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NOTE: None of the information on this Web page is included
in the book "An American in China." | |||||
Sinking of the USS Panay A full 20-minute film on this important event, a precede to Pearl Harbor, can by seen at this link. Norman Alley, a Universal News cameraman, was able to capture the last hours of the Panay while being evacuated along with other journalists from the city before the Japanese onslaught. | |||||
Directed by Bill Guttentag, Dan Sturman | |||||
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The horrific fate suffered by Nanking at the hands of the Japanese has so overwhelmed the history
of this city that it is hard to visualize it before the Japanese occupation. The images that the Westerner retains from a study of history and from television documentaries are generally marked by slaughter, terror and destruction. Yet by contemporary accounts it was (and still is) a pleasant and progressive metropolis, rich with historical landmarks, not the least of which are its 600-year-old surrounding wall and the impressive Sun Yat-sen Mausoleum, built in 1925. Sun Yat-sen proclaimed Nanking the capital in 1912 but this proved impractical and so the seat of government remained in Peking. In 1928, however, Chiang Kai-shek made it the capital again and so it remained until 1937 (at which time it was transferred to Chungking in the interior.) In the ten years under Nationalist reign, it made impressive strides in modernization, developing an electric-light system and a clean-water-distribution network, among other improvements. It could confidently bear the title of capital, which had been taken from haughty Peking, at the time unceremoniously dubbed Peiping, meaning Northern Peace, although rarely ever called that. Nanking was also the capital after the war, from 1945 up to the Communist takeover in 1949. | |||||
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The Ministry of Communications Building Built in 1935 by a Russian architect in the then popular Chinese Palatial style, this structure was intended to impress and it certainly succeeded. Today, many of the Republican Era buildings in Nanjing that were designed by top architects of the time are now under the protection of a plan drafted by the Nanjing Urban Planning Institute. However, this is not one of them. In a terrible twist of fate, the building, the most ornate in the city, was set ablaze on Dec. 12, 1937, by Nationalists soldiers, determined to leave no important edifice standing for the Japanese. A reporter for the Chicago Daily Tribune, wrote in his journal on that day. "Because the building was used as a powder magazine, the big bursts and fires continued like hell was set free, and the panic of the crowd got worse." Photograph by Alfred T. Palmer, from The National Geographic. | |||||
Built in 1931 in the Nanking area as a retreat for Chiang Kai-shek and his wife, Soong May-ling. Again, in the Palatial style, which combined Western and Chinese elements. | |||||
Norma Shearer (visible on poster at left) stars in "Romeo and Juliet" at a movie theater in early 1937.This photograph is by the journalist Julius Eigner from The National Geographic. | |||||
Old photograph of Nanking showing the Ming wall and a lake. | |||||
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US. amabassador to China from 1929-1941. In 1933 he made the cover of Time. | |||||
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The first emperor of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644)
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In Nanking one night the diplomatic corps was giving a dinner for U. S. Ambassador to China Nelson T. Johnson to celebrate his 30th year of diplomatic service. Shortly after midnight the bantering, toasting diners heard the sudden scream of sirens. They knew they were about to be raided from the air, but decided to stick it out. Through the moonlit sky roared a squad of Japanese bombers, plunked incendiary bombs on the capital's poorer districts. Three times they returned, until the more congested quarters of the city were in flames. One hundred and fifty coolies, trapped in squalid mud huts, were burned alive. - Time, Sept. 6, 1937
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Friday, 4 April 2014
Nanking ~ Nanjing ~ 南京
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