Enrile, Cagayan


', officially the ', is a of the Philippines| in the province of,. According to the, it has a population of people.
Enrile's economy is driven by our agriculture industry, primarily the production of rice, corn, peanuts and mongo crops. Our high school and college graduates have the largest percentage of graduation and promotion to professional occupations in the entire province. In the last 15-years, our community has dramatically risen from a 6th class designation to our current classification of three.
The municipality was named after Spanish governor-general Pasqual Enrile y Alcedo.
Cabug was the original name of Enrile when it was a barrio of Tuguegarao. It was established as a separate town in September 1849 and named in honor of the Spanish Governor General Pascual Enrile during the Spanish regime.
Enrile lies on the southernmost part of Cagayan, bounded by Sta. Maria, Isabela to the south, by the mighty Cagayan River  to the east, by Solana and Tuguegarao to the north, Kalinga to the west.
Enrile is predominantly an agricultural town where the majority of its population derive their income from farming. It has a land area of 18,450 hectares unevenly distributed to the 22-barangays of the municipality. Its main products are rice, corn, peanut, tobacco and vegetables.
Enrile has a total population of 35,834 inhabitants. Its citizens are called Itawit because they speak the Itawit dialect. Ilocanos and Tagalogs have settled at the western barangays and have blended very well in the mainstream of Itawit life.
Enrile is a community of simple and hardworking people. While Enrile has limited natural resources, it takes pride in its human resources. Almost every family in the community has a member that is of the professional class. Enrile is best known as community of intellectuals having the highest literacy rate among all municipalities in the province.

History

The History of Enrile dates as early as 1690. According to Father Juan Paguere, it was just a wide and long stretch of virgin land located at the southern most end of the province of Cagayan. In 1718, the Govierno Superior ordered the place to become one of the barrios of Tuguegarao. It was named “Cabugag” or in short Cabug, the dialect term for hunchback for the first settler was a man with this deformity. So the place was named after him. The name “Cabug” is engraved on the town’s first church bell which is still found in the steeple.
In 1724, The Dominican Friars have thought of giving the barrios their Patron Saint. Cabug was given “Nuestra Señora de las Caldas”. The old prominent residents of the barrio had chosen the sixth day of August as her feast day. As year went by, the land area and population of the barrio increased with surprising rapidly. The Cagayan River which flowed close to the barrio site gradually changed its course and moved further towards Cataggaman as flood plains were formed. The non Christian inhabitants called Kalingas gradually deserted the barrio and moved westward to the Mountain Province. As a result, more agricultural lands were cleared and cultivated. Tobacco and corn are the chief crops of the people.
In September 1849, the Govierno Superior ordered the separation of Cabug from the municipality of Tuguegarao to become a town by itself. The new town was named Enrile in honor of Governor Pascual Enrile who was responsible for building roads in the northern part of Luzon during those days. The separation of Enrile from Tuguegarao led to a change of its patron saint. The population unanimously adopted “Nuestra Señora de las Nieves” as its patron Saint. The fifth day of August was selected as her feast day. Since then the feast day had always been celebrated pompously.
According to Father Julian Malumbres in his Historia de Cagayan, the name “Cabug” was first recorded in the official documents of the Dominican Fathers on January 20, 1849. However the town was known as “Cabug” even up 1863 when the name Enrile was officially written and road in the official documents of the Dominican Fathers. Cabug was the original name of Enrile when it was a barrio of Tuguegarao. It was established as a separate town in September 1849 and named in honor of the Spanish Governor General Pascual Enrile during the Spanish regime.
Enrile lies on the southernmost part of Cagayan, bounded by Sta. Maria, Isabela to the south, by the mighty Cagayan River  to the east, by Solana and Tuguegarao to the north, Kalinga to the west.
Enrile is predominantly an agricultural town where the majority of its population derive their income from farming. It has a land area of 18,450 hectares unevenly distributed to the 22-barangays of the municipality. Its main products are rice, corn, peanut, tobacco and vegetables.
Enrile has a total population of 29,719 inhabitants. Its citizens are called Itawit because they speak the Itawit dialect. Ilocanos and Tagalogs have settled at the western barangays and have blended very well in the mainstream of Itawit life.
Enrile is a community of simple and hardworking people. While Enrile has limited natural resources, it takes pride in its human resources. Almost every family in the community has a member that is of the professional class. Enrile is best known as community of intellectuals having the highest literacy rate among all municipalities in the province.
In 1690, the town of Enrile was a virgin forest on the southernmost portion of the province of Cagayan.
In 1724 or thereabouts, it was named Cabug, a barrio of Tuguegarao City and it now celebrates its feast day on August 6, later changed to August 5, in honor of its Patron Saint Nuestra Senoŕa de las Caldas.
In the chronicle of Fray Julian Manumbres, Cabug as a geographical unit was officially recorded on January 20, 1849. And although the name Enrile was officially written and read in the records of the Dominicans up to 1863, the town of Enrile was still known as “Cabug”.
Kalingas, the early settlers, were later joined by neighbor inhabitants in the cleaning and cultivating its rich soil. They plowed and planted the fields with staple products and tobacco.
With the increasing production and number of educated elders, the Gobierno Superior proclaimed “Cabug” separated from Tuguegarao City in 1849, with a new patroness named Nuestra Senoŕa de las Nieves.
This proclaimed “Cabug” as “Enrile” in honor of Gobernardo General Pascual Enrile, who was responsible for the construction of Luzon’s highways.
Sinupac, a hinterland of Enrile, was the hiding place of Emilio Aguinaldo and his revolutionary forces when they retreated from pursuing American forces.
Today the town of Enrile not only boasts of its peaceful,orderly conditions and its competent professionals, but also of its rapidly growing hog and poultry industry.

