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Woosung railway

The Woosung railway (simplified Chinese: 吴淞铁路; traditional Chinese: 吳淞鐵路; pinyin: Wúsōng Tiělù)[n 1][n 2] was a 19th-century, 2 ft 6 in (762 mm) narrow-gauge passenger railway in Shanghai, China, between the outskirts of the American Concession in the modern city's Zhabei District and Wusong in Baoshan District. Surreptitiously conceived and constructed, it ran for less than a year before it was purchased and dismantled by the Qing viceroy Shen Baozhen. The line would not be rebuilt for twenty years. This fate was a commonly invoked symbol of the Qing dynasty's backwardness and insularity, despite the road's admitted illegality and numerous legitimate objections voiced by the Chinese during its construction and operation.

Woosung railway
Overview
LocaleShanghai, China
Dates of operation1876–1877
PredecessorNone
SuccessorSonghu railway
Technical
Track gauge2 ft 6 in (762 mm)
Length9+14 mi (14.9 km)
Route map
Woosung railway
Shanghai
Jiangwan (Kiangwan)
Wusongkou (Woosungkou)
Wenzaobang

Its route – still primarily rural as late as the turn of the century – now forms part of the Shanghai Metro's elevated Line 3.

History edit

 
Shanghai, 1855

Background edit

Following the success of the first British railroads and the concessions to foreign traders following the 1842 Treaty of Nanking ending the First Opium War, European and American diplomats and merchants began to advocate for the development of railroads within China. The British firm Jardine, Matheson, & Company in particular started to champion rail connections from the interior to Canton, Shanghai, and Tianjin as early as 1845.[1] MacDonald Stephenson, the engineer responsible for the East Indian Railway, attempted to interest the imperial government in rail links from Hong Kong and Shanghai to Calcutta through Hankou and Kunming in 1859[1] and again in 1864. These proposals were rejected even by the foreign-led Hong Kong Chamber of Commerce, which thought it might impact established shipping. A request of 20 July 1863 by 27 firms for a Shanghai-to-Suzhou line was similarly rejected by the governor of Jiangsu Li Hongzhang[1][2] and in 1865 by the circuit intendant of Shanghai Ying Baoshi, who composed an influential treatise, "The 7 No's",[n 3] on the occasion.

However, in 1864, American Chinese began to be employed by the Central Pacific Railroad and by March 1865 the company was recruiting thousands of workers directly from Guangdong Province.[3] The well-liked[1] inspector general Robert Hart and the British minister Sir Thomas Wade made strenuous cases for the adoption of western technology in 1865,[1] cases that were picked up first by Shanghainese merchants[1] and then by the Imperial bureaucracy itself in a heated debate from 1866 to 1867,[4] which ultimately decided to continue opposition to foreign-controlled rail.

Objections raised then and subsequently included that lines would facilitate foreign interference with – and invasions of – the interior,[5] that railways' straight lines promoted bad feng shui,[6] that their presence would antagonize the official and peasant classes,[4] and that their competition would destroy the livelihood of porters and ferrymen along the canals, leading them to banditry.[7] Whereas canals assisted irrigation along their routes and could not be stolen, railways would inevitably occupy and pollute arable land and invite theft. Even supporters of railways insisted that it was essential to keep any lines Chinese-controlled and to oppose foreign ones.

Construction edit

 
The opening of the Woosung road.
 
The opening of the Woosung Road, as depicted by the September 2, 1876, Illustrated London News.

Nonetheless, officials at Shanghai were repeatedly troubled about constructing a railway between the city and a Yangtze port, as the mouth of the Suzhou Creek continued to silt up, obstructing deep-bottomed foreign vessels. Jardine, Matheson, & Co. initially established the Woosung Road Company as a front with a 200-share issue in 1865.[8] Distributing shares to local businessmen did not succeed in winning official approval and land purchases were far more expensive than expected. The company stopped work in 1867.[8]

The surreptitious construction by the Danish Great Northern Telegraph Company of a riverine line connecting the Hong Kong–Wusong telegraph lines to Shanghai in 1870 and its eventual protection by local authorities against theft and disruption in the summer of 1872[9][10] suggested a course forward.

