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Poverty incidence of Tarlac City 2.5 5 7.5 10 12.5 15 2006 7.10 2009 8.74 2012 8.50 2015 10.76 2018 5.23 2021 10.01 Source: Philippine Statistics Authority Shopping malls There are several shopping malls established within the city. To name a few, there is the SM City Tarlac, which is the first SM Supermall in the Tarlac Province, located along McArthur Highway in San Roque; Plaza Luisita Mall ...
Poverty incidence of Tarlac 5 10 15 20 2006 18.15 2009 17.50 2012 16.56 2015 16.78 2018 10.46 2021 8.10 Source: Philippine Statistics Authority Rice plantations in Gerona The economy of Tarlac is predominantly agricultural. It is among the biggest producers of rice and sugarcane (the principal crops) in Central Luzon. Other major crops are corn and coconuts, fruits (bananas, calamansi and ...
He also became the nation's youngest vice-governor at 27. He became governor of Tarlac province in 1961 at age 29, then secretary-general of the Liberal Party in 1966. In 1967 he made history by becoming the youngest elected senator in the country's history at age 34. [3]
The Cry of Tarlac (Filipino: Sigaw sa Tarlac, Spanish: Gritos de Tarlac) was an uprising led by General Francisco Macabulos in La Paz, Tarlac in January 1897. Although the province of Tarlac was already classified to be in a state of rebellion even before the uprising, major hostilities unfolded after the cry.
Tarlac National High School (TNHS; Filipino: Pambansang Mataas na Paaralan ng Tarlac), formerly Tarlac High School (Filipino: Mataas na Paaralan ng Tarlac), is a public high school in Tarlac City, Philippines. Established on September 2, 1902 by American Thomasites, it is one of the oldest public high school system in the country. [2]
María Corazón Sumulong Cojuangco was born on January 25, 1933, in Paniqui, Tarlac. [9] She was born to the prominent Cojuangco family. Her father was José Cojuangco, a prominent Tarlac businessman and former congressman, and her mother was Demetria Sumulong, a pharmacist. Both of Aquino's parents were from prominent political families.
Factory laborers quarters, with cane areas of Hacienda Luisita in background, 1929 Aerial view of Central Azucarera de Tarlac, circa 1930s. During the American period, the hacienda supplied almost 20% of America's sugar from 1898 to the 1940s (from the Spanish–American War until World War II) back when the Tabacalera still owned it. [6]
In some very important cases, they did not need to borrow at all. [ 6 ] : 24 " Milner (2011) [ 64 ] suggests that this pattern of adaptation reflects what Wolters (1999) calls "localization," a process by which foreign ideas ("specifically Indian materials" [ 64 ] ) could be "fractured and restated and therefore drained of their original ...