Head of Government

Gobernadorcillos

A. Spanish Regime – 1849 to 1896
  1. Don Vicente Bunagan
  2. Don Marcelo Guzman
  3. Don Martin Fortunato
  4. Don Lorenzo de los Reyes
  5. Don Pio Cepeda
  6. Don Mariano Guzman
  7. Don Carlos Argonza
  8. Don Agapito Lappay
  9. Don Pedro Bunagan
  10. Don Vicente Carag
  11. Don Patricio Gacutan
  12. Don Cayatano Fortunato

    Municipal Captain

1. Don Cornelio Bunagan – 1896 – 1898

Municipal Mayors

  1. Vicente Babaran          1900-1902
  2. Tomas Carag                1902-1903
  3. Matias Bunagan          1903-1904
  4. Agapito Guzman         1904-1906
  5. Cipriano Pagulayan           1906-1909
  6. Vicente Babaran              1909-1913
  7. Nicolas Pauig                1913-1917
  8. Generoso Palattao              1917-1920
  9. Pedro Camigad                   1920-1924
  10. Jacinto Camacam               1924-1926
  11. Francisco Turingan            1926-1931
  12. Joaquin Accad                     1931-1935
  13. Felix Babaran                      1935-1943
  14. Rufino Luyun                       1943-1945
  15. Agustin Palattao                  March 1945 to June 30, 1945
  16. Anastacio Luyun                 1945-1946
  17. Jose Babaran                       1947-1951
  18. Gorgenio Manauis             January 1, 1952 to March 27, 1952
  19. Benigno Carag                   Serving the rest of the term of Mayor Manauis, he being the elected Vice Mayor.

    Elected Government Official 2019-2022

Mayor:
  1. Miguel B. Decena Jr.
Vice Mayor:
  1. Expedito C. Taguibao
Sangguniang Bayan Member:
  1. Christina Magbitang                         
  2. Maria Rosabell Herrera                 
  3. Romeo Battung                        
  4. Juan Carag                                         
  5. Sergio Turingan                             
  6. Joseph Amistad                            
  7. Jacinto Tuddao                            
  8. Mercuria Gaffud      
  9. Macario Mabazza
  10. Alfonso Sarmiento

    Geography

Enrile lies on the southernmost part of Cagayan, bounded by Sta. Maria, Isabela to the south, by the mighty Cagayan River to the east, by Solana and Tuguegarao City to the north and by the province of Kalinga to the west.

Topography

Enrile is bounded by hills and mountains on both North and West. Area with low elevation is about 20 meters above sea level at the Eastern part which lies close to the river boundaries. The highest elevation is found Northwest which is approximately 800 meters above sea level.

