SHANGHAI, CHINA 1927-1941
The 4th Regiment of the United States Marine Corps received
orders on January 28, 1927 to embark for expeditionary duty in
the Far East. This was the beginning of a 15 year tenure in
China, protecting lives and property of American citizens in the
International Settlement of Shanghai. The 4th Regiment never had
to draw their weapons although the Chinese Revolution and the
second Sino-Japanese War were within miles of the International
Settlement.
The 4th Regiment had been called for service to protect
American lives and property because of the increasing political
turmoil between Chiang Kai-shek's National forces and the
Communists. By April of 1927, the crisis was over and Chiang
Kai-shek's forces had control of Shanghai. The International
Settlement was not involved in the conflict and the 4th Marines
began to settle into their surroundings. The regiment changed
its name on February 13, 1930, the regiment was officially
designated the 4th Marines, a change which applied to all
regiments in the Marine Corps.
Shanghai in 1842 was a sleepy provincial town, but the
arrival of the white man began a remarkable commercial boom. By
1927 the city had a population of about three million and it was
the leading port of China. The International Settlement
consisted of British, Japanese, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese,
and Dutch communities. France also had an independent concession
just to the south of the Settlement.
Other nationalities included White Russians who had fled the
Revolution in their country twenty years earlier and there was
also a thriving community of Sikhs who had left India in the
early thirties. Quite a few Sikhs joined the Shanghai
International Police Force and these men and the 4th Marines
helped each other out on numerous occasions. The International
Defense Scheme, indented to protect the Settlement against
Chinese attack, had been drawn up by the commanders of the
British, American and Japanese garrisons at Shanghai.
"There were American citizens over there which we
protected, but most of our duties were strictly guard.
Standard Oil Company was over there and we used to guard them.
Then we had our own areas that we to guard. We had to guard
the hospital. The navy hospital. And so it was one day on and
two days off. The first thing you do is buy a teakwood chest.
Then you go down, you start buying this and buying that,
whatever you could afford. The ivory was the most important
thing that we could buy. It was real, real inexpensive there
and you could buy like a Hamilton wrist watch was like a Rolex
today. You could get that for less than a hundred dollars.
Some silks, some kimonos, and just a little bit of everything
that you could. You just kept packing it and packing it and
hopefully we can get it home, you know. The 4th Marines had
their our own club in town, and, of course, everybody would go
to the club. If you would venture out to say, French town,
there were several bars. Most of them went to what they call
the Green Hall Bar. It was a popular place that everybody
would go there. And it was just a regular beer place, you
know. So everybody would get drunk as a hoot owl. The French
police is the one that you really have to really be careful
with, and if you got caught by the French police. They would
throw you in their jail and it's like being thrown in jail in
Mexico. You'd never get out of that place. Boy, it's terrible.
So you had to really be on your toes." - Pete George
It was choice duty. Among other things, labor, women, jewelry
and other items were available and cheap. Each squad could hire
a Chinese man to do all the work. Clean the room, make the beds,
do the laundry, shine shoes, and run errands. Billets and
headquarters buildings were converted schools, office buildings,
or private mansions, rented from their owners or the Shanghai
Municipal Council. In April of 1938, the past members of the 4th
Marines gave the present marines a club all to their own. On
April 9th, the 4th Marines Club opened as the finest enlisted
men's club in the world. The club included a Noncommissioned
Officer's Bar, a Private's Bar, three lane bowling alley,
billiards, gymnasium, library, restaurant, movie theater, a
ballroom, dining and private rooms.
A new crisis began in September of 1931 when the invasion of
Manchuria marked the beginning of the Imperial Japanese efforts
to conquer China. The rise to power of Chiang Kai-shek worried
the Japanese militarists, who realized that the Nationalist
drive to the north as a threat to Japanese ambitions in
Manchuria. Japan did not want a strong, unified China.
On September 18, 1931, following a "staged
explosion" by Japan on the South Manchuria Railway,
Japanese forces moved out from positions guarding the track to
occupy the principal southern Manchurian cities. This invasion
by Japan led a state of war between Japan and China and also
permitted the Japanese militarists to take control of the
Japanese government. On January 7, 1932, the United States
stated it would not recognize Japan's Manchurian conquest.
Japan's answer was to proclaim 'independence' of Manchukuo under
the puppet emperor, Henry Pu Yi.
Stuck right in the middle of all this was the 4th Marines
stationed in Shanghai at the International Settlement. The US
was opposed to Japanese aggression against China, but our
garrison at Shanghai was a partner of the Japanese and other
powers in a plan to defend the International Settlement against
the Chinese. There was no provision for dealing with a situation
where one of the partners to the agreement attacked the Chinese.
The Japanese agreed to withdraw from the International
Settlement and the 4th Marines along with the British had no
choice but to remain neutral in the eminent war for Shanghai.
