<html><p>What kind of city was waiting for Dutch scholar Gerret Pieter Rouffaer when he got to Manila?</p><p>After more than a decade of occupation, the Americans had given the colonial capital some thorough nips and tucks. Aside from the glimmering roads and shady plazas, the Americans also laid down more tramways. Trams were already up and running during the latter part of the Spanish occupation, but in 1905, the US rehabilitated the old system. Unlike the old Spanish versions, these new streetcars barrelled along on double-wheeled trucks and could fit fifty people. They also ran on electricity. </p><p>When Rouffaer arrived in the Philippines, he took the tranvia everywhere, and wrote down his snarky observations in a diary. Let’s see what he had to say.</p><p></p><p>Support the podcast:<a href="https://patreon.com/thecolonialdept" target="_blank"> </a><u><a href="https://patreon.com/thecolonialdept" target="_blank">patreon.com/thecolonialdept</a></u></p><p>Follow us on IG: <u><a href="https://www.instagram.com/thecolonialdept/" target="_blank">@thecolonialdept</a></u></p><p>Follow us on TikTok: <u><a href="https://www.tiktok.com/@thecolonialdept" target="_blank">@thecolonialdept</a></u></p><p>Email us: <u><a href="mailto:
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[email protected]</a></u></p><p></p><p>References:</p><p>Muijzenberg, Otto Van Den (ed., trans.) (2016). <em>Colonial Manila 1909-1912: Three Dutch Travel Accounts. </em>Ateneo de Manila University Press.</p><p>Rodell, Paul A. (1974). “Philippine ‘Seditious Plays.’” <em>Asian Studies, 12</em>(1), pp. 88-118.</p><p>Pante, Michael D. (2016). “Urban Mobility and a Healthy City Intertwined Transport and Public Health Policies in American-Colonial Manila.” <em>Philippine Studies: Historical & Ethnographic Viewpoints, 64</em>(1), pp. 73-101.</p><p>Morley, Ian (2016). “Modern Urban Designing in the Philippines, 1898–1916.” <em>Philippine Studies: Historical & Ethnographic Viewpoints, 64</em>(1), pp. 3-42.</p><p>Gardini, Ashley (8 July 2025). “Daniel Burnham in the Philippines.” <em>JSTOR Daily. </em></p><p>Cubeiro, Didac (2017). “Modernizing the Colony: Ports in Colonial Philippines, 1880-1908.” <em>World History Connected.</em></p><p>RailwaysPh. “Tranvías de Manila y Corregidor: Notable Heritage Tram Systems” (15 November 2020). <em>Renacimiento Manila.</em></p><p>Sison, Norman (21 April 2015). “LRT expansions remind of tranvia days.” <em>Vera Files. </em></p><p>Scott, William Henry (1984). <em>Prehispanic Source Materials for the Study of Philippine History </em>(revised edition). New Day Publishers.</p></html>