Baliwag City, (; , Kapampangan: Lakanbalen ning Baliwag/Siudad ning Baliwag,), is a component city in the province of Bulacan, Philippines. According to the , it has a population of people.

The name Baliwag, hispanized as Baliuag, is an old Kapampangan word for "untouched.". However, both names were confused by locals, the term 'Baliwag' refers to the entire city, while 'Baliuag' for the city's proper/downtown (commonly referred to as Baliuag Bayan/Baliuag Loob). It was founded in 1732 by Augustinian friars and was incorporated by the Spanish Governor-General on May 26, 1733. It was carved out from the town of Quingua (now Plaridel).

Through the years of Spanish domination, Baliuag was predominantly agricultural. People had to depend on rice farming for the main source of livelihood. Orchards and tumanas yielded fruits and vegetables, which were sold in the public market. Commerce and industry also played important contributions to the economy of the people. Buntal hat weaving in Baliwag together with silk weaving popularly known in the world as Thai silk; the manufacturer of cigar cases, piña fibers, petates (mats), and Sillas de Bejucos (cane chairs) all of the fine quality became known in many parts of the world. The local market also grew. During the early part of the 19th century, Baliwag was already considered one of the most progressive and richest towns in Bulacan. The growth of the public market has significantly changed the model of the economy of the city.

Baliwag is the major commerce, transportation, entertainment, and educational center of Northern Bulacan.

On July 22, 2022, Republic Act No. 11929 lapsed into law. The said measure converted the municipality into a component city and standardized its name as the City of Baliwag. On December 17, 2022, a plebiscite was held, 17,814 residents voted in favor of conversion to a component city while only 5,702 voted against.

History

Fr. Joaquín Martínez de Zúñiga, OSA, a friar, in his "1803 Historia de las Islas Filipinas" Fr. Diez served as the longest cura parroco of Baliuag from 1789, having built the church and convent from 1790 to 1801.

Spanish records "Apuntes históricos de la provincia augustiniana del Santísimo Nombre de Jesús de Filipinas" reveal that Fr. Juan de Albarran, OSA was assigned Parish Priest of Baliuag in 1733. The first baptism in Baliuag Church was ordered by Fr. Lector and Fr. Feliz Trillo, Provincial of the Province on June 7, 1733, while Baliuag was founded and began its de jure existence on May 26, 1733. The pueblo or town was created in the provincial Chapter on May 15, 1734, with the appointment of Fr. Manuel Bazeta/Baseta as first cura parroco.

In 1769–1774, the Church of Baliuag was built by Father Gregorio Giner. The present structure (the third church to be rebuilt, due to considerable damage during the 1880 Luzon earthquakes) was later rebuilt by Father Esteban Diaz using mortar and stone. The 1866 Belfry was also completed by Father Matias Novoa but the July 19, 1880, quake damaged the same which was later repaired by Father Thomas Gresa.

The earthquake of June 3, 1863, one of the strongest to ever hit Manila, destroyed the Governor's Palace in Intramuros. Malacañang then became the permanent residence of the head of the country. The massive quake also damaged the Baliuag Church. In 1870, the reconstruction began when a temporary house of worship, the “Provincial”, along Año 1733 street, emerged as a narrow, and simple edifice which later used by the RVM Sisters of the Colegio de la Sagrada Familia (now St. Mary's College of Baliuag) as the classroom. Antonio de Mesa, “Maestrong Tonio" fabricated the parts to have finished the Spanish-era Baliuag Church.

Baliwag City was the 10th town founded by the Augustinians in the province of Bulacan.

