Utilization of archives for research 201
Match documents with other printed or graphic data. Look out for por-
traits of personalities who played important roles in your subject matter. Pho-
tographs of celebrations of holy mass, inaugurations, sacramental rites,
church construction, calamities, funerals, etc. are always useful and should be
gathered. Artists’ sketches, illustrations, and paintings serve the same pur-
pose. Maps may shed light on territorial boundaries, street or town names,
commercial routes, physical features, and many other aspects. Population sta-
tistics, lists of donors, committee memberships, and even advertisements are
also important sources; many of these can be gleaned from souvenir pro-
grams, missalettes, bulletins, prayerbooks, newspapers, calendars, almanacs,
and yearbooks. Sometimes you may have to locate ordinary-looking papers
like student papers, workshop accounts, or lists of tools which, while not ex-
actly archival material, may be useful in reflecting conditions over a period of
time. Don’t forget that news clippings, mementos, and photos may have been
left inserted in old books, recipe collections, bibles, or novenas. Continue fit-
ting all of these in your timeline. [illustrations # 12 - banner in Don Bosco
Makati, 13 - besamano in Mandaluyong, 14 -400 years of Santa Cruz parish].
Scout for tangible memorabilia to complement your timeline. Were com-
memorative medals cast? What about trophies, badges, watches, caps, pen-
nants, banners, posters, souvenir items, cigars, buttons, ballpens, gifts, plates,
stamps? This is like searching for the ‘murder weapon’. Don’t be surprised
that as you collect material such as these, you are contributing to the forma-
tion of a museum. Slowly, you are recreating the ambience of the periods you
are working on. [illustrations # 15, 16, 17: Santa Cruz photo panels].
Visit the sites of the events chronicled in your timeline. Are the monu-
ments, buildings, playing fields, or churches familiar to the characters in your
timeline still standing? How has the skyline changed? Take photographs of
these places and compare them with earlier photos, paintings or illustrations.
While in the field – including visiting other countries – search for inscriptions
on monuments, obelisks, tombstones, streetsigns, or bells, for further mate-
rial. In the Philippines, an old marker commemorates the spot where the first
mass was said in this country; however a number of scholars doubt this claim
and more research is needed. Of interest to Filipinos in Madras is the stone
crest formerly crowning one of the entrances to the old walled city of Intra-
muros; it ended up in the museum in Fort St George, brought by the British
after they left Manila in 1764, after two years of occupation [illustrations #
18, 19: bells in Manaoag, Pangasinan; 20: 18th century beam in Man-
daluyong; 21, historical marker in Santa Cruz; 22: date inscribed on Sta
Cruz church].
Look for data in other recorded forms such as videos, taped interviews
or television programs, or reel recordings. You may have some difficulty