The 4th Marines turned to strengthen their defenses along
Soochow Creek to the north. On the other side of Soochow Creek
was Chapei, the location of the battle between China and Japan.
By February 7th, 1932 the entire 3 ½ miles of front lines had
been barb wired and sandbagged with machine guns ready. The
battle for Chapei lasted until March 3rd and neither the Chinese
nor the Japanese encroached on the International Settlement but
from their front lines, the 4th Marines had grandstand seats for
the war.
In 1937, the mascot of the 4th Marines arrived on the scene.
Along the banks of Soochow Creek, a small and underfed puppy
began to post guard along side other Marines. The men of the 4th
Regiment began to help feed the lost puppy and it wasn't long
before he was taken back to live with B Company. They named him
Soochow and he became the mascot of the China Marines. He was
outfitted with three different uniforms; greens, khakis and even
dress blues. Soochow would hit the clubs and restaurants with
his fellow marines and on many Saturday nights, Soochow could be
seen riding in his own rickshaw back to his billet.
The second battle for Shanghai began on August 13th, 1937.
Once again north of Soochow Creek, the Chinese and Japanese were
locked in combat. Not until the final offensive launched by the
hoarding Japanese Army in October did the Chinese retreat from
Shanghai.
The withdrawal of the Chinese army from Shanghai left the
International Settlement and the French Concession as two tiny
islands of Western authority in a hostile Japanese sea. The
Allied numbers were sparse compared to the Japanese army of
300,000, the British numbered 2,500 - French numbered 4,000 and
the 4th Marines numbered around 1,000.
Yet with even these small numbers, the International
Settlement continued business as usual. The Chinese post office,
radio and telegraph offices, and central bank all continued to
operate within the Settlement. The greedy Japanese were furious
because they could not control these institutions nor lay their
hands on the rich revenues. A new threat to the neutrality of
the International Settlement came upon on August 10, 1940, when
the British announced the withdrawal of all forces from Shanghai
and North China. By the end of 1940, Admiral Thomas C. Hart,
commander of the Asiatic Fleet, was convinced that war with
Japan was inevitable. All but the 4th Marines and the Yangtze
River Patrol gunboats had departed by early 1941.
Japan's war machine moved southward in April 1939 with the
seizure of the Hainan Islands. That hostility combined with
repeated bombings and other atrocities against civilians in
China, led to the move of the United States Fleet from the West
Coast to Pearl Harbor in May of 1940. Japanese occupation of
northern Indochina in August and her alliance with Germany and
Italy in the Tripartite Pact, on September 27th had resulted in
war material restrictions and to strategic conversations among
Americans, British, and Dutch concerning Pacific defense. When
Japan completed their Indochina occupation in July 1941,
President Roosevelt countered by freezing Japanese assets.
In Shanghai, the 4th Marines had been making plans in the
event of hostilities breaking out. Colonel Peck prepared a
desperate escape plan in case the Japanese attacked the
International Settlement. Mounted in all available motor
vehicles, the 4th Marines were to break through the roads blocks
on the Settlement boundary and drive west towards territory
controlled by Chiang Kai-shek. Peck intended to keep the 4th
Marines together as a military force as long as possible. But,
"when the regiment hit something it couldn't crack,"
the men were to be instructed to break into small groups and
attempt to make their way as best they could to the nearest
Nationalist-held territory and then to Chungking, some 900 miles
away.
"The Japanese would just test you and see what you
would do. They would come on into our settlement, and, of
course, what we would do is just force them back out again.
And I think two occasions we got into gunfire with them. It
was not in our end of the field but First Battalion, they ran
into it. They had a gun fight with the Japanese. Most of it,
see, was down towards where the harbor was. The Japanese were
down in there with their destroyers and light cruisers so they
had a lot of run-ins down there. They thought that they could
just come on in and do it, and, of course, we had orders that
if they come into your sector, well, you're to put them out,
or, if not, then you get into a gun fight with them so that
happened a few times. The Japanese would capture the Chinese
people and would execute them every other day at 5 o'clock in
the afternoon. These were the Communist Chinese. Now, Chiang
Kai-shek was down in Chungking, but it was the communist
regime that actually took over China. It was Mao and his group
that we would catch and then turn them over to the Japanese.
We watched a lot of killings over there." - Pete George
The summer months passed with only minor skirmishes and
Colonel Samuel L. Howard, commanding officer since May 14, 1941,
gained permission for withdrawal of the regiment in early
November. The liners President Harrison and President Madison
were charted for this purpose.
Thousands of cheering people waving Chinese and American
flags lined the streets to see the regiment, which had played
such an intimate part in community life for over 14 years,
parade through the Settlement for the last time. At the dock,
members of the Municipal Council, the foreign consuls and
diplomatic representatives, the commanding officers of all
military units, including the Japanese, and the heads of many
civic organizations gathered to bid the Marines farewell. The
4th Marines including Soochow were finished with Shanghai, their
ships bound for the Philippines. _^_
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