150px|thumbnail|right|Plaza Baliwag 1899 election marker

150px|thumbnail|right|Bulwagang Francisco Guerrero

150px|thumbnail|right|Francisco Guerrero

First Municipio

Baliuag had 30 curates (1733–1898): Fr. Esteban Diez Hidalgo and Fr. Fausto Lopez served 40 and 24 years, respectively. Fr. Lopez had 6 children with a beautiful native, Mariquita: Dr. Joaquin Gonzalez, Francisco, the former Assemblyman Ricardo Lloret Gonzales (Legislative districts of Bulacan, 5th Philippine Legislature), and Jose the eldest who was widely known as “Pepeng Mariquita", inter alia. Spanish cura parroco, Fr. Ysidoro Prada served in Baliuag during the last decade of the Spaniard regime.

The Philippine-American civil and military authorities supervised the first municipal elections, having chosen Baliuag as the site of the 1899 Philippine local elections, the first Philippine elections of May 7, 1899. Francisco Guererro was elected the First Presidente Municipal. The Filipinos gathered at the plaza of the St. Augustine Church after the Holy Mass, and thereafter the officials were selected based on the qualifications for voters set by the Americans.

The first town Gobernadorcillo (1789 title) of Baliuag was Cap. Jose de Guzman. He was assisted by the Tribunal's teniente mayor (chief lieutenant), juez de ganadas (judge of the cattle), juez de sementeras (judge of the field) and juez de policia (judge of the police). In the History of the Philippines (1521–1898), the 1893 Maura Law, the title of Gobernadorcillo became "capitan municipal" and that of each juez to teniente. From Baliuag's independence from Quingua, now Plaridel, Bulacan to 1898, 49 served as capitan, 13 alcalde and 92 as Gobernadorcillo. Felix de Lara (1782) and Agustin de Castro (1789) were the 1st alcalde and Gobernadorcillo, respectively. Municipal President Fernando Enrile, in 1908, honored some of these officials, even naming some of Baliuag calles in their honor, later. But all these political officials remained under the thumbs and the habito, of the autocratic Augustinian friars, the Baliuag Kura Parokos.

Don Mariano Ponce

Mariano Ponce was a native of Baliuag. He was a founding member of the Propaganda Movement together with José Rizal and Marcelo del Pilar; a former assemblyman of the second district of Bulacan to the Philippine Assembly; and the co-founder of La Solidaridad with fellow co-founder Graciano López-Jaena. His most common names are Naning (the Plaza Naning in Baliuag being named after his nickname); Kalipulako, named after the Cebuano hero Lapulapu; and Tagibalang or Tigbalang (Tikbalang), a supernatural being in Filipino folklore.

American period

The local government of Baliuag used as first Municipio under the American regime (History of the Philippines (1898–1946)) the Mariano Yoyongko (Gobernadorcillo in 1885) Principalia in Poblacion (now a part of the market site), which it bought from Yoyongko.

On September 15, 1915, Baliuag municipality bought the heritage mansion and a lot of Dr. Joaquin Gonzalez. The Gonzalez old mansion served as Lumang Municipio (the Old Municipio or Town Hall Building, as the seat of the local government) for 65 years. It is now the Baliuag Museum and Library.

Baliuag produced not less than 30 priests, including 3 during the Spanish-Dominican, and 2 Jesuits during the American regimes.

Jeorge Allan R. Tengco and Amy R. Tengco (wife of Lito S. Tengco), philanthropists, owners of Baliwag Transit and other chains of business establishments had been conferred the Papal Orders of Chivalry October 3, 2000 Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice and the 2012 Dame of the Order of St. Gregory the Great awards.

Fifth Republic

On June 16, 1995, communist guerrilla Melencio Salamat Jr., a local leader of the New People's Army (NPA) in Bulacan, surrendered to the authorities along with 94 other members of the NPA at the Baliwag municipal building. Prior to the surrender, Salamat's group was responsible for collecting "revolutionary taxes" from residents along the coastal towns of Bulacan, and had chosen to give up arms after NPA officials were killed on April 28 in Barangay Catulinan, Baliwag.

Cityhood

thumb|Former flag of Baliwag used until 2022, before cityhood

In 2018, the Sangguniang Bayan filed a resolution to request Bulacan 2nd District Representative Gavini Pancho, to file a house bill to convert Baliuag into a city.