In the winter of 1872–1873, the American vice-consul Oliver Bradford began purchasing and leasing a 15-yard (14 m) –wide[2] strip of land within the American Concession, although it was common knowledge – both among the Shanghailanders[11] and the local Shanghainese[4] – the ultimate intention would be conversion to rail. As the construction of a Chinese railway was a clear violation of Article VIII of the 1868 Burlingame Treaty, American interests in the enterprise were sold to Jardine's Woosung Road Company, which extended the Danish telegraph from Wusong south to Shanghai along its right-of-way on 12 August 1873.[9][12] The revived company was led by Jardine's British Shanghai chief F.B. Johnson, the Americans Augustus Hayes of Olyphant & Co. and Frank Forbes of Russell & Co., the British E. Iveson of Iveson & Co., and the Danish G.H.N. Dreyer of the Great Northern.[12] Concurrently with this revival, the Woosung Tramway Company was established separately to manage purchases and planning for the railway.[4] A third company, the Woosung Railway Company, Limited, was incorporated in London on July 28, 1874, to raise capital for imported British rails and rolling stock, which arrived on December 18, 1875.

Even before realizing a railway was intended, the regional viceroy Shen Baozhen noticed that public land at Wusong had been fraudulently sold to the "road"[n 4] and demanded its repurchase and a ban on any road crossing the Wenzaobang to enter Wusong proper.[4] His subsequent discovery that its conversion to rail had been previously mooted and was known to Feng Zhunguang, the circuit intendant of Shanghai, only increased his annoyance.[4]

The British engineer Gabriel J. Morrison hammered in the first spike on 20 January 1876.[7] The Pioneer ran its first trials on about a mile of track on February 14. Within a week, the circuit intendant of Shanghai Feng Zhunguang had written a protest to the British consul Walter H. Medhurst. After consultation, they agreed that the Chinese would permit construction to continue so long as the British ceased to employ the locomotive and that both would seek further instruction from their superiors. Upon being notified of the railway, Shen Baozhen ordered the circuit intendant to suspend all work: this failed, but workmen, dibao, and landowners came under such pressure that the company considered the agreement vitiated and restored the locomotive on March 20. Wade ordered the British naval commander to Shanghai and provided for protection against any local interference against the workmen.[4]

The British secretary W.F. Mayers met with the circuit intendant of Shanghai six times in mid-April concerning a Chinese purchase of the railway; both concurred in principle but differed on how long Jardine's would continue its management role. Mayers demanded eight years, Feng would only permit three. Adamant objection from Wu Yuan-ping, the new governor of Jiangsu, ended these negotiations.[4]

Operation edit

 
The Woosung Road in 1876.

The first engine was the Ransomes & Rapier 0-4-0 Pioneer. On June 12, the 0-6-0 Celestial Empire set the line's record, reaching 25 mph.

On June 30, 1876, the line was completed as far as Jiangwan.[8] After two days of complimentary and publicity runs for Shanghailanders and local businessmen,[4] this section was opened to passenger traffic on July 3.[13] Over the next month, receipts averaged $40–60 a day.[8] Business was brisk enough to necessitate adding an extra round trip to the original six on July 22.[4]

