29/08/2025
đ Kinsaây moapil? Letâs bring back the good vibes! đ
Did you know Cebu had its own âFast & Funnyâ racesâbut with horses and tartanillas?
đĽ Throwback to the Tartanilla Races of the 1930s:
Kutseros in full swag, decorated carriages, cheering crowdsâand winners not just by speed, but by style and punchlines! đđ
Way back in the 1930s, downtown Cebu had its own version of street racingâbut instead of motorcycles or cars, it was tartanillas (yes, those horse-drawn carriages!) tearing through the old cobblestone roads of Colon, Pasil, and Pari-an.
During fiestas or special town events, driversâcalled âkutserosââwould dress up in their sharpest barong, decorate their tartanillas with colorful buntings, and race for pride (and sometimes a lechon!). Crowds would cheer, kids would climb onto lamp posts, and bets would secretly fly. It wasnât just a ride⌠it was a spectacle.
And the best part? These races werenât always about speed. Sometimes, the most stylish tartanilla or funniest kutsero punchline won the day. Imagine TikTok-worthy moments happening every turn!
But as modernization galloped in, cars took over, and the tartanilla showdown faded into memoryâexcept in whispered stories from lolo and lola.
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đ So the next time you see a tartanilla clip-clopping near Fort San Pedro and along the streets of Pasil and Carbon, just know: they used to be Cebuâs version of Fast & Furious. đđ¨đ´
đ Like, share, and tag your lolo/lola who might still remember this!
Letâs keep Cebuâs cool and quirky history aliveâone laugh, one lechon memory at a time! đđ
29/08/2025
đĄ Did you know that Cebu once had its own âLuneta Parkâ by the sea?
A hundred years ago, families in Cebu City would flock to Plaza Libertadâa beautiful seaside park that stretched along todayâs port area, near where the MalacaĂąang sa Sugbo stands. Imagine it as the âIT Park hangoutâ of its time, but instead of cafĂŠs and BPO hubs, you had benches under big acacia trees, kids running around, and couples strolling while watching the ships dock. đâľ
It was the place to unwind, people-watch, and feel the cityâs pulse. Sunday afternoons were especially livelyâthink of it like the 1920s version of going to Ayala Terraces or SM Seasideâs Sky Park.
Sadly, as Cebu modernized and the port expanded, Plaza Libertad slowly disappeared from the map. Today, you wonât find the seaside park anymoreâit lives only in old photos and stories from our great-grandparents.
So next time youâre chilling by SRP or strolling around Plaza Independencia, just imagine the vibes of Plaza Libertadâa Cebuano hangout spot that once defined the cityâs weekends. â¨
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29/08/2025
Imagine Cebu in the 1870s. No SRP, no bridges, no skyscrapersâjust cobblestone streets, kalesas (horse-drawn carriages), and a growing downtown that smelled of both saltwater and fresh abaca fiber.
Now hereâs the cool partâabaca (aka Manila h**p) was Cebuâs âcryptoâ back then.
By the mid-1800s, Cebu became a global trading hub for abaca, that tough fiber used for ropes and ship rigging. Thanks to British and American demand (their ships needed those ropes), Cebu was suddenly on the international radar. Traders were flooding in, warehouses were being built near the pier, and mestizo merchants were becoming the OG Cebuano entrepreneurs.
And hereâs a fun twist: while Manila was still the star of Spanish Philippines, Cebu was quietly building its own âstartup sceneâ through abaca exports. Farmers in the provinces brought raw fiber, Cebuâs middlemen graded and sold it, and foreign ships carried it off to the world.
The boom was so big that it changed Cebuâs social lifeâsuddenly, there were more schools, printing presses, and even cafĂŠs popping up. The wealthy locals (mestizos and ilustrados) started sending their kids to Manila or even Spain for education. This set the stage for a new generation of Cebuanos who would later push for reforms and independence.
So, if you think about it, 150 years ago Cebu was already hustling in the global marketânot with BPOs or TikTok content, but with abaca ropes powering the worldâs ships. Very Cebuano thing again: find the demand, fill it, and build a future from it.
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⨠Cebu in 1875 wasnât just a provincial townâit was low-key becoming the fiber capital of the world, and that hustle helped shape the city we know today.
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28/08/2025
So picture this: Cebu in the 1820s wasnât yet the bustling âQueen City of the Southâ we know today. It was more like a sleepy but strategic Spanish colonial port town. No Ayala Center, no IT Parkâjust galleons, friars, and traders.
Hereâs the interesting partâCebu was booming in secret trade.
Spain had this strict rule called the Galleon Trade Monopoly (only ManilaâAcapulco ships could do legit international trade). But by 1825, the monopoly had already ended (1815), and Cebu was like: âFinally, we can join the game!â
Cebuâs harbor quietly became a hotspot for illegal but thriving maritime trade. Chinese junks, British merchants from Singapore, and even local Visayan traders were sneaking in goodsâcotton, to***co, abaca (the OG eco-friendly fiber), and rice. Imagine Cebu as a low-key âunderground Amazon marketplaceâ back then.
And hereâs the twistâwhile Manila was still super formal and bureaucratic, Cebu folks were more relaxed. Merchants, mestizos, and locals found ways to hustle by blending legit farming with semi-smuggled goods. The friars werenât always happy (they wanted control), but the people were like: âBro, this is how we eat.â
This underground economy actually laid the foundation for Cebuâs rise as a commercial hub later in the 19th century. So in a way, Cebuâs âside hustle cultureâ started way back in the 1820s.
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⨠So yeahâ200 years ago, Cebu wasnât just praying novenas and chilling by the plaza. People were already hustling, finding loopholes, and turning the island into a trade hotspot. Very Cebuano thing, right?
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đ¸ Photo Credit to the rightful owner.