China (First World War)

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Chinese Labour Corps

The Chinese Labour Corps was recruited from 1916 to assist with Britain’s desire for an ever-growing requirement for manpower to carry out labouring tasks on the Western Front. By the end of the conflict nearly 100,000 Chinamen had enlisted and served in France and Flanders, and continued to serve well into 1920 helping to clear up the old battlefields and recover the dead.[1]

Shanghai Contingent

In Shanghai, the War Office accepted an offer of 110 men who had previous military training, for service at the front. The British community paid for the passages of the men. (Details[2])

External links

Historical books online

Extract with photographs. greatwardifferent.com, now an archived website.

Fiction

  • Within the Four Seas : a Shantung Idyll by Paul Richard Abbott published Shanghai : The Commercial Press, 1930. A series of chapter downloads from STOU Digital Repository, Sukhothai Thammathirat Open University, Thailand. A description elsewhere says "A fictional tale of a young Chinese scholar who has run away from the tyranny of his family to work with the Chinese Labor Corps in France during the Great War". The author is stated to be an American missionary and the book is discussed from page 84 in Cultural Engagement In Missionary China: American Missionary Novels 1880-1930 by Yi-Ling Lin PhD Thesis in Comparative Literature, Graduate College of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2013.

References

  1. The Chinese Labour Corps 1916-1920 by Gregory James ww1centenary.net, now archived.
  2. ianjonesncl .Shanghai Contingent Gunners Great War Forum blog 30 November 2022. Retrieved 30 November 2022.
  3. Digital page 231? The Siege of Tsingtau: The German-Japanese War 1914 by Charles Stephenson Google Books