Weihaiwei Regiment
{{Infobox military unit
|unit_name=1st Chinese Regiment (Weihaiwei Regiment)
|image=Guard, 1st Chinese Regiment, Weihaiwei, China, ca.1902–1903.jpg
|caption=Guard, 1st Chinese Regiment, Weihaiwei, China, ca.1902–1903
|dates=1898–1906
|country={{flagicon image|British Weihaiwei flag.svg}} British Weihaiwei
|branch={{flagd|United Kingdom}} British Colonial Auxiliary Forces
|type=
|size=
|command_structure=
|garrison=Matou, Weihaiwei
|ceremonial_chief=
|ceremonial_chief_label=
|colonel_of_the_regiment=Hamilton Bower
|nickname=
|motto=
|colors=
|march=
|mascot=
|battles=Gaselee Expedition
Battle of Tientsin
|notable_commanders=Hamilton Bower (1898 to 1907)
Clarence Dalrymple Bruce (1902 to 1907)
|anniversaries=
}}
The 1st Chinese Regiment (also known as the Weihaiwei Regiment) was a British Colonial Auxiliary Forces regiment raised in British Weihaiwei. The regiment, which was praised for its performance, consisted of Chinese enlisted men serving under British officers.{{cite book|author=Ralph L. Powell|title=Rise of the Chinese Military Power|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=akXWCgAAQBAJ&q=example+results+obtained+small+regiment+commanded&pg=PA118|date=8 December 2015|publisher=Princeton University Press|isbn=978-1-4008-7884-0|pages=118–}}
Formation
The 1st Chinese Regiment was created in 1898 from men of Shantung Province led by British officers and Colour Sergeants.p. 125 Airlie, Shiona Thistle and Bamboo: The Life and Times of Sir James Stewart Lockhart Hong Kong University Press, 1 Oct 2010 Army Order No 2 of 1899 approved the raising of a Chinese regiment of 1,000 men. Major Hamilton Bower of the Indian Staff Corps was given the local rank of lieutenant colonel and appointed Commandant of the new regiment. British officers started to arrive in late 1898 and the regiment first appeared in the Army List, preceded by the Hong Kong Regiment (not to be confused with the later Royal Hong Kong Regiment), in January 1899.{{Cite web|url=http://www.kaiserscross.com/304501/306501.html|title = The Soldier's Burden}}
The Regiment was highly regarded for its drill, military appearance and marksmanship.Perrett, Bryan Against All Odds!Hachette UK, 11 Oct 2012
By 1900 the Regiment consisted of 420 men organised into seven companies.p.34 Bodin, Lynn E. & Warner, Chris The Boxer Rebellion Osprey Publishing, 1979
Active Service
File:First British-Chinese Regiment, Wei Hai Wei.jpg]]
In its first action in March 1900, 420 men of the regiment led by Lt Col. Bower quelled a failed uprising in Chengfoo without bloodshed.pp 2-3 Barnes, Colonel A. A. On Active Service with the Chinese Regiment : A Record of the Operations of the First Chinese Regiment in North China from March to October 1900 1902
The Regiment sent 200 men in four companies led by Lt Col. Bower to serve in the Boxer Rebellion, arriving in Tianjin on 24 June 1900.Harrington, Peter Peking 1900: The Boxer Rebellion Osprey Publishing, 23 Apr 2013 The men of the regiment fought alongside United States Marines led by Smedley Butler.p.17 Schmidt, Hans Maverick Marine: General Smedley D. Butler and the Contradictions of American Military History University Press of Kentucky, 17 Feb 2014p. 83 Johnston, Reginald F. Lion and Dragon in Northern China Cambridge University Press, 30 Jun 2011 Two British captains and 21 Chinese NCOs and other ranks were killed, two majors, one colour sergeant and 15 Chinese NCOs and other ranks were wounded during this campaign.pp. 227-228 Barnes Two members of the regiment, Colour Sergeant Purdon and [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:1stChineseRegiment-B.jpg Sergeant Gi Dien Kwee] were awarded the Distinguished Conduct Medal in the Boxer Rebellion. Gi received this medal following a mention in dispatches for “ leading a half-company without a European officer in charge during a heated battle in Tianjin. London Gazettes 6 November 1900 ( page 6750) and 25 July 1901 (page 4916)
The regiment was alerted to be deployed to Chemulpo in Korea but the movement did not eventuate.
A party of one British colour sergeant and 12 men travelled to London in 1902 to represent the regiment at the Coronation of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra.
By 1902 the regiment consisted of over 1200 men organised into 12 companies.
