Shanghai Volunteer Corps

Shanghai Volunteer Corps
Active 12 April 1853 – 27 February 1942
Country Shanghai International Settlement
Type local auxiliary militia
Anniversaries 1854, 1938, 1954
Engagements January 28 Incident (1932)
Battle of Shanghai (1937)
Shanghai Volunteer Corps
Traditional Chinese 上海萬國商團
Simplified Chinese 上海万国商团
Literal meaning Shanghai Myriad-Nation Urban Defense Corps

The Shanghai Volunteer Corps (SVC) was a multinational, mostly volunteer force controlled by the Shanghai Municipal Council which governed the Shanghai International Settlement. The SVC was in existence from 1853 to 1942.

History

The Shanghai Volunteer Corps was created on 12 April 1853 during the Small Swords Society's uprising.[1] It saw action alongside British and American military units in the 1854 'Battle of the Muddy Flat', when Qing imperial troops besieging the rebel-held city ignored foreign demands to move further away from the foreign concessions. Concerned that the Qing forces were drawing rebel fire into the settlements, the foreign consuls and military commanders authorised an attack on the Qing forces to dislodge them. The operation was successful, and the battle was thereafter commemorated as an important event in the history of the SVC.[2] The Corps was disbanded in 1855 but reestablished in 1861.[3] In 1870 the Shanghai Municipal Council took over the running of the SVC .[4]

The unit was mobilised in 1900 for the Boxer Rebellion and in 1914 for the First World War. In 1916 the British recruited Chinese to serve in the Chinese Labour Corps for service in rear areas on the Western Front to free troops for front line duty. Many members of the SVC served as officers in the CLC. In 1910 the German contingent consisted of one regular company ("Prinz Heinrich Kompangie") and one reserve company. When the First World War broke out at least forty of the German volunteers in Shanghai left to join the 7. Kompagnie of the III. Seebataillon in the defence of Tsingtao.

At various times during its history the Shanghai Volunteer Corps included Scottish, American, Chinese, Italian, Austro-Hungarian, Danish, German, Filipino, Jewish, Portuguese, Japanese, White Russian, and Eurasian companies, amongst others. British War Office supplied weapons and a commanding officer.[5] The German and the Austro-Hungarian companies were disbanded in 1917 when China declared war on Germany.[6]

Symbols

Volunteers from the German Prinz Heinrich Kompagnie of the SVC in Tsingtao, 1914.

Prior to 1914 some of the national contingents wore distinctive parade uniforms at their own expense, modelled on those of their respective armies.[7]

'While the uniforms of each company differed in many ways, each made use of the Cap badge of the SVC which consisted of an eight-pointed Brunswick star with the letters "SVC" and the date "4th April 1854" in a scroll underneath. The official seal of the Volunteer Corps was different however and consisted of the Municipal Council seal as approved in 1868 on a gold Brunswick star and was exactly the same except the council title and motto was replaced with "Shanghai Volunteer Corps" and the Prussian flag (representing Germany) was retained even when it was removed from the council flag after 1917.

The insignia of the companies also differed: the German Company, "Prinz Heinrich Kompagnie", wore a crowned "H" monogram on their shoulder straps for Prince Heinrich of Prussia (Kaiser Wilhelm II's younger brother and commander of the German East Asia Squadron, 1899-1903), and the Jewish Company, who wore collar insignia consisting of a Star of David with "SVC" in the centre. The Portuguese Company wore red collar tabs, as worn by the Portuguese Army, and had the distinction of being the only SVC unit to be decorated by any government, when on 5 October 1932, the Portuguese Minister to China presented the Company with the Military Order of Christ.

Portuguese Company of the SVC in 1908.

Units

British Officers of the SVC in 1908.
Japanese Company in the SVC, 1908.

The SVC reached its maximum strength in the early 1930s where it consisted of the following units-[8]

The German Company, founded in 1891 and granted permission to be named the "Prinz Heinrich Kompagnie" in 1898, and the Austro-Hungarian Company, founded in 1912, were both disbanded in 1917 with China's entry into the First World War. The Italian Company, founded in 1914, also later disbanded in 1920.