On August 3, a local man was killed and Chinese troops from the Wusong garrison were stationed along the railway.[4] The train driver David Banks was charged with manslaughter, but tried in a Western tribunal and acquitted on the grounds that the train had sounded and the suspicion the victim had been a suicide. Given the existing tensions, Thomas Wade used the Margary Affair and the ensuing negotiations over the Chefoo Convention to include advisors from the more conciliatory Li Hongzhang, since promoted to the prestigious viceroyalty of Zhili, into the negotiations in Shanghai and Nanjing.[4] These lasted throughout October, but on the 24th, the Qing government signed with Wade "The Articles of Purchasing the Wusong Railway",[13] which committed them to provide the railway's owners Tls. 285,000,[6] payable in three installments over the course of the next year, at which point they would acquire complete ownership and management of the line.[4] Jardine's agreed to sell in the interest of establishing a native rail network it could supply and help capitalize.[8] At then-current exchange rates,[14] this was equivalent to a £95,000 return on a £20,000[citation needed] investment. Although Wade had originally only asked for Tls. 200,000, Shen initially offered to pay Tls. 300,000 within 24 hours simply to take immediate possession of the line before another incident.[4]

Meanwhile, the company continued work on the line. On December 1, 1876, the extension to Wusong was completed and opened,[13] with six cars running six round trips daily. By February, demand was great enough to increase the number of cars to nine, necessitating the use of dual locomotives on each run.[4] At this point, the train had 130 seats and would sometimes carry 250 on festivals. In its year of service, the Woosung Road carried 187,876 passengers,[8] the majority of whom preferred the relatively expensive first- and second-class service. The company posted profits of £27 per mile per week, comparable with British routes. Local Shanghainese entrepreneurs even established a pony-drawn bus service – with both its bus and uniforms modeled on the railroad's – from the Little East Gate of the old town.[4]

Closure edit

The profit of the line made the British expectant of continued Chinese operation: in April, they engaged their foreign employees to another 18 months of service and, in September, ordered a fourth and larger locomotive. The railway's chief engineer, Morrison, even visited the officials at Suzhou to discuss construction of an extension for the line. A local petition was circulated among the Shanghainese requesting its continued operation.[4]

However, as the foreigners made clear among themselves and to the Chinese, they intended to convert the railway to a freight line, competing with the China Merchants' Steam Navigation Company and forcing the issue of opening Wusong as a continuation of their concessions at Shanghai. Although the line's initial five freight cars were converted to passenger use in May 1876, twelve 5 ton–capacity replacements were delivered from Britain shortly later. The foreign diplomats also made no secret of their intention to expand concessions regarding Shanghai into its adjoining territory. During his negotiations over the line, the British secretary Mayers openly claimed that "Woosung is really but a part of the port of Shanghai under the Treaty of Tientsin".[4]

Moreover, the importance of the line to the foreigners had already allowed Li Hongzheng to interfere with and even usurp Shen's authority within Jiangsu as a corollary to his authority over treaty negotiations. The line's purchases and operation increased property values, but divided farms and obstructed existing streams and canals with low bridges.[4]

The Chinese authorities took possession of the line in October, 1877, after which Shen had the railway disassembled.[15] He answered the local pro-railroad petition with another which opposed it. At the same time, he also blocked French attempts to open a new road to Zikawei and British ones to extend Markham Road and Cemetery Road. Shanghailanders complained of the closure incessantly, including in the North-China Herald's obituary of Shen. The annoyance was compounded when the initial plan – to ship the rails and rolling stock to Qing Taiwan to help develop the coal mines there[4] – failed to materialize on account of mishandling during shipment[citation needed] and lack of funds.[4] Instead the equipment was dumped along the shore and left to rust.

Memorials edit

 
Remnant of the Tiantong'an Station on the Woosung railway in Hongkou District.

The Woosung railway's path now forms the stretch of the Shanghai Metro's elevated Line 3 between its Baoshan Road and Zhanghuabang stations. The Shanghai Railway Museum includes original Chinese-language memorials concerning the railway and a full-scale mock-up of the Pioneer.