Representatives Eric Go Yap (ACT-CIS Partylist) and Paolo Duterte (Davao City–1st) filed House Bill No. 7362, seeking to convert Baliuag into a city. House Bill No. 7362 was filed last August 12, 2020, for the conversion of the municipality of Baliuag into a component city in the province of Bulacan. House Bill No. 10444, filed by the three aforementioned representatives, was concurred by the Senate and submitted to the President for signature on June 29, 2022, a day before the end of the 18th Congress.

250px|thumbnail|right|COMELEC Chairman [[George Garcia visits Baliwag cityhood poll personnel]]

The bill lapsed into law without the President's signature on July 30, 2022 as Republic Act No. 11929. The plebiscite was originally set by the Commission on Elections on January 14, 2023, but its date was later moved to December 17, 2022, following the postponement of the December 2022 Barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan Elections to October 2023.

Despite having a low voter turnout, majority of participated voters ratified the cityhood, making Baliwag the Bulacan's fourth component city and the country's 148th.

Geography

With the continuous expansion of Metro Manila, Baliwag is part of Manila's built-up area which reaches San Ildefonso, Bulacan at its northernmost part.

Baliwag is from Malolos, from Manila, and from Pulilan.

Barangays

thumb|A white map of the City of Baliwag, with the names of its 27 barangays.

Baliwag is politically subdivided into 27 barangays, as shown in the matrix below. Each barangay consists of puroks and some have sitios.

<!-- arranged by PSGC for easier updates in the future -->

Feast and Patron Saints of each Barangays

{| class="wikitable Sortable" style="text-align:center;"

