Location :
57 kms N of Cebu City
Area : 9,635
hectares
No. of Barangays :
20
Town Fiesta :
February 10
Patron Saint : San
Guillermo de Aquitania
Major Occupation :
farming
Principal Products :
corn
Places of Interest :
beach resorts
Historical Notes
Comilang relates that long ago,
Catmon was once a dreary colony of heathen natives. It was nothing more than
a cluster of native cogon huts, that queue like mushrooms in the glade
beneath tall trees that stand like green palisades along the hillsides and
along the sandy beaches. A big tree called catmon also grew abundantly in
the area.
One particularly big tree with
outspreading branches was the favorite resting place for natives. It was
there that at one time, as the legend goes, where the Spaniards came upon
natives lazily lolling under the shades of the Catmon tree. Interested to
know the name of the locality, one asked : Como se llama este lugar?
Confounded as to what he meant, an Indio nevertheless answered: Catmon.
He of course presumed that the conquistadores were referring to the tree.
The name was accordingly given to the town.
One of the barangays of Catmon, five
kilometers from Catmon proper, is called Catmandaan, meaning old Catmon.
This was the original site of the municipality. The public market is still
in this place. The Poblacion is now along the seacoast.
During the revolution of 1898, Catmon
figured prominently when in barrio Cambakay in Capayan mountain, Gen Maxilom
retreated after his forces were defeated by the Americans. As his temporary
headquarters, here he issued orders to his scattered remaining troops.
Catmon was also actively involved in
the resistance movement during World War II
Construction of the church started by
Fr. Miguel de Jesus was made in 1835. But it was made only of nipa and
cogon. Fr, Juan Juseu in 1854 replaced it with stones and corals taken from
quarries seven to eight kilometers away. Fr. Jose Miramon completed the dome
of the belfry in 1873 and Fr. Francisco Bargasa put up the roofing and the
altar.
The municipal building was started in
1912 by Municipal President Montecillo and completed in 1917.
Kilometer 47 or
Hinagdan Beach
Km. 47 or Hinagdan Beach, opened to the public in
1957. Its owner, Pantaleon Kianiko recalls that there used to be no
access leading down to the beach area. The family, he says, had to carve
out the stair-way by hand a little at a time. It was only in recent
years that the small cottages and concrete stairs were completed.
Judging from the uneven depression of some parts
of the beach however, it would seem that sand has been extracted to
concrete the stairs and floors of the beachfront cottages.
There are no fancy amenities around, but raw
nature really does something to the sense. A section of the beach is a
natural cave-like channel used by some of the young beach goers as a
dressing room.
With massive overhanging cliffs, the beach area
looks stunning. The cottages overlooking the sea more charming than the
manicured look of the more developed ones in Mactan. Also offers a
selection of either shallow or deep waters, the latter apparently cause
by sand extraction.
Hinagdan Beach has 120 steps or so of uneven
stairs. Fish species of different colors were visibly doing business
about the waters.