According to archival researches of Fr. Jose Maria Luengo, a priest, historian, and founder of the
Mater Dei College in
Tubigon, Talibon traces its history back to the time of Portuguese conquistador
Ferdinand Magellan after his death on 27 April 1521. Escaping from the hands of
Lapu-Lapu's men who were bent on taking revenge for the rape of 50 virgins in Cebu, the crew of the ship
Trinidad sailed towards the direction of
Getafe and Talibon, where some of them disembarked and mingled with the natives of the place. After settling in the area, members of the crew took native wives and introduced them to the basic teachings of Christianity. They dedicated their settlement to the Most Holy Trinity (*Santísima Trinidad*) in honor of the patrons of their ill-fated ship. Some crew members, including Gonzalo Gómez de Espinosa and Ginés de Mafra, later became the first lay missionaries in Talibon. Fr. Luengo referred to them as the “Trinidad Christians of Talibon.” In 1830, Talibon was established as an independent municipality from
Inabanga. The following year, Talibon had become a dedicated parish to the Most Holy Trinity, with Fr. Ramon de Santa Ana as the first Spanish parish priest. At first, a ramshackle hut built by the natives served as the church but in 1852, construction of the permanent church was started. With
forced labor and the use of blocks of coral rocks, the church was built on an elevated plain overlooking the sea and was finished in 1899. In June 1942, the locals woke up one morning to see truckloads of heavily armed troops of the
Imperial Japanese Army's 175th Infantry Battalion in Poblacion. It was the first entry of the Japanese troops in the comparatively peaceful town. Before properly settling down, the Talibon Central Elementary School became the headquarters of the Japanese soldiers. After a few days, the invaders ransacked the cabinets in the municipal building for important records. They went from house to house, rounded up the civilians, and ordered them to stay at the municipal hall. Through an interpreter, a Japanese intelligence officer named 1st Lt. Mitsuo Kimura inquired for the municipal officials and after learning they had fled, he ordered the people to organize a civil government by electing the necessary officials. The Japanese threatened to burn all the houses and buildings in Poblacion if the people failed to organize the government. To save the town from the possibility of being reduced to ashes, the people organized a civil government and appointed the young lawyer Atty. Maximino C. Boiser as municipal mayor. During the height of World War II, a guerrilla force against the Japanese 175th Infantry Battalion was secretly organized and then took control and authority over the town of Talibon. Former Senator
Carlos P. Garcia acted as high adviser of the group. While Talibon was under Japanese occupation, he narrowly escaped capture by fleeing with his family to
Leyte. In reprisal, the Japanese soldiers in Talibon, through the leadership of battalion commander Maj. Ichiro Tokogawa, burned down the Garcia house on 4 July 1942 and tortured volunteer guard Cesario Avergonzado for allegedly misleading them. Later on in 1943, Atty. Maximino C. Boiser, the municipal mayor of Talibon at that time, was executed by the guerillas for conspiring with the Japanese forces according to local witnesses. In 1947, by virtue of
Executive Order No. 80 signed by
President Manuel Roxas, fifteen
barrios from Talibon, along with three from
Ubay, were segregated and organized into a separate municipality of
Trinidad. Ipil, one of its former
barrios, was designated as the new municipality's seat of government. In 1957, when
Carlos P. Garcia became the eighth
president of the Philippines, the church was renovated under his initiative. According to the members of the prominent Boiser family of Talibon, the president would regularly visit Mr. Justo C. Boiser's house in Poblacion just to have lunch with him and his family as both sides were politically related. One of Justo's well-established children, Atty. Ramon L. Boiser, is a witness to how the two families talked about politics, interests, and future plans for Talibon's development. In honor of the Boisers in Talibon, a street was named after the family, which is located still in Poblacion. In 1986, the Diocese of Talibon was created. ==Geography==