CAMANAVA

CAMANAVA Photographers Club Blog

Who We Are

CAMANAVA Photographers Club is a group form by photo enthusiasts from Freelance, Amateur, and Professionals who are residents of CALOOCAN, MALABON, NAVOTAS and VALENZUELA.

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This Blog exist to serve our fellow CAMANAVA Community and its Visitors to give more facts what is this city is all about.

Send us your inquiry and if you have an old photos and memorabilias that you want to share to the world, let us know and we're happy to post it here together with your website or portfolio.

Navotas City

The entire place of Navotas was once part of Malabon. According to one legend, the long and narrow delta extended unbroken from north to south along the seashore. The strip of land between the former district of Tondo, Manila and this town was eaten away by the sea until an opening was made. Water began to flow through the opening. The geographical change prompted the people to refer to the place as "butas", "nayon ng butas",or "nabutas",a Tagalog word that means breached or pierced through. What began as a natural channel developed into a regular waterway, now known as the Navotas River. In later years, the place came to be known as "Nabotas", then "Navotas".

San Jose de Navotas was the name given to the locality after its patron saint, Saint Joseph. On June 11, 1859, a "Superior Decreto" established a new parish and municipality under the supervision of Friar Matias Navoa. The populace was divided into two distinct groups, the naturales (locals) and the mestizos. Mariano Estrellas was the gobernadorcillo (petty governor) of the naturales and Mariano Israel, of the mestizos. Today, because records are incomplete, recognition is only given to the gobernadorcillos for the mestizos. A school in honor of San Jose was built and known as "San Jose Academy."

In 1904, the town was again merged with Malabon. Bernardo Dagala, a native of Navotas, was elected municipal president.

Source: Wikipedia.org

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