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China / Society

Remembering maritime heroes from abroad

By Peng Yining (China Daily) Updated: 2015-01-13 08:37

Remembering maritime heroes from abroad

A tablet set up in memory of Philo Norton McGiffin in Pennsylvania.

"I saw a vivid glare in front, and a horrible feeling for about a billionth of a second ... I just thought 'this is death' and knew no more," McGiffin wrote about his experience in the battle.

British officer Alexander Purvis was supposed to return home for a vacation when the war broke out, but insisted on staying and joining the battle as head of the engine department of the battleship Zhi Yuan.

After their vessel had been severely damaged and burned, the Zhi Yuan crew attempted to ram a Japanese battleship but failed. Purvis, aged 29, went down with his ship.

The Chinese people erected two cenotaphs at the port to remember the sacrifice of Purvis and Thomas Nicholls, another British officer who died in the battle at the age of 45.

Li Hongzhang, one of the eight viceroys of China, wrote to the emperor after the battle and said: "They are from overseas, but fought and even died for China. They are brave, loyal and righteous."

The Qing government later gave each of these foreign officers who sacrificed themselves three years' salary as pension to their families.

Learning from the West

Since the mid-19th century, China started to learn from the West to build a modern navy. Starting with preparations in 1875, the Beiyang fleet was commissioned by 1888 and became one of the strongest naval forces in Asia.

China imported the most advanced battleship and weapons from Europe but had insufficient experience, naval professionals and scientific knowledge to navigate this huge modern fleet. In 1881, Ding Ruchang, a Chinese naval officer who became commander of the fleet, brought two battleships from the British city of Newcastle, but could not find anyone in China who knew how to operate the vessels' 10-inch guns.

According to Chen Yue, the naval historian, foreign officers were mostly from Britain, which was the strongest maritime power at that time. Officers also came from France, Germany and the US.

In return, the Chinese government offered attractive salaries, which lured many low-income naval officers from abroad.

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