Governor of Marinduque
| Provincial Governor of Marinduque | |
|---|---|
![]() Incumbent since June 30, 2025Melecio J. Go | |
| Seat | Marinduque Provincial Capitol |
| Appointer | Elected via popular vote |
| Term length | 3 years |
| Inaugural holder | Martin Lardizabal |
| Formation | 1899 |
| Website | https://marinduque.gov.ph/executive/ |
The governor of Marinduque (Filipino: Punong Panlalawigan ng Marinduque), is the chief executive of the provincial government of Marinduque. Marinduque was a sub-province of Tayabas (now Quezon), which also has its own governor, until 1920. The governor holds office at the Marinduque Provincial Capitol in Boac.
Provincial Governors (1899-present)
| No. | Image[1] | Governor | Term |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Martin Lardizabal | 1899-1901 | |
| 2 | ![]() |
Ricardo Paras | 1901-1907[a] |
| 3 | Juan Nieva | 1907-1916 | |
| 4 | Pedro Madrigal | 1916-1919 | |
| 5 | Vicente Triviño | 1919-1922 | |
| 6 | Miguel Villamayor | 1922-1925 | |
| 7 | Damian Reyes | 1925-1929 | |
| 8 | ![]() |
Leon Pelaez | 1929-1933 |
| 9 | Pedro del Mundo | 1933-1936 | |
| (8) | ![]() |
Leon Pelaez | 1936-1938 |
| 10 | Ramon Reynoso | 1938-1941 | |
| 11 | Jose L. Lopez | 1941-1942 | |
| 12 | ![]() |
Ricardo Nepomuceno | 1945-1946 |
| 13 | Cesar Nepomuceno | 1946-1951 | |
| 14 | Felix Fidel Paz | 1951-1955 | |
| 15 | Miguel M. Manguera | 1955-1963 | |
| 16 | Celso Preclaro | 1963-1967 | |
| 17 | Aristeo M. Lecaroz | 1967-1988 | |
| 18 | Luisito M. Reyes | 1988-1995 | |
| 19 | Jose Antonio Carrion | 1995-1998 | |
| 20 | ![]() |
Carmencita O. Reyes | 1998-2007 |
| (19) | Jose Antonio Carrion | 2007-2010 | |
| (20) | ![]() |
Carmencita O. Reyes | 2010-2019[b] |
| 21 | ![]() |
Romulo A. Bacorro Jr. | 2019 |
| 22 | ![]() |
Presbitero J. Velasco Jr. | 2019-2025 |
| 23 | ![]() |
Melecio Go[2] | 2025-present |
Notes
- ^ Concurrently served as Governor of the mother province of Tayabas from 1903 to 1904.
- ^ Died in office
See also
References
- ^ "History, Culture and Tradition". Province of Marinduque. Retrieved August 30, 2022.
- ^ "Velasco dynasty falls in Marinduque". Rappler. Retrieved May 14, 2025.




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