Named locomotives edit

See also edit

Further reading edit

"EARLY CHINESE NARROW-GAUGE RAILWAYS" by Peter Crush (柯睿思) and Baiyu Shang (尚白宇) (downloaded 03.02.2022). A series of research articles on the "researchgate.net" academic website about narrow gauge railways built in China during the Qing dynasty and the early 20th Century. Full texts are available for download from the links.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Also Wusong Road or Woo Sung Railway
  2. ^ It is sometimes also called the Songhu railway, although that name more properly refers to the 1890s railway which ran principally along the same route.
  3. ^ Chinese: 七不可; pinyin: Qī Bù Kě; Wade–Giles: Chih-pu-k'o
  4. ^ A local named Li K'un-yung had leased land belonging to his widowed sister-in-law to the company, with two local dibao assisting him and adding public land to the lot. The dibao received 2,950 and 1,200 lashes with a bamboo rod, respectively; Li received only 500 but the experience killed him. The British consul protested returning the land for months, but was forced to yield owing to the fraud and the land's proximity to numerous official buildings including the Wusong battery and the Baoshan magistrate's office. (Confus, 664–665.)
  5. ^ simplified Chinese: 先导号; traditional Chinese: 先導號; pinyin: Xiāndǎo Hào
  6. ^ simplified Chinese: 天朝号; traditional Chinese: 天朝號; pinyin: Tiāncháo Hào
  7. ^ simplified Chinese: 华国号; traditional Chinese: 華國號; pinyin: Huáguó Hào
  8. ^ simplified Chinese: 总督号; traditional Chinese: 總督號; pinyin: Zǒngdū Hào

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Smith, Adrian J. Privatized Infrastructure: the Role of Government, pp. 45 ff. Thos. Telford, 1999. ISBN 0-7277-2712-5.
  2. ^ a b Shanghai Municipal Government. Office of Shanghai Chronicles. 第一章淞沪铁路: "吴淞铁路". (in Chinese)
  3. ^ Chew, Wm. F. "Nameless Builders of the Transcontinental Railroad" (PDF)., p. 37. 2004.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Pong, David (1973). "Confucian Patriotism and the Destruction of the Woosung Railway, 1877". Modern Asian Studies. 7 (4): 647–676. ISSN 0026-749X. JSTOR 311679.
  5. ^ Hart, Robert. Journal entry. 24 July 1865. Op. cit. Smith, Richard J. & al. (eds.) Harvard East Asian Monographs, Vol. 155. Robert Hart and China's Early Modernization: His Journals, 1863–1866, p. 304. Harvard Univ. Asia Center, 1991. ISBN 0-674-77530-9.
  6. ^ a b Darwent, C. E. (1900). Shanghai : a handbook for travellers and residents to the chief objects of interest in and around the foreign settlements and native city. Cornell University Library. Shanghai ; Hongkong : Kelly & Walsh. pp. 115, 132.
  7. ^ a b Huenemann, Ralph Wm. The Dragon and the Iron Horse: the Economics of Railroads in China, 1876–1937, pp. 1–5. Harvard Univ. Asia Center, 1984. ISBN 0-674-21535-4.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Keswick, Maggie; Weatherall, Clara (2008). The Thistle and the Jade: A Celebration of 175 Years of Jardine Matheson. Frances Lincoln. p. 204. ISBN 978-0-7112-2830-6.
  9. ^ a b Baark, Erik. Lightning Wires: the Telegraph and China's Technological Modernization, 1860–1890, pp. 81 ff. Greenwood Publishing Group, 1997. ISBN 0-313-30011-9.
  10. ^ The Great Northern Telegraph Company Centenary Book. 1969. Op. cit. Glover, Bill. "The Great Northern Telegraph Company: an Outline of the Company's History 1869–1969". Accessed 25 Oct. 2011.
  11. ^ Hart, Robert. Letter. Op. cit. in Huenemann (1984), p. 2.
  12. ^ a b Lange, Ole. Stormogulen: C.F. Tietgen - en Finansmand, Hans Imperium og Hans tid 1829–1901, p. 345. Gyldendal A/S, 2006. ISBN 87-02-05278-4. (in Danish)
  13. ^ a b c Shanghai Municipal Government. Office of Shanghai Chronicles. "July 3 2011-09-19 at the Wayback Machine".
  14. ^ Schneider, Jurgen & Denzel, Markus A. Handbook of World Exchange Rates, 1590–1914, p. 510.
  15. ^ WOOSUNG ROAD -the story of China's First Railway, Peter Crush, Hong Kong 1999. ISBN 962-85532-1-6