|-

! scope=“col” style=“width:25%;” | Barangay

! scope="col" style="width:25%;" | Patron

! scope="col" style="width:25%;" | Feast Day

! scope="col" style="width:25%;" | Parish

|-

! scope="row" | Bagong Nayon

| Our Mother of Perpetual Help

| June 27

| Diocesan Shrine and Parish of St. Augustine - Baliwag

|-

! scope="row" | Barangka

| Nuestro Padre Jesus Nazareno

| January 9

| Sagrada Famila Parish - Tangos

|-

! scope="row" | Calantipay

| Nuestra Señora dela Paz y Buen Viaje

| May 2

| Nuestra Señora delas Flores Parish - Virgen Delas Flores

|-

! scope="row" | Catulinan

| San Roque

| August 16

| Sagrada Familia Parish - Tangos

|-

! scope="row" | Concepcion

| Immaculate Conception

| December 8

| Immaculate Conception Parish - Concepcion

|-

! scope="row" | Hinukay

| San Roque

| August 16

| Sagrada Familia Parish - Tangos

|-

! scope="row" | Makinabang

| Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary

| October 7

| Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary Parish - Makinabang

|-

! scope="row" | Matangtubig

| Sagrada Familia

| Sunday after Christmas

| Nuestra Señora delas Flores Parish - Virgen Delas Flores

|-

! scope="row" | Pagala

| San Isidro Labrador

| May 15

| Sagrada Familia Parish - Tangos

|-

! scope="row" | Paitan

| St. James the Great

| July 25

| Sagrada Familia Parish - Tangos

|-

! scope="row" | Piel

| St. Anthony of Padua

| June 13

| Sagrada Familia Parish - Tangos

|-

! scope="row" | Pinagbarilan

| St. Lucy of Syracuse

| December 13

| Nuestra Señora delas Flores Parish - Virgen Delas Flores

|-

! scope="row" | Poblacion

| St. Augustine of Hippo

| August 27

| Diocesan Shrine and Parish of St. Augustine - Baliwag

|-

! scope="row" | Sabang

| St. Helena

| May 5

| Our Lady of Mt. Carmel Parish - Sabang

|-

! scope="row" | San Jose

| St. Joseph, Spouse of Virgin Mary

| March 19

| Diocesan Shrine and Parish of St. Augustine - Baliwag

|-

! scope="row" | San Roque

| San Roque

| August 16

| Sagrada Familia Parish - Tangos

|-

! scope="row" | Santa Barbara

| Sta. Barbara

| December 4

| Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary Parish

|-

! scope="row" | Santo Cristo

| Señor Sto. Cristo

| May 3

| Diocesan Shrine and Parish of St. Augustine - Baliwag

|-

! scope="row" | Santo Niño

| Sto. Niño

| Third Sunday of January

| Sagrada Familia Parish - Tangos

|-

! scope="row" | Subic

| Our Lady of Lourdes

| February 11

| Diocesan Shrine and Parish of St. Augustine - Baliwag

|-

! scope="row" | Sulivan

| Our Lady of Fatima

| May 13

| Sagrada Familia Parish - Tangos

|-

! scope="row" | Tangos

| Holy Family

| Sunday after Christmas

| Sagrada Familia Parish - Tangos

|-

! scope="row" | Tarcan

| Sacred Heart of Jesus

| Friday after Corpus Cristi

| Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary Parish - Makinabang

|-

! scope="row" | Tiaong

| St. Augustine of Hippo

| August 27

| Nuestra Señora delas Flores Parish - Virgen Delas Flores

|-

! scope="row" | Tibag

| Nuestra Señora dela Paz y Buen Viaje

| Last Sunday of May

| Diocesan Shrine and Parish of St. Augustine

|-

! scope="row" | Tilapayong

| St. Augustine of Hippo

| August 27

| Sagrada Familia Parish - Tangos

|-

! scope="row" | Virgen Delas Flores

| Nuestra Señora delas Flores

| Last Sunday of May

| Nuestra Señora delas Flores Parish - Virgen Delas Flores

|-

|}

Climate

Demographics

In the 2020 census, the population of Baliwag, Bulacan, was 168,470 people, with a density of .

Religion

Baliwag at present has six Roman Catholic parishes, a sub-parish and a quasi-parish under the administration of Diocese of Malolos. Their patron saint of Baliwag is St. Augustine because Baliwag was founded by the Augustinians in 1733. Other Christian denominations are also present in the city, including Iglesia ni Cristo, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Members Church of God International, Bible Baptist Church and Evangelical Christianity.

Economy

{| class="floatright" style="font-size: 85%; border:1px solid gray;"

|-

! colspan=2 style="background:#EFEFEF"|

|-

|

|-

! colspan=2 style="background:#EFEFEF"|

|-

|

  • Total Assets: PHP 613.43 million
  • Total Liabilities: PHP 230.64 million
  • Total Equity: PHP 382.78 million

|-

|

  • Total Revenues: PHP 491.54 million
  • Total Expenses: PHP 459.84 million
  • Excess Income Over Expenses: PHP 31.70 million

|-

|

  • Appropriation and Allotments: PHP 507.30 million
  • Obligations: PHP 480.09 million
  • Balances: PHP 27.21 million

|}

Major industries

  • Garments
  • Pyrotechnics
  • Food/Food Processing
  • Furniture
  • Swine
  • Chicken Production
  • Automobile Industry

Major products

  • Buntal Hat and Bags
  • Bakeries (Native Pandesal, Ensaymada, Spanish Bread)
  • Native Delicacies (Chicharon, Puto, Pastillas de Leche)
  • Lechon Manok (famously Baliwag Lechon Manok)