Land Area

Enrile has a land area of 18,450 hectares unevenly distributed to the 22 barangays of the municipality and predominantly agricultural where the majority of its inhabitants derive their income from farming.

Barangays

Enrile is politically subdivided into 22 barangays.

Demographics

In the, the population of Enrile, Cagayan, was people, with a density of.

Peanut Production

The Department of Agriculture has declared the town of Enrile in Cagayan as the “peanut capital of the Philippines” for its “noteworthy contribution” to the development of the local peanut industry.
Agriculture Secretary Proceso Alcala declared it so following the presentation of evidence of the significant contributions of the town to the peanut industry in the country. DA Assistant Secretary for Agribusiness Leandro Gazmin, who went to Enrile to represent Alcala during the peanut harvest ceremony, said the soil suitability of the town – sandy to sandy-loam – and its unique ability to produce peanut year-round are the “primary reasons why it will be known as an important source of peanut henceforth.”
Gazmin said the Secretary lauds them for their collective effort but that the DA chief requests that they “commit themselves to improve and develop even further not just the peanut industry but the entire agricultural sector as well.”
He said the Secretary is also happy to know that farmers have been receptive to new technologies hence, they are able to increase productivity from 1.5 to 1.8 tons per hectare.
During the peanut harvest, the DA regional office turned over to the local government of Enrile over P4-million worth of farm machineries and equipment, including one unit four-wheel drive tractor, four units of mill for corngrits, 10 heads of carabao, 2,500 kilos of peanut seeds for planting and 300 bags of open-pollinated corn variety.
Though peanut is considered a high value crop by DA, not just in Enrile but in neighboring towns of Peñablanca and Tuguegarao and Sta. Maria and Cabagan in Isabela, the former was chosen as “number one” for having the “highest production share of 1,800 metric tons per year or 8 to10 percent of the national supply.”
Also, Enrile is the only municipality that can cultivate peanuts during the dry and wet season cropping, the DA said.
DA Region II Executive Director Lucrecio Alviar said that per cropping, the town of Enrile is able to produce a big chunk of the national production, making it the major source of raw materials for various peanut-based products processed and sold in Metro Manila.
Enrile is home to 800 peanut farmers cultivating 700 hectares of farmlands with a potential expansion area of another 800 hectares. “With improved production and yield, Enrile may be able to fill up a portion, if not all, of the import requirement for peanut of 15,060 metric tons,” Alviar added.
With the use of technology from DA and the Department of Science and Technology – particularly the use of improved varieties and fertilizers like Boron and Gypsum – the DA is optimistic that “peanut production could reach an all-time high of 3.25 tons per hectare,” or an increase of 200 percent over its current average. The DA said it hopes the farmers can sustain their productivity.
Gazmin also encouraged peanut farmers to bring their harvest to the Isabela Agri-Pinoy Trading Center, where they can directly sell their produce. The Isabela APTC is part of the government’s effort to empower farmers to become traders to enhance their incomes, stabilize food prices and encourage them to produce more. “Let us utilize the center as a venue for cooperativism” and enabling each other to produce and earn more, he said.

Transportation

Passenger jeepneys, tricycles and other private transportation vehicles service all routes within and outside Enrile. Kalesa is also driven within the Poblacion and barangays only.

Local Business

Agro - Trade Fair located at the side of Municipal Hall.
Operator: LGU - Enrile
Kimikarlai Hardware and Construction Services
Operator: Remedios T. Turingan and Lovelai Turingan
Kimikarlai Construction Supply and Services
Operator: Remedios T. Turingan and Lovelai T. Turingan
Kimikarlai Gamefarm
Operator: Robert B. Turingan
Kimikarlai - Turingan Sports Center and Airconditioned Cockpit Arena
Operator: Robert B. Turingan
Lai Gasoline Station
Operator: Lovelai Turingan
Lai Gasoline Station
Operator: Lovelai Turingan
Lai Grains and Palay Gasoline Station
Operator: Lovelai Turingan
M.B. Decena Jr. Livestock
Operator: Miguel B. Decena Jr.