With the exception of the White Russians, the Corps were all unpaid Volunteers with the SVC financed by the Shanghai Municipal Council. On 16 January 1941 the Russian Regiment became the Auxiliary Detachment of the Shanghai Municipal Police.

Commandants

The following officers served as commandant of the SVC:[11]

Awards

Members of the volunteer corps were made eligible for several medals for service by the Municipal Council during its history. In addition to being eligible for awards from members' own native countries, these awards held official status and could be worn with other medals with the status of a foreign award. These medals included:

Disbandment

The SVC was disbanded early in 1942 after the Japanese took over the International Settlement.[20] The decision was formally made by the still existing Shanghai Municipal Council who held a reception to mark the placing of the Corps' colours "in a place of dignity and honour" in the Council chambers.[21] A 'Centenary Dinner' was held in Hong Kong on 2 April 1954.[22]

See also

References

External links

Notes

  1. North China Herald, 16 April 1853, p.146
  2. The Battle of "Muddy Flat": Being an historical sketch of that famous occurrence written specially for the Jubilee Commemoration thereof at Shanghai, April 1904; with some added particulars relating to the Shanghai Volunteer Corps (Shanghai, 1904)
  3. p.39 Heath, Ian & Perry, Michael The Taiping Rebellion 1851-66 1994 Osprey Publishing
  4. "Tales of old Shanghai - Library - A Short History of Shanghai". Retrieved 2 May 2015.
  5. Harriet Sergeant, page71, "Shanghai", ISBN 0-7195-5713-5
  6. p. 258 Johnstone The Shanghai Problem Stanford University Press
  7. http://www.sacktrick.com/igu/germancolonialuniforms/SVC.htm
  8. p.182 Clark ,George B. Treading Softly: U.S. Marines in China, 1819-1949. Greenwood Publishing Company
  9. p.185 Bramsen, Christopher Bo Open doors: Vilhelm Meyer and the Establishment of General Electric in China 2001 Routledge
  10. "The Jewish Company of the Shanghai Volunteer Corps". Retrieved 2 May 2015.
  11. Shanghai Volunteer Corps, Centenary Dinner Brochure http://www.virtualshanghai.net/Asset/Source/bnBook_ID-1264_No-1.pdf
  12. "Obit.". Singapore Government Newspaper SG. The Straits Times. 2 December 1925. p. 10. Retrieved 1 May 2015.
  13. Reuters (1 April 1931). "COL. W. F. L. GORDON DEAD.". Singapore Government Newspaper SG. The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser. p. 11. Retrieved 1 May 2015.
  14. "SHANGHAI VOLUNTEERS.". Singapore Government Newspaper SG. The Straits Times. 5 January 1928. p. 9. Retrieved 1 May 2015.
  15. "SHANGHAI FORCES. N.Z. Officer Takes Command.". Western Argus (Kalgoorlie, WA: National Library of Australia). 17 March 1931. p. 23. Retrieved 1 May 2015.
  16. "Shanghai Volunteer Corps.". The Argus (Melbourne: National Library of Australia). 19 December 1933. p. 9. Retrieved 1 May 2015.
  17. "LIEUT.-COL. GRAHAM.". Singapore Government Newspaper SG. The Straits Times. 23 December 1933. p. 11. Retrieved 1 May 2015.
  18. The London Gazette: no. 34455. p. 7186. 16 November 1937. Retrieved 1 May 2015.
  19. "SHANGHAI CORPS TO HAVE AUSTRALIAN LEADER.". The Sydney Morning Herald (National Library of Australia). 6 November 1940. p. 12. Retrieved 1 May 2015.
  20. p.187 Ristaino, Marcia Reynders Port of Last Resort: The Diaspora Communities of Shanghai 2004 Stanford University Press
  21. Robert Bickers, page 316 "Empire Made Me", ISBN 0-7139-9684-6
  22. Shanghai Volunteer Corps Centenary Dinner held at The Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club on Friday, 2nd April 1954, programme
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