Shwebo
Shwebo was the headquarters of the District of the same name in Upper Burma, situated in 22° 35' N. and 95° 42' E., on the Sagaing-Myitkyina railway, about sixty five miles north west by rail from Mandalay. It is located between the Irrawaddy and Mu rivers, 16½ miles west of Kyaukmyaung on the Irrawaddy.
There was a cantonment, established in 1888, located to the north-east of the town on high ground.
The stone S.P.G. church was situated in the north-west.corner of the town, and the Roman Catholic church in the south-east corner.
During the First World War, there was a camp for Turkish Prisoners of War at Shwebo.
Also see
Volunteer Regiment
Shwebo was the head-quarters of a company of the Upper Burma Volunteer Rifles, drawn from the Shwebo, Katha, Bhamo, and Myitkyina Districts. [1]
External links
- Shwebo Wikipedia
- Photograph: Hospital Shwebo with Different Descriptions of Ambulances, 1887 – 1897 by Felice Beato. Wall Street Journal. This photograph was included in an exhibition at the J Paul Getty Museum [2]
Historical books online
- "Shwebo District" Imperial Gazetteer of India, Volume 22, page 311.
- "Shwebo Town" Imperial Gazetteer of India, Volume 22, page 322
- "Shwebo" page 326 Wanderings in Burma by George W Bird 1897. Southeast Asia Visions, Cornell University.
- "Camp for convalescents at Shwebo (Burma)" [for Turkish Prisoners of War, WW1], page 57 Reports on British prison-camps in India and Burma, visited by the International Red Cross Committee in February, March and April, 1917 Archive.org
References
- ↑ Imperial Gazetteer of India, Volume 22, page 321
- ↑ Felice Beato: A Photographer on the Eastern Road, photograph 114, exhibition at the J Paul Getty Museum