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Personal Life
Eulogio "Amang" Adona Rodriguez, Sr.
(January 21, 1883–December 19, 1964) was a Filipino politician, the
longest serving Senate President after Manuel L. Quezon, serving the post
from April 30, 1952 to April 17, 1953 and May 20, 1953 to April 5, 1963.
Rodriguez was born in Montalban (renamed Rodriguez
in his honor), Distrito de Morong on January 21, 1883 to Petronilo
Rodriguez and Monica Adona. He first studied at the Spanish-run public
school in Montalban, then took his secondary course at the Colegio de San
Juan de Letran in Manila, where he completed his Bachelor of Arts in 1896.
He then studied law under a private tutor.
He had seven children by his first wife, Juana Santiago,
namely Eulogio, Jr., Jose, Ruperto, Leonor, Isidro, Constancio and
Adelaida. With his second wife, Luisita Canoy, he had three children,
namely, Baby, Linda and Rafael.
Political life
Rodriguez first served as Municipal President of Montalban,
Rizal from 1906–1916; became Governor of Rizal in June 1916; and was
reelected in June 1922. He was appointed Mayor of Manila by Governor
General Leonard Wood on July 23, 1923, and later served as Representative
of Nueva Vizcaya District from February 1924 to May 1925. He became the
Representative of the Second District of Rizal in 1925 and was reelected
in 1931 and 1934. He was also appointed Secretary of Agriculture and
Commerce by Governor Frank Murphy on July 26, 1934, re-appointed by
President Manuel Quezon on January 15, 1940, and served as such until
August 28, 1941. After his resignation as Mayor of Manila, he campaigned
for a seat in the Senate and was elected senator in 1941. On May 20, 1953,
he was elected Senate President, a position he occupied for the next ten
years.
“Amang” started his career in politics as a Democrata or a
member of the opposition party, and not until there was a general
realignment of parties due to the divisive struggle over the approval of
the Independence Law in 1933, did he switch to the majority or the
Nacionalista Party, to which he remained faithful until the day of his
death three decades later. He nursed the party during its darkest hours,
and steered it successfully through the political reefs and typhoons that
rocked the local scene, thus earning for him the sobriquet “Mr.
Nacionalista”. Unlike so many others, he did not switch parties for
personal convenience.
As a legislator, he always supported measures improving
the lot of common man, for he knew that the upgrading of the masses was
the best way of retaining democracy in the country. Many were sometimes
politically at odds with him, but they always found him to be a reasonable
opponent who played clean in a game known for its mendacity and
unpricipled moves. A man of integrity, who played fair even with his
opponents, and who could be generous in victory, Eulogio “Amang” Rodriguez
was a man, a politician and a public official of sterling attributes. |