woosung, railway, simplified, chinese, 吴淞铁路, traditional, chinese, 吳淞鐵路, pinyin, wúsōng, tiělù, 19th, century, narrow, gauge, passenger, railway, shanghai, china, between, outskirts, american, concession, modern, city, zhabei, district, wusong, baoshan, distri. The Woosung railway simplified Chinese 吴淞铁路 traditional Chinese 吳淞鐵路 pinyin Wusōng Tielu n 1 n 2 was a 19th century 2 ft 6 in 762 mm narrow gauge passenger railway in Shanghai China between the outskirts of the American Concession in the modern city s Zhabei District and Wusong in Baoshan District Surreptitiously conceived and constructed it ran for less than a year before it was purchased and dismantled by the Qing viceroy Shen Baozhen The line would not be rebuilt for twenty years This fate was a commonly invoked symbol of the Qing dynasty s backwardness and insularity despite the road s admitted illegality and numerous legitimate objections voiced by the Chinese during its construction and operation Woosung railwayOverviewLocaleShanghai ChinaDates of operation1876 1877PredecessorNoneSuccessorSonghu railwayTechnicalTrack gauge2 ft 6 in 762 mm Length9 1 4 mi 14 9 km Route mapWoosung railwayLegendShanghaiJiangwan Kiangwan Wusongkou Woosungkou WenzaobangIts route still primarily rural as late as the turn of the century now forms part of the Shanghai Metro s elevated Line 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Background 1 2 Construction 1 3 Operation 1 4 Closure 1 5 Memorials 2 Named locomotives 3 See also 4 Further reading 5 Notes 6 ReferencesHistory edit nbsp Shanghai 1855Background edit Following the success of the first British railroads and the concessions to foreign traders following the 1842 Treaty of Nanking ending the First Opium War European and American diplomats and merchants began to advocate for the development of railroads within China The British firm Jardine Matheson amp Company in particular started to champion rail connections from the interior to Canton Shanghai and Tianjin as early as 1845 1 MacDonald Stephenson the engineer responsible for the East Indian Railway attempted to interest the imperial government in rail links from Hong Kong and Shanghai to Calcutta through Hankou and Kunming in 1859 1 and again in 1864 These proposals were rejected even by the foreign led Hong Kong Chamber of Commerce which thought it might impact established shipping A request of 20 July 1863 by 27 firms for a Shanghai to Suzhou line was similarly rejected by the governor of Jiangsu Li Hongzhang 1 2 and in 1865 by the circuit intendant of Shanghai Ying Baoshi who composed an influential treatise The 7 No s n 3 on the occasion However in 1864 American Chinese began to be employed by the Central Pacific Railroad and by March 1865 the company was recruiting thousands of workers directly from Guangdong Province 3 The well liked 1 inspector general Robert Hart and the British minister Sir Thomas Wade made strenuous cases for the adoption of western technology in 1865 1 cases that were picked up first by Shanghainese merchants 1 and then by the Imperial bureaucracy itself in a heated debate from 1866 to 1867 4 which ultimately decided to continue opposition to foreign controlled rail Objections raised then and subsequently included that lines would facilitate foreign interference with and invasions of the interior 5 that railways straight lines promoted bad feng shui 6 that their presence would antagonize the official and peasant classes 4 and that their competition would destroy the livelihood of porters and ferrymen along the canals leading them to banditry 7 Whereas canals assisted irrigation along their routes and could not be stolen railways would inevitably occupy and pollute arable land and invite theft Even supporters of railways insisted that it was essential to keep any lines Chinese controlled and to oppose foreign ones Construction edit nbsp The opening of the Woosung road nbsp The opening of the Woosung Road as depicted by the September 2 1876 Illustrated London News Nonetheless officials at Shanghai were repeatedly troubled about constructing a railway between the city and a Yangtze port as the mouth of the Suzhou Creek continued to silt up obstructing deep bottomed foreign vessels Jardine