Sun Ning Railway Company

(Redirected from Xinning Railway)

The Sun Ning Railway Company, also known as the Sunning Railway Co. or the Xinning Railway Co., was a standard-gauge railway in the Pearl River