Villamor was born in Bangued, Abra on February 1, 1863 to parents Florencio Villamor y García and Wenceslawa Borbón. His father died when he was young. Wanting to be a priest, he attended at the Seminario Conciliar of Vigan,[1]Ilocos Sur but did not push through with the vocation.[2]
In 1882, he studied at the San Juan de Letran in Manila and acquired a bachelor's and master's degrees. At the University of Santo Tomas, he acquired his law degree in March 1893 while completing two-year work on literature and philosophy at the same time. Married to Mariquita Flores,[1] he was the father of five children, including the decorated war veteran Jesus Antonio Villamor.[3]
Career
Academe
He established the College of San Antonio de Padua in 1889,[4] and he was his province's delegate to the Malolos Congress and participated in the drafting of the new Philippine constitution, particularly on the provision of universal education for all. Together with Enrique Mendiola, he co-founded the Liceo de Manila[1] on June 29, 1900,[2] where he was a professor and secretary.[1]
Judiciary
On February 16, 1901, he served as prosecuting fiscal of Pangasinan and then judge of the Court of First Instance of the sixth judicial district, which was composed of Cavite, Laguna, and Tayabas. He then was appointed as Solicitor General from July 17, 1906 to July 1, 1908
In July 1907, Philippine Independence Leader Macario Sakay and his group surrendered under a promise of general amnesty but were later arrested in a deceitful entrapment by American authorities. At the trial at the Court of First Instance, with the use of false witnesses, Sakay and his men were accused of robbery in band, murder, rape, summary executions, arson, kidnapping under the Brigand Act.
On Aug. 6, 1907, Judge Ignacio Villamor (who would become UP president) convicted them. Sakay was later hanged.
He was appointed the president of the University of the Philippines (UP) in 1915, becoming its first Filipino president when he replaced American Murray Bartlett.[1] The school expanded during his term, adding new units like Conservatory of Music[5] and opening the College of Education and the University High School.[6] The Junior College of Liberal Arts in Cebu City was also established. Through the initiative of then Cebu GovernorManuel Roa who petitioned for its establishment on April 30, 1918, it was created by virtue of Act No. 2759 that was backed up by Speaker of the Philippine Commission Sergio Osmeña. When the college opened on July 1, 1918, its first registrar was Paulino Gullas with Dr. Lawrence Wharton as first dean.[3]
After his term at the University of the Philippines ended, he served as Associate Justice of the Supreme Court in 1921 and remained in the position until his retirement.[1][2]
Author
Throughout his career, he had written several published works including Commentaries on the Election Law, Election Frauds and Their Remedies, and others.[7]
The University of Santo Tomas in Her Third Century.
Historical commemoration
Through City Ordinance No. 594 that was enacted on July 10, 1967, the Justice Ignacio Villamor Street, which stretches from Justice Abad Santos up to Gochan Subdivision, Barangay Kasambagan, Cebu City, was named in his honor.[3]
Villamor Hall in University of the Philippines was named after him.
Further reading
Rodriguez, Eulogio Balan. Ignacio Villamor: the Savant and the Man, Bureau of Print (1939)
^ abcOaminal, Clarence Paul (September 27, 2014). "Justice Ignacio Villamor Street". The Freeman through Pressreader. Retrieved May 25, 2019 – via PressReader.