Matheson amp Co initially established the Woosung Road Company as a front with a 200 share issue in 1865 8 Distributing shares to local businessmen did not succeed in winning official approval and land purchases were far more expensive than expected The company stopped work in 1867 8 The surreptitious construction by the Danish Great Northern Telegraph Company of a riverine line connecting the Hong Kong Wusong telegraph lines to Shanghai in 1870 and its eventual protection by local authorities against theft and disruption in the summer of 1872 9 10 suggested a course forward In the winter of 1872 1873 the American vice consul Oliver Bradford began purchasing and leasing a 15 yard 14 m wide 2 strip of land within the American Concession although it was common knowledge both among the Shanghailanders 11 and the local Shanghainese 4 the ultimate intention would be conversion to rail As the construction of a Chinese railway was a clear violation of Article VIII of the 1868 Burlingame Treaty American interests in the enterprise were sold to Jardine s Woosung Road Company which extended the Danish telegraph from Wusong south to Shanghai along its right of way on 12 August 1873 9 12 The revived company was led by Jardine s British Shanghai chief F B Johnson the Americans Augustus Hayes of Olyphant amp Co and Frank Forbes of Russell amp Co the British E Iveson of Iveson amp Co and the Danish G H N Dreyer of the Great Northern 12 Concurrently with this revival the Woosung Tramway Company was established separately to manage purchases and planning for the railway 4 A third company the Woosung Railway Company Limited was incorporated in London on July 28 1874 to raise capital for imported British rails and rolling stock which arrived on December 18 1875 Even before realizing a railway was intended the regional viceroy Shen Baozhen noticed that public land at Wusong had been fraudulently sold to the road n 4 and demanded its repurchase and a ban on any road crossing the Wenzaobang to enter Wusong proper 4 His subsequent discovery that its conversion to rail had been previously mooted and was known to Feng Zhunguang the circuit intendant of Shanghai only increased his annoyance 4 The British engineer Gabriel J Morrison hammered in the first spike on 20 January 1876 7 The Pioneer ran its first trials on about a mile of track on February 14 Within a week the circuit intendant of Shanghai Feng Zhunguang had written a protest to the British consul Walter H Medhurst After consultation they agreed that the Chinese would permit construction to continue so long as the British ceased to employ the locomotive and that both would seek further instruction from their superiors Upon being notified of the railway Shen Baozhen ordered the circuit intendant to suspend all work this failed but workmen dibao and landowners came under such pressure that the company considered the agreement vitiated and restored the locomotive on March 20 Wade ordered the British naval commander to Shanghai and provided for protection against any local interference against the workmen 4 The British secretary W F Mayers met with the circuit intendant of Shanghai six times in mid April concerning a Chinese purchase of the railway both concurred in principle but differed on how long Jardine s would continue its management role Mayers demanded eight years Feng would only permit three Adamant objection from Wu Yuan ping the new governor of Jiangsu ended these negotiations 4 Operation edit nbsp The Woosung Road in 1876 The first engine was the Ransomes amp Rapier 0 4 0 Pioneer On June 12 the 0 6 0 Celestial Empire set the line s record reaching 25 mph On June 30 1876 the line was completed as far as Jiangwan 8 After two days of complimentary and publicity runs for Shanghailanders and local businessmen 4 this section was opened to passenger traffic on July 3 13 Over the next month receipts averaged 40 60 a day 8 Business was brisk enough to necessitate adding an extra round trip to the original six on July 22 4 On August 3 a local man was killed and Chinese troops from the Wusong garrison were stationed along the railway 4 The train driver David Banks was charged with manslaughter but tried in a Western tribunal and