Government

Local government

thumb|Baliwag City Hall

{|class=wikitable

|+Baliwag City Officials (2025–28)

|-

!Position !!Name !!colspan=2|Party

|-

| Mayor

| Sonia V. Estrella

|

|-

| Vice Mayor

| Ferdinand "Ferdie" V. Estrella

|

|-

| rowspan=10| Councilors

| Jose Noel "Joel" S. Pascual

|

|-

| Rodrigo "Ogie" E. Baltazar

|

|-

| Dr. Katherine "Kitchie" A. Angelo-Dela Cruz

|

|-

| Ron Harold "Ron Bata" P. Cruz

|

|-

| Marie Nelle "Bhang" S. Imperial

|

|-

| Karlo Kenneth "Kenneth" M. Cruz

|

|-

| Lowell C. Tagle

|

|-

| Antonio "Tony" S. Patawaran

|

|-

| Dr. Carolina "Carol" L. Dellosa

|

|-

| Andronicus "Consi Ron" O. Cruz

|

|-

! colspan=4| Ex Officio Municipal Council Members

|-

| ABC President

| Michael R. Lopez (Santo Cristo)

|

|-

| SK Federation President

| Jerome D.P. Gonzales (Concepcion)

|

|}

List of former mayors

{| class="wikitable" style="float:center; "

|-

! No.

! Presidente Municipal

! style="text-align:center;"|Took office

! Left office

|-

|1 || Francisco Guerrero|| style="text-align:center" | 1899 || style="text-align:center" | 1899

|-

|2 || Jose Rustia|| style="text-align:center" | 1900 || style="text-align:center" | 1900

|-

|3 || Ancieto Valencia|| style="text-align:center" | 1901|| style="text-align:center" | 1903

|-

|4 || Dr. Domingo M. Enrile|| style="text-align:center" | 1904|| style="text-align:center" | 1905

|-

|5 || Jose Lajom|| style="text-align:center" | 1906|| style="text-align:center" | 1907

|-

|6 || Fernando Enrile|| style="text-align:center" | 1908|| style="text-align:center" | 1909

|-

|7 || Martin H. Prado|| style="text-align:center" | 1910|| style="text-align:center" | 1912

|-

|8 || Juan Racelis|| style="text-align:center" | 1913|| style="text-align:center" | 1918

|-

|9 || Pablo Camacho || style="text-align:center" | 1919|| style="text-align:center" | 1922

|-

|10 || Emilio Rustia || style="text-align:center" | 1922 || style="text-align:center" | 1925

|-

|11 || Pedro R. Mateo || style="text-align:center" | 1925 || style="text-align:center" | 1930

|-

|12 || Dr. Peregrino E. Sauco || style="text-align:center" | 1931|| style="text-align:center" | 1934

|-

|13 || Atty. Wenceslao Ortega || style="text-align:center" | 1934 || style="text-align:center" | 1937

|-

! No.

! Alcalde

! style="text-align:center;"|Took office

! Left office

|-

| 1 || Dr. Guilermo dela Merced ||style="text-align:center"| 1938 ||style="text-align:center"| 1941

|-

| 2 || Rafael Chico ||style="text-align:center"| 1942 ||style="text-align:center"| 1945

|-

|-

! No.

! Municipal Mayors

! style="text-align:center;"|Took office

! Left office

|-

| 1 || Maj. Servando C. Santos|| style="text-align:center" | 1946|| style="text-align:center" | 1955

|-

| 2 || Roberto E. Chico|| style="text-align:center" | 1956|| style="text-align:center" | 1959

|-

| 3 || Felix R. Tiongson|| style="text-align:center" | 1960|| style="text-align:center" | 1963

|-

| 4 || Roberto E. Chico|| style="text-align:center" | 1964|| style="text-align:center" | 1967

|-

| 5 || Florentino Vergel de Dios|| style="text-align:center" | 1968|| style="text-align:center" | March 1980

|-

| 6 || Dominador Enrile|| style="text-align:center" | March 1980 || style="text-align:center" | September 20, 1981

|-

| 7 || Leonardo C. Mananghaya|| style="text-align:center" | September 20, 1981 || style="text-align:center" | May 1986

|-

| 8 || Atty. Emilio Camacho Santos (OIC)|| style="text-align:center" | May 1986 || style="text-align:center" | February 1988

