
THE UNITED STATES MARINES IN NORTH CHINA:
1894-1942
Chester M. Biggs, Jr
NEW copy, trade PAPERBACK.
(Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, 2003). Fifty-seven
photographs, maps, chronology, appendices,
notes, bibliography, index, 284 pp.
NEW copy, trade PAPERBACK.
(Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, 2003). Fifty-seven
photographs, maps, chronology, appendices,
notes, bibliography, index, 284 pp.
Like most foreign troops stationed in China, the United States Marines’ mission
was to protect the American embassy and American consulates, missionaries,
tourists, and other citizens in China. During the half century covered by this
book, the Marines saw China as it would never again be. The Opium Wars and Boxer
Rebellion gave the Europeans a certain standing, with prerogatives and
privileges that were looked upon by everyone, even the Chinese, as a natural
order of existence.
The author discusses early military operations in
north China, the early legation guards, the Boxer Rebellion in 1900, and the
Marine legation guard in Peking also in 1900. It also discusses Seymour’s relief
column, Waller’s column, the capture of the Walled City of Tien-Tsin, the siege
of the legations at Peking, the relief of Peking, and the Marines’ return to
Peking.
$45.00

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