acquitted on the grounds that the train had sounded and the suspicion the victim had been a suicide Given the existing tensions Thomas Wade used the Margary Affair and the ensuing negotiations over the Chefoo Convention to include advisors from the more conciliatory Li Hongzhang since promoted to the prestigious viceroyalty of Zhili into the negotiations in Shanghai and Nanjing 4 These lasted throughout October but on the 24th the Qing government signed with Wade The Articles of Purchasing the Wusong Railway 13 which committed them to provide the railway s owners Tls 285 000 6 payable in three installments over the course of the next year at which point they would acquire complete ownership and management of the line 4 Jardine s agreed to sell in the interest of establishing a native rail network it could supply and help capitalize 8 At then current exchange rates 14 this was equivalent to a 95 000 return on a 20 000 citation needed investment Although Wade had originally only asked for Tls 200 000 Shen initially offered to pay Tls 300 000 within 24 hours simply to take immediate possession of the line before another incident 4 Meanwhile the company continued work on the line On December 1 1876 the extension to Wusong was completed and opened 13 with six cars running six round trips daily By February demand was great enough to increase the number of cars to nine necessitating the use of dual locomotives on each run 4 At this point the train had 130 seats and would sometimes carry 250 on festivals In its year of service the Woosung Road carried 187 876 passengers 8 the majority of whom preferred the relatively expensive first and second class service The company posted profits of 27 per mile per week comparable with British routes Local Shanghainese entrepreneurs even established a pony drawn bus service with both its bus and uniforms modeled on the railroad s from the Little East Gate of the old town 4 Closure edit The profit of the line made the British expectant of continued Chinese operation in April they engaged their foreign employees to another 18 months of service and in September ordered a fourth and larger locomotive The railway s chief engineer Morrison even visited the officials at Suzhou to discuss construction of an extension for the line A local petition was circulated among the Shanghainese requesting its continued operation 4 However as the foreigners made clear among themselves and to the Chinese they intended to convert the railway to a freight line competing with the China Merchants Steam Navigation Company and forcing the issue of opening Wusong as a continuation of their concessions at Shanghai Although the line s initial five freight cars were converted to passenger use in May 1876 twelve 5 ton capacity replacements were delivered from Britain shortly later The foreign diplomats also made no secret of their intention to expand concessions regarding Shanghai into its adjoining territory During his negotiations over the line the British secretary Mayers openly claimed that Woosung is really but a part of the port of Shanghai under the Treaty of Tientsin 4 Moreover the importance of the line to the foreigners had already allowed Li Hongzheng to interfere with and even usurp Shen s authority within Jiangsu as a corollary to his authority over treaty negotiations The line s purchases and operation increased property values but divided farms and obstructed existing streams and canals with low bridges 4 The Chinese authorities took possession of the line in October 1877 after which Shen had the railway disassembled 15 He answered the local pro railroad petition with another which opposed it At the same time he also blocked French attempts to open a new road to Zikawei and British ones to extend Markham Road and Cemetery Road Shanghailanders complained of the closure incessantly including in the North China Herald s obituary of Shen The annoyance was compounded when the initial plan to ship the rails and rolling stock to Qing Taiwan to help develop the coal mines there 4 failed to materialize on account of mishandling during shipment citation needed and lack of funds 4 Instead the equipment was dumped along the shore and left to rust Memorials edit nbsp