The Augustinian Archives, Vol. 17–18, which recorded the missionary achievements of the
Augustinian missionaries, mentions that in 1617 the missionaries ministered a community then known as Catmon, named after an imposing
katmon tree used as a landmark. The town sat on a rich and fertile plain traversed by the Salug (now
Tigum) and
Aganan rivers, producing rice, corn, sugar, mongo and tobacco. Then Catmon was only a “Visita Catmon” of Jaro vicariate. In 1760, Catmon was established as an independent parish, whose
patron saint was
Santa Barbara and the settlement became a “pueblo” named after her. Its total population at the time was 15,094. In 1845, its population was 19,719 and it covered an area which are now the Municipalities of
Maasin,
Janiuay,
Cabatuan,
Alimodian,
San Miguel,
Zarraga,
New Lucena and parts of
Leganes and
Pavia. When the
Philippine Revolution broke out on
Luzon in 1896, it did not spread immediately to Iloilo. The Spanish authorities thought that they could keep the Ilonggos loyal to Spain. Governador–General Basilio Agustin organized the Volunteer Militia in Iloilo to enlist Ilonggos to fight the
Tagalog rebels. Being a “mestizo” and having occupied the highest office in his town,
Martin Teofilo Delgado was appointed commander of the “voluntaries” in Santa Barbara. Unknown to the Spaniards, however, Delgado had already become a “revolucionario”. On October 28, 1898, he publicly declared himself for the Revolution and seized the municipal building. The
Revolutionary Government of the Visayas was organized and on November 17, 1898, was formally inaugurated at the town plaza of Santa Barbara. A large crowd hailing from many places across Iloilo gathered for the historic occasion. The
Philippine flag was raised for the first time outside of Luzon. Gen.
Adriano Hernández y Dayot headed the
Ejército Libertador or the Liberating Army in the province of Iloilo. The officials of the Revolutionary Government were Roque Lopez, president; Vicente Franco, vice president and secretary of the interior; Venancio Concepcion, secretary of finance; Ramon Avanceňa, secretary of state; Jovito Yusay, secretary of justice; Julio Hernández y Dayot, secretary of war; Fernando Salas, secretary general. General Martin T. Delgado was chosen General –in-Chief of the Revolutionary Forces. Santa Barbara became the headquarters of the Revolutionary Forces and from here, Gen. Delgado launched the campaign to liberate the whole province which culminated in the surrender of Iloilo City by Governor-General de los Rios on December 24, 1898. The victory against Spain was short-lived as the
Philippine–American War followed. Gen. Delgado led the same army against Americans from 1899 to 1901. Delgado was forced to surrender on February 2, 1901. As
Iloilo governor,
Adriano Hernández y Dayot introduced the first irrigation system in
San Miguel and Santa Barbara in 1910. Upon the establishment of the civil government, Martin Delgado was appointed as the first provincial Governor of Iloilo and was elected to the same position in the first elections held in 1903. Santa Barbara became a town under American regime and was incorporated into a municipality by the
Commonwealth Government. The town soon began to progress. In 1948,
Barangay Tuburan-Solbud was transferred to
Zarraga,
Iloilo. Towards the end of the last term allowed to him by the Philippine Constitution,
Ferdinand Marcos placed the Philippines under
martial law in 1972. This marked the beginning of a 14-year period of one-man rule, historically remembered for
its human rights abuses One of the prominent torture-related deaths during this period was that of 2lt
Pablo G. Fernandez, who objected to martial law, and as a result was caught, detained, and summarily executed at an unspecified "military camp in Santa Barbara" Booming developments in Santa Barbara began after the opening of the
Iloilo International Airport in
Cabatuan in 2007, as Santa Barbara serves as a thoroughfare to Iloilo City. Developers, including
Megaworld's Global-Estate Resorts, were drawn to Santa Barbara and invested in a
mixed-use development near the airport. Santa Barbara is also poised to become a hub for provincial and regional government offices, as the
Iloilo Provincial Government is gradually relocating government offices from Iloilo City to their new site in Santa Barbara, aiming to alleviate congestion in the city. ==Geography==