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The Treaty of Manila formally grants independence to the Philippines

On July 4, 1946 C.E., a crowd gathered in Manila as two governments signed a document that ended nearly five decades of American colonial rule. With a stroke of the pen, the United States formally relinquished sovereignty over the Philippines, and the Republic of the Philippines stepped into the world as an independent nation. It was a moment more than half a century in the making — and one that Filipinos had fought, petitioned, and died to reach.

Key facts

  • Philippine independence: The treaty was signed on July 4, 1946 C.E., in Manila by U.S. High Commissioner Paul V. McNutt and Philippine President Manuel Roxas, formally ending U.S. sovereignty.
  • Treaty ratification: The U.S. Senate ratified the agreement on July 31, 1946 C.E.; the Philippines followed on September 30; the treaty entered into force on October 22, 1946 C.E., when ratifications were exchanged.
  • Colonial timeline: The Philippines had declared independence as early as June 12, 1898 C.E., but that declaration was ignored by both Spain and the United States — making the 1946 C.E. treaty the legal culmination of a 48-year struggle.

A sovereignty deferred

The Philippines had seen independence promised, delayed, and redefined across generations. After Commodore George Dewey’s U.S. naval victory at Manila Bay in 1898 C.E., Filipino revolutionary leader Emilio Aguinaldo declared his country’s independence on June 12 of that year, forming the First Philippine Republic. Neither Spain nor the United States recognized it.

Instead, the Treaty of Paris (1898 C.E.) transferred the Philippines from Spain to the United States for $20 million — a transaction concluded without Philippine consent. What followed was the Philippine-American War, a brutal conflict in which an estimated 200,000 to 600,000 Filipino civilians died, according to historians, alongside tens of thousands of combatants on both sides.

Progress toward self-governance came in fragments. The Jones Law of 1916 C.E. created the Philippines’ first fully elected legislature. The Tydings-McDuffie Act of 1934 C.E. set a ten-year timeline toward independence and established the Commonwealth of the Philippines. Then came World War II, Japanese occupation, and liberation — and finally, in 1946 C.E., the formal transfer of sovereignty the Philippine people had been demanding since before the 20th century began.

What the treaty actually did

The Treaty of Manila — formally called the Treaty of General Relations and Protocol — was a compact between two governments recognizing each other as sovereign equals. The United States gave up all claims to the Philippine archipelago. The Republic of the Philippines gained full legal standing in international law.

President Manuel Roxas signed for the Philippines. U.S. High Commissioner Paul V. McNutt signed for the United States. President Harry Truman ratified the treaty on August 14, 1946 C.E. It was a moment of genuine diplomatic significance — but also one layered with economic conditions that complicated the meaning of full independence.

The broader human picture

The Philippines is a nation of more than 7,000 islands and, in 1946 C.E., home to dozens of distinct ethnolinguistic groups — Tagalog, Cebuano, Ilocano, Bisaya, and many others — each with deep histories predating both Spanish and American colonization. The independence recognized in the Treaty of Manila was, for many Filipinos, not the beginning of a national story but the reclaiming of one interrupted.

Filipino scholars, writers, and activists had sustained the idea of nationhood across the colonial period. José Rizal’s novels and essays in the 1880s and 1890s C.E. galvanized a national consciousness. The Katipunan revolutionary movement organized ordinary Filipinos into a fighting force. Women like Gabriela Silang, celebrated as a folk hero, had resisted colonial authority generations earlier. The treaty of 1946 C.E. was the legal endpoint of a movement with deep popular and Indigenous roots.

The date chosen — July 4 — was deliberate on the American side, aligning Philippine independence with U.S. Independence Day. Many Filipinos later found this framing uncomfortable. In 1964 C.E., the Philippine government officially moved its own independence commemoration to June 12, the date of Aguinaldo’s 1898 C.E. declaration, reclaiming the historical reference point on Filipino terms.

Lasting impact

The Treaty of Manila set a precedent in the post-World War II wave of decolonization. Within two decades of the treaty, dozens of nations across Asia and Africa would follow similar paths toward formal sovereignty. The Philippines became one of the earliest examples of a peaceful, negotiated transfer of colonial power in Asia — a model, however imperfect, that others could point to.

The Philippines joined the United Nations as a founding member in 1945 C.E., even before the treaty was signed, and went on to play an active role in regional diplomacy. It was a founding member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in 1967 C.E. — a body that now represents one of the most populous and economically significant regional blocs in the world.

Philippine independence also had cultural ripple effects. Filipino literature, cinema, and music flourished in ways that colonial censors had constrained. The country developed its own constitutional traditions — tested, strained, and renewed across subsequent decades — rooted in the idea that sovereignty ultimately belongs to the people.

Blindspots and limits

The Treaty of Manila was not a clean break. Accompanying legislation, including the Bell Trade Act of 1946 C.E., tied Philippine economic policy closely to U.S. interests — restricting tariff autonomy and granting American citizens equal rights to Philippine natural resources. Critics then and since have called this arrangement a form of economic neo-colonialism that limited what independence could mean in practice.

The treaty also did not resolve longstanding questions about land reform, Indigenous land rights, and the political representation of the Philippines’ many ethnic minorities — questions that remained unresolved for generations and, in some respects, remain contested today. Independence gave the Philippines a seat at the table of nations; it did not automatically deliver justice to everyone within its borders.

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For more on this story, see: Treaty of Manila (1946) — Wikipedia

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