NEGROS OCCIDENTAL| Silay City’s Bernardino Jalandoni Museum

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

The Bernardino Jalandoni Museum in Silay City

Since the Balay Negrense Musuem would not open until 9am, we headed to the nearby Bernardino Jalandoni Museum first which was just a minute’s walk from El Ideal Bakery. We really had no inkling as to what this museum holds, but since we’ve got time to kill, we decided to check it out anyways.
 
The Caroza at the Bernardino Jalandoni Museum in Silay CityA guide greeted us upon entering the museum’s cool and cavernous lobby. It used to be the garage for horses and carriages back in the day. Jorge Po, as he introduced himself, was soon busy escorting us in and around the many corners of the museum.

We started at the ground floor where photographs of the historical mansions around Silay City and the family’s doll collection are displayed. Also parked inside was a caroza with a statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary, which according to our guide is still being paraded during Holy Week around town.

Up the wooden staircase, we were introduced to the opulence of life back when sugar was still a prime commodity and Silay City the center of the trade. This was the era when the city shined like Paris every harvest season. George Po, Bernardino Jalandoni Museum's Guide in Silay City

The floors of the Bernardino Jalandoni Museum were made of thick hardwoods shipped from Mindoro, the ceiling embossed with tin ceiling trays imported from Germany, and intricate wooden furniture dot every corner of the house.
 
This quarter is every antique collector’s wet dream; graceful rocking chairs, opulent chandeliers, intricate rugs, massive tables, elaborate dressers, old-world A Corner of Bernardino Jalandoni Museum in Silay Citybeds and expensive musical instruments like the wooden harp at the living area, the expensive Steinberg Piano and the rare Stradivarius Violin are all housed in it.

Huge family portraits also hang on every wall of the living area and it’s easy to see how this place might give someone the heebie-jeebies.

The tour lasted for almost an hour, with our nifty guide giving anecdotes and what-nots about the pieces around the house, the events that had unfolded in the different rooms, and the people that had once lived there.

And as tour ended and we exited out into the veranda, my mind’s eye saw how the sugar barons of Silay City’s glory days must have stood where I was standing, dressed in garbed clothing and a smoking pipe in hand, keeping watch over the never-ending fields of sugarcanes across the horizon.

Visiting the Bernardino Jalandoni Museum made me realize the rich history of Silay City and gave it a unique character that vastly distinguished it from any other cities I stayed in.

The Main Living Area of Bernardino Jalandoni Museum in Silay City The Bedroom of Bernardino Jalandoni Museum in Silay CityThe Main Living Area of Bernardino Jalandoni Museum in Silay City The Dining Area of Bernardino Jalandoni Museum in Silay City

 

Bernardino-Ysabel Jalandoni Museum
Open Hours: Tuesdays to Sundays and Holidays 9:00AM – 5:00PM
Address: Rizal St., Silay City, Negros Occidental
Contact Number: (34) 495-5093

 

You Might Also Like

7 comments

  1. kudos to the curator/guide. he seems to love having people around. very accomodating.

    ReplyDelete
  2. master whats your itenerary on your bacolod trip?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Lestat
    Sir Jorge was really engaging eh, made the tour very enjoyable

    Jeremiah
    Will finish everything up muna po before posting the itinerary, about two or three more posts to go =)

    ReplyDelete
  4. wow more to come. the best ka talaga master.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Jeremiah
    Thanks ulit bro, itinerary posted na =)

    ReplyDelete
  6. Hoping to go there soon. Ganda ng pictures :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Minnie! Be sure to get a tour guide when exploring the museum, you would appreciate it more with a guide :)

      Delete