statistics Office will answer questions. Send family history inquiries to:

Office of the Civil Registrar General National Statistics Office EDSA Corner, Times Street West Triangle, Quezon City 1104 Philippines Telephone: 926-7373 Fax: 926-7329 Email: [mailto:L.Hufana@mail.census.gov.ph L.Hufana@mail.census.gov.ph]

Tanggapan Sa Pamamahala Ng Mga Kasulatan At Sinupan (Records Management and Archives Office). The Archive Division of the Records Management and Archives Office (Bureau of Records Management) has approximately 11,000,000 documents from the Spanish colonization period (1552–1898) and a few records from the American occupation period (1898–1946). Unfortunately, thousands of documents have been lost due to careless handling, deliberate destruction, and natural deterioration caused by termites, mold, and moisture.

The FamilySearch Library has filmed the most important genealogical records from this collection, including:


 * Cemetery records (cementerios).
 * Inheritance records and inventories of personalestates (bienes de difuntos).
 * Marriage records (matrimonios).
 * Census records (vecindarios, estadísticas, padrones de chinos).
 * Military records (quintas, guardia civil, hojas de servicio).
 * Immigration and naturalization records(naturalización de Españoles, radicación de estrangeros).
 * Notarial records (protocolos).

For more information on these records, see the Philippines Wiki article for each record type.

The Archive Division of the Records Management and Archives Office is in the Philippine National Library Building. Send inquiries to:

Archive Division of the R.M. &amp; A.O. Philippine National Library T. M. Kalaw Street Ermita, Manila 2801 Metropolitan Manila, Philippines

The Philippine National Library has a valuable 45,000-volume Filipiniana collection of biographies, local histories, bibliographies, and gazetteers. It also has collections of rare books and manuscripts, newspapers and brochures, and microforms. The atlases, maps, gazetteers, and manuscripts of the rare books collection are listed in:

Medina, Isagani R., Editor. Filipiniana Materialsin the National Library. Quezon City, Philippines: Published jointly by the National Library and the University of the Philippines Press, 1971.

The Filipiniana collection at the University of the Philippines Library is also helpful. See:

Filipiniana 1968: A Classified Catalog of Filipinian Books and Pamphlets in the University of the Philippines Library as of January 1, 1968. Diliman, Rizal, Philippines: the University of the Philippines, 1968.

The following libraries shelve Filipiniana collections:


 * The Ayala Museum Library has over 3,500 rare books and manuscripts: Ayala Museum Library and Iconographic Archives Makati Avenue Makati, Manila Metropolitan Manila, Philippines Internet: http://www.ayalamuseum.com
 * The Jorge B. Vargas Filipinian Collectionhouses Vargas's personal collection of rarebooks, documents, and manuscripts: Jorge B. Vargas Filipiniana Foundation 241 Shaw Boulevard Mandaluyong, Manila Metropolitan Manila, Philippines Internet: http://www.vargasmuseum.org
 * The Fr. Luis G. Merino Library has rare holdings from 1700 on, Philippine history, architecture, cultural arts, and the restoration of the historic walled City of Intramuros. The Fr. Luis G. Merino Library 5/F Palacio del Gobernador Building Gen. Luna Street, Intramuros Manila, Metropolitan Manila, Philippines

The following collection includes mostly documents from the American occupation period, with some records from the Spanish colonization period, and a few modern records: U.S. Embassy, American Historical Collection Ateneo de Manila University Quezon City, Metropolitan Manila Philippines Telephone: (632) 924-4601, ext. 2668 Fax: (632) 924-4428

Many important libraries are listed in:

Dayrit, Marina. Directory of Libraries in the Philippines. Diliman, Quezon City, Philippines: The University of the Philippines Library, 1973.

Besides the libraries listed above, each province has a library that stores valuable local histories. Some municipalities and cities have libraries that collect local family histories and other important genealogical records. Also, each municipality has a local civil registrar office that keeps valuable family history information. The local civil registrar logs all civil registration events (see Philippines Civil Registration.

Church Archives. See Philippines Church Records.

Foreign Libraries
The U.S. Library of Congress. The U.S. Library of Congress has a large Filipiniana collection. It has the most comprehensive foreign bibliography on the Philippines (about 18,000 entries) in the Orientalia Division of its:

Southeast Asia Subject Catalog. Boston, Massachusetts, USA, G.K. Hall, 1972. Six Volumes. Volume 4: The Philippines.

Library of Congress 1st–2nd Streets, S.E. Washington, D.C. 20504 Internet: http://www.loc.gov/index.html

The Newberry Library. Chicago's Newberry Library has the most valuable foreign collection of documents from the Spanish colonization period. You can contact the library at:

Newberry Library 60 West Walton Street Chicago, Illinois 60610-3394 Internet: http://www./

The above collection is described in:

Newberry Library. Chicago, Illinois, USA. Dictionary Catalog of the Edward E. Ayer Collection of Americana and American Indians in the Newberry Library. Volume 6, pp. 5,895–99,964. Boston, Massachusetts, USA: G. K. Hall, 1961.

Welsh, Doris V. Catalog of Printed Materials Relating to the Philippine Islands, 1519–1900, in the Newberry Library. Chicago, Illinois, USA: Newberry Library, 1959.

Lietz, Paul S., Editor. Calendar of Philippine Documents in the Ayer Collection of the Newberry Library. Chicago, Illinois, USA: Newberry Library, 1956. (FS Library book 959.9 A3c; film 0795964 item 4.)

Computer Networks and Bulletin Boards
Computers with modems can be useful tools for obtaining information from selected archives and libraries. In a way, computer networks themselves serve as a library. The Internet, certain computer bulletin boards, and commercial online services help family history researchers:


 * Locate other researchers.
 * Post queries.
 * Send and receive e-mail.
 * Search large databases.
 * Search computer libraries.
 * Join in computer chat sessions.

You can find computerized research tips and information about ancestors from the Philippines in many sources at local, provincial, national, and international levels. The list of sources is growing rapidly. Most information is available at no cost.

Some information and guides are available on the Internet for research in the Philippines. Sites that include information about libraries and museums, maps, and naming customs are found in various Wiki articles for the Philippines.

General sites that act as indexes to many interesting Philippines genealogical sites on the Internet include:


 * Philippines Genealogy Web Project.
 * FamilySearch Library home page.

Websites

 * http://www.loc.gov/rr/international/asian/philippines/resources/philippines-libraries.html