Spanish colonization The 1818 Spanish census showed the area had 1,729 native families and 19 Spanish-Filipino families. Bacoor was one of the flashpoints of the
Cavite Mutiny of 1872. Bacoor's parish priest at that time,
Fr. Mariano Gómez, was one of the
GOMBURZA trio implicated in the mutiny for advocating the
secularization of
priesthood in the Philippines. He and the rest of GOMBURZA were executed at
Bagumbayan in 1872. The death of the GOMBURZA served as the inspiration for
Jose Rizal's
El Filibusterismo, which in turn influenced the ignition of the
Philippine Revolution. (Cuenca Ancestral House) served as the headquarters of the Philippine revolutionary government in 1898. During the Philippine Revolution against Spain in 1896, Bacoor was among the first towns in Cavite to rise in revolt. A local
Katipunan chapter, codenamed Gargano and led by Gil Ignacio of Barrio Banalo, initiated hostilities in Bacoor on September 2, 1896, three days after the outbreak of the revolution. On February 17, 1897, a force of approximately 40,000 under General
Emilio Aguinaldo's engaged a 20,000-strong Spanish reinforcement at the Zapote River. Filipino troops fortified the southern bank with trenches designed by engineer
Edilberto Evangelista. Edilberto Evangelista was known as the "Engineer of the revolution" and the "Hero of the revolution". They also blew up the Zapote Bridge with explosives which killed several Spaniards crossing it and thereby preventing them from reaching Cavite and forcing them to retreat to
Muntinlupa. Despite the Filipino victory, they lost the brilliant Evangelista who was killed in action. However, after the Spanish counteroffensive in May 1897, Bacoor and the rest of Cavite finally fell to the Spaniards, forcing Aguinaldo and his men to retreat to
Biak-na-Bato. Zapote Bridge's special place in Philippine history is depicted today in Bacoor's city seal. On October 15, 1903, the
Philippine Commission enacted Act No. 947, merging Bacoor and
Perez-Dasmariñas with
Imus. Bacoor was reconstituted as an independent municipality on October 24, 1906 by virtue of Act No. 1551, thus separating it from Imus.
Japanese occupation During World War II, in 1942, Japanese occupation forces entered Bacoor and other towns of Cavite province. From May 7, 1942, to August 15, 1945, many Caviteños joined the Cavite Guerrilla Unit (CGU), a recognized guerrilla group headed by Colonel Mariano Castañeda. This group would eventually become the Filipino-American Cavite Guerrilla Forces (FACGF). Colonel Francisco Guerrero and the FACGF's 2nd Infantry Regiment was put in charge of Japanese resistance in Bacoor. The FAGCF, together with Filipino soldiers under the 4th, and 42nd Infantry Division of the Philippine Commonwealth Army liberated Bacoor. The 4th Constabulary Regiment of the Philippine Constabulary defeated the Japanese Imperial Army forces from January 1, to August 15, 1945, during the
Allied liberation of the Philippines.
Philippine independence In 1972, Bacoor became a center of commemoration for the centennial of the martyrdom of the
Gomburza and its beloved parish priest Padre
Mariano Gomez. The celebrations were headed by Mayor
Pablo Gomez Sarino, a relative of Fr. Gomez, which included the turnover of a historical marker to the town of Bacoor. On June 21, 1988, Mayor Angelito Miranda was assassinated in front of a hospital in
Las Piñas by two gunmen, which the police claimed to be from a notorious drug syndicate.
Cityhood During the 1990s and 2000s, Bacoor attempted to achieve cityhood status due to its growing population and tax income, with several cityhood bills filed in Congress in 1997, 2000 and 2007. On July 25, 2011, President
Benigno Aquino III signed into law Republic Act No. 10160 creating the City of Bacoor. wherein majority of the town's participated registered voters favored the cityhood. With the incorporation of Bacoor as a city, it was divided into two legislative districts, Bacoor West and Bacoor East. During the 2013 mid-term elections, the citizens of Bacoor voted for six councilors for each of the two districts. On April 12, 2019, President
Rodrigo Duterte signed into law Republic Act No. 11274, amending Section 10(B) of RA No. 10160; as a result, eight barangays had their names P.F. Espiritu corrected to Panapaan, and another, Zapote V, which was inadvertently omitted in the list provided by an earlier law, was included as part of Bacoor West.
2023 plebiscite On March 28, 2023, the city government passed
City Ordinance No. 275-2023, signed by mayor
Strike Revilla, pursuant to the
Local Government Code of 1991. for the conduct of the plebiscite, which was set on July 29. A plebiscite was held in 223 clustered precincts across 22 voting centers, as well as in the city jail, The plebiscite results were announced after midnight of July 30. Local officials had argued that once ratified, the merger of 44 barangays will increase their annual income by about 147–197%. COMELEC said that the city's 223 clustered precincts will be decreased for
the upcoming nationwide barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan elections in October. ==Geography==