Remnant of the Tiantong an Station on the Woosung railway in Hongkou District The Woosung railway s path now forms the stretch of the Shanghai Metro s elevated Line 3 between its Baoshan Road and Zhanghuabang stations The Shanghai Railway Museum includes original Chinese language memorials concerning the railway and a full scale mock up of the Pioneer Named locomotives editPioneer n 5 0 4 0 Celestial Empire n 6 0 6 0 Flowery Land n 7 0 6 0 Viceroy n 8 0 6 0 See also editHistory of rail transport in China History of Shanghai Kaiping Tramway List of railways in ChinaFurther reading edit EARLY CHINESE NARROW GAUGE RAILWAYS by Peter Crush 柯睿思 and Baiyu Shang 尚白宇 downloaded 03 02 2022 A series of research articles on the researchgate net academic website about narrow gauge railways built in China during the Qing dynasty and the early 20th Century Full texts are available for download from the links Notes edit Also Wusong Road or Woo Sung Railway It is sometimes also called the Songhu railway although that name more properly refers to the 1890s railway which ran principally along the same route Chinese 七不可 pinyin Qi Bu Ke Wade Giles Chih pu k o A local named Li K un yung had leased land belonging to his widowed sister in law to the company with two local dibao assisting him and adding public land to the lot The dibao received 2 950 and 1 200 lashes with a bamboo rod respectively Li received only 500 but the experience killed him The British consul protested returning the land for months but was forced to yield owing to the fraud and the land s proximity to numerous official buildings including the Wusong battery and the Baoshan magistrate s office Confus 664 665 simplified Chinese 先导号 traditional Chinese 先導號 pinyin Xiandǎo Hao simplified Chinese 天朝号 traditional Chinese 天朝號 pinyin Tianchao Hao simplified Chinese 华国号 traditional Chinese 華國號 pinyin Huaguo Hao simplified Chinese 总督号 traditional Chinese 總督號 pinyin Zǒngdu HaoReferences edit a b c d e f Smith Adrian J Privatized Infrastructure the Role of Government pp 45 ff Thos Telford 1999 ISBN 0 7277 2712 5 a b Shanghai Municipal Government Office of Shanghai Chronicles 第一章淞沪铁路 吴淞铁路 in Chinese Chew Wm F Nameless Builders of the Transcontinental Railroad PDF p 37 2004 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Pong David 1973 Confucian Patriotism and the Destruction of the Woosung Railway 1877 Modern Asian Studies 7 4 647 676 ISSN 0026 749X JSTOR 311679 Hart Robert Journal entry 24 July 1865 Op cit Smith Richard J amp al eds Harvard East Asian Monographs Vol 155 Robert Hart and China s Early Modernization His Journals 1863 1866 p 304 Harvard Univ Asia Center 1991 ISBN 0 674 77530 9 a b Darwent C E 1900 Shanghai a handbook for travellers and residents to the chief objects of interest in and around the foreign settlements and native city Cornell University Library Shanghai Hongkong Kelly amp Walsh pp 115 132 a b Huenemann Ralph Wm The Dragon and the Iron Horse the Economics of Railroads in China 1876 1937 pp 1 5 Harvard Univ Asia Center 1984 ISBN 0 674 21535 4 a b c d e f Keswick Maggie Weatherall Clara 2008 The Thistle and the Jade A Celebration of 175 Years of Jardine Matheson Frances Lincoln p 204 ISBN 978 0 7112 2830 6 a b Baark Erik Lightning Wires the Telegraph and China s Technological Modernization 1860 1890 pp 81 ff Greenwood Publishing Group 1997 ISBN 0 313 30011 9 The Great Northern Telegraph Company Centenary Book 1969 Op cit Glover Bill The Great Northern Telegraph Company an Outline of the Company s History 1869 1969 Accessed 25 Oct 2011 Hart Robert Letter Op cit in Huenemann 1984 p 2 a b Lange Ole Stormogulen C F Tietgen en Finansmand Hans Imperium og Hans tid 1829 1901 p 345 Gyldendal A S 2006 ISBN 87 02 05278 4 in Danish a b c Shanghai Municipal Government Office of Shanghai Chronicles July 3 Archived 2011 09 19 at the Wayback Machine Schneider Jurgen amp Denzel Markus A Handbook of World Exchange Rates 1590 1914 p 510 WOOSUNG ROAD the story of China s First Railway Peter Crush Hong Kong 1999 ISBN 962 85532 1 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Woosung railway amp oldid 1217519162, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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