|-

| 9 || Reynaldo S. del Rosario|| style="text-align:center" | February 1988 || style="text-align:center" | June 30, 1992

|-

| 10 || Cornelio P. Trinidad || style="text-align:center" | June 30, 1992 || style="text-align:center" | November 16, 1994

|-

| 11 || Edilberto S. Tengco|| style="text-align:center" | November 16, 1994 || style="text-align:center" | June 30, 1998

|-

| 12 || Rolando F. Salvador|| style="text-align:center" | June 30, 1998 || style="text-align:center" | June 30, 2004

|-

| 13 || Romeo M. Estrella|| style="text-align:center" | June 30, 2004 || style="text-align:center" | June 30, 2013

|-

|14 || Carolina L. Dellosa, M.D.|| style="text-align:center" | June 30, 2013 || style="text-align:center" | June 30, 2016

|-

|15 || Ferdinand V. Estrella|| style="text-align:center" | June 30, 2016 || style="text-align:center" | December 17, 2022

|-

|-

! No.

! City Mayors

! style="text-align:center;"|Took office

! Left office

|-

|1 || Ferdinand V. Estrella|| style="text-align:center" | December 17, 2022 || style="text-align:center" | June 30, 2025

|-

|2 || Sonia V. Estrella|| style="text-align:center" | June 30, 2025 || style="text-align:center" | present

|}

City seal

According to Republic Act No. 11929, the official seal of the city shall be circular in form with the dominant colors of green and blue representing the city's vision to promote economic and social progress, sustainable development, and technological advancement. The year 2022 at the center upper part of the official seal indicates the year that Baliwag became a component city. The building structure represents the facade of the town’s seat of government. On top of this image is the year 1733, when Baliwag was founded by the Augustinians. The official seal shall display rice stalks to indicate that the City of Baliwag maintains its commitment to national food security as one of the top rice yielders in the Province of Bulacan. The Baliwag buntal hat, a product woven in this City and is regarded as superior in quality to other types of buntal hats produced in the country, is likewise depicted in the official seal. The City of Baliwag may alter its official seal, provided that any change of the seal shall be approved by Congress and registered with the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG).

Tourism

;Baliwag Clock Tower:Baliwag is the home of the first self-supporting clock tower in Bulacan, which is a heritage attraction in the city.

;Lenten Processions:Baliwag is known for its Semana Santa (Holy Week) processions, which are among the longest religious processions in the Philippines. As of 2019, the procession hosts a record 124 (121, with 3 additional) carros or carrozas (floats) with life-sized santos (statues) joined in the parade showcasing events from the life and passion of Christ.

;Buntal Hat Festival: thumb|A [[buntal hat from Baliwag]]

Buntal Hat Festival is a celebration of the culture of buntal hat making in the city that is simultaneously celebrated with Mother's Day annually. Early versions of the buntal hat were wide-brimmed farmer's hats and used unsoftened strips of buntal fiber. The industry expanded into Baliwag, Bulacan between 1907 and 1909, originally introduced by Mariano Deveza who originally hailed from Lucban, Quezon. Colorful and grandiose decorations and street dancing are the highlights of this celebration.

Other attractions

  • 3006 Augustine Square (A. Square)
  • Baliwag Glorietta Park
  • Baliwag Museum and Library (Lumang Municipio)
  • Mariano Ponce Ancestral House Museum
  • The Greenery Events Place
  • The Baliwag Star Arena
  • Jose Rizal Monument at Plaza Naning
  • Baliwag Pasalubong Center
  • Parish Museum of Old Religious Artifacts (Parish of St. Augustine)
  • Carozza Makers
  • Artisan Street (Bone In-Lay Handicrafts)
  • Baliwag Heroes’ Park
  • Baliwag Night Market
  • Baliwag Christmas Night Market
  • The Chapters

Transportation

thumb|right|BTI main terminal in Plaza Naning, Baliwag

Public transportation in Baliwag is served by provincial buses, jeepneys, UV Express AUVs, and intra-municipal tricycles.

Baliwag Transit, Inc., one of the largest bus transportation system in the Philippines, is headquartered in Barangay Tibag. It mainly services routes to and from Metro Manila and Central Luzon.

There are three major transport lines in the municipality: The Baliwag - Candaba (Benigno S. Aquino Avenue) road going to Pampanga (from the Downtown Baliwag to Candaba Town Proper), the Old Cagayan Valley road (Calle Rizal) and the Dona Remedios Trinidad Highway (N1, AH26) going to Manila and Nueva Ecija. The city is located 52 kilometers north of Manila, the capital of the Philippines.

Education

The Baliwag Schools Division Office governs all educational institutions within the municipality. It oversees the management and operations of all private and public, from primary to secondary schools.

Primary and elementary schools

  • Baliuag Alliance Christian Academy
  • Tilapayong Elementary School
  • San Jose Elementary School
  • Concepcion Elementary School
  • Sabang Elementary School
  • Baliwag North Central School
  • Baliwag South Central School
  • Jacinto Ponce Elementary School
  • Catulinan Elementary School
  • Pinagbarilan Elementary School
  • Hinukay Elementary School
  • Engr. Vicente R. Cruz Memorial School
  • Makinabang Elementary School
  • Tarcan Elementary School
  • Sta. Barbara Elementary School
  • Tiaong Elementary School
  • Immaculate Concepcion School of Baliwag
  • Living Angels Christian Academy
  • Montessori De Sagrada Familia
  • St. Mary's College of Baliwag

Secondary schools

  • Mariano Ponce National High School
  • Sto. Niño High School
  • Virgen Delas Flores High School
  • Sulivan National High School
  • Teodoro Evangelista Memorial High School
  • Sta. Barbara High School
  • Saint Jean Baptiste Academy, Inc.
  • San Benildo Integrated School
  • St. Joseph School of Baliwag
  • The Catholic Servants of Christ Community

Higher educational institutions

  • ACLC
  • Baliuag University
  • Baliuag Polytechnic College
  • Bulacan College of Computer Science
  • Fernandez College of Arts and Technology
  • Marian College of Baliwag
  • National University (Baliwag Campus) — SM City Baliwag
  • Our Lady of Mt. Carmel College
  • St. Mary's College of Baliuag
  • STI College
  • St. Mark College

Notable people

  • Clem Castro - musician and singer-songwriter
  • Mcoy Fundales - musician, writer, and actor
  • Empoy Marquez - actor, comedian, and host
  • Cris Villanueva - actor

<gallery widths="200" heights="150">

File:Baliuagjf9367 21.JPG|Baliwag Welcome Arch from Pulilan, Bulacan

File:FvfPobBaliuag8478 26.JPG|Baliwag Clock tower

File:Baliuag Glorietta.JPG|Baliwag Glorietta Park at night

File:FvfBaliuag1245 12.JPG|Ang Baliwag kay Rizal Monument

File:FvfPagalaBaliuag6802 15.JPG|Baliwag Star Arena

File:FvfBaliuagHospital7649 07.JPG|Baliwag District Hospital

</gallery>

See also

  • Good Friday processions in Baliwag
  • Saint Augustine Parish Church (Baliwag)
  • Baliuag Museum and Library
  • Sub-Parish Church of Santo Cristo
  • Lady of Most Holy Rosary Parish Church
  • Fernandez College of Arts and Technology
  • Baliuag University
  • St. Mary's College of Baliuag
  • Baliwag Transit
  • SM City Baliwag
  • Dr. Joaquin Gonzalez

References

  • Local Government Unit: Municipality of Baliwag
  • Baliwag Bulacan
  • [ Philippine Standard Geographic Code]
  • Philippine Census Information
  • Baliwag Official Site
  • BALIWAG-eBOOK, a five volume history of Baliwag: Volumes I II III IV V, Baliwag Society International