Uniform and insignia
Upon formation in 1898 the Weihaiwei Regiment wore a medium blue uniform with Chinese style headdress and white leggings. By 1900 this had been replaced for parade dress by a black turban, dark-blue/grey (almost black) tunic, breeches and puttees. The tunic was double-breasted with two rows of brass buttons. For ordinary duties and active service, khaki drill was worn with a
straw wide-brimmed hat modelled on that worn by the Royal Navy at the time. A red waist sash was worn with both blue and khaki uniforms.{{cite book|first=Wendell|last=Schollander|pages=188–189|title=Glory of the Empires 1880-1914|year=2016|isbn=978-0-297-85266-7}} According to Barbara-Sue White, the turbans worn by members of the 1st Chinese Regiment were an adoption of those worn by Sikhs.{{Cite book |last=White |first=Barbara-Sue |title=Turbans and Traders: Hong Kong's Indian Communities |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=1994 |isbn=9780195852875 |pages=122}}
Following the regiments much-praised actions and conduct during the anti-Boxer campaign of 1900 the regiment received permission to wear new regimental headgear and collar badges made of brass, representing the [https://www.globalphotos.org/tianjin-drum.htm Drum Tower of Tientsin (Tianjin)]
File:Recruit, 1st Chinese Regiment, China, winter of 1901.jpg|Recruit, circa winter of 1901
File:Drummer boy, in winter uniform, 1st Chinese Regiment, China, ca.1901.jpg|Drummer boy, ca.1901
File:Orderlies, 1st Chinese Regiment, Weihaiwei, China, ca.1901.jpg|Orderlies, ca.1901
File:Corporal, 1st Chinese Regiment, wearing winter uniform, China, ca.1900.jpg|Corporal, ca.1900
File:Lance Corporal, 1st Chinese Regiment, in winter marching order, China, ca.1900.jpg|Lance Corporal, ca.1900
File:1st Chinese Regiment Collar Badge.jpg|Regimental collar badge
File:1stChineseRegiment-B.jpg|Sergeant Gi Dien Kwee D.C.M seated centre
Disbandment
When it was decided to run the territory under civil, rather than military lines at the end of 1901, the first stage of disbandment was begun. The regiment was reduced from 1,200 to 500 men through natural wastage and a freeze on recruitment, retaining 16 officers and six NCOsp.126 Airlie, Shiona Thistle and Bamboo: The Life and Times of Sir James Stewart Lockhart Hong Kong University Press, 1 Oct 2010 organised into four companies.
In spite of its excellent record the regiment was ordered to be totally disbanded on 1 June 1906The Army ListGreat Britain. Ministry of Defence
H.M. Stationery Office, 1906p. 56 Airlie, Shiona Scottish Mandarin: The Life and Times of Sir Reginald Johnston Hong Kong University Press, 1 Oct 2012 by Army Order No.127 of 1906. The reason appears to have been primarily a financial one, after the decision was made
not to develop Weihaiwei as a naval base.
Further service from members of the Regiment
Some of the soldiers were retained as a permanent police force with three of the British Colour Sergeants commissioned as police inspectors. In 1910 the police force was commanded by three European Inspectors, Colour Sergeants Purdon, Alfred Whittaker and Young.{{Cite web|url=http://www.dnw.co.uk/auction-archive/special-collections/results.php?specialcollection_id=297&layout=list&offset=48&limit=24|title = Medals to the Rifle Brigade and Affiliated Regiments from the collection formed by Michael Haines | Dix Noonan Webb}} The remainder of the force consisted of 55 Chinese Constables,p.83 Johnson
The original second-in-command (2IC) and later commander of the Regiment, Colonel Clarence Dalrymple Bruce, became Captain Superintendent commanding the Shanghai Municipal Police from 1907 to 1913.
Other former non-commissioned Chinese members of the regiment following disbandment were enlisted in a special unit of railway police responsible for the security of Imperial Railways of North China stations and other railway facilities. Crush, Peter (2013) “Imperial Railways of North China” – “关内外铁路” 皮特•柯睿思 著. Bilingual in English and Simplified Chinese. Xinhua Publishing House, Beijing ISBN 978-7-5166-0564-6. 2649
During the First World War, the Chinese Labour Corps was recruited in Weihaiwei for service in France. The unit's commanding officer was Colonel Bryan Charles Fairfax who had served as a lieutenant with the Chinese Regiment in the Boxer Rebellion, the unit's 2IC was Major Purdon, who was later promoted to colonel and succeeded Colonel Fairfax.p.83 Xu, Guoqi Strangers on the Western Front Harvard University Press, 2011
Notes
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References
- {{cite book|last=Barnes|first= Arthur Alison Stuart|title=On Active Service with the Chinese Regiment: A Record of the Operations of the First Chinese Regiment|year=1902|url=https://archive.org/details/cu31924023151040}}
External links
- Regiments. org (archived) https://web.archive.org/web/20060117162532/http://www.regiments.org/regiments/china/cn-regts/898whw.htm
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2017}}
Category:British colonial regiments
Category:Military units and formations established in 1898
Category:Military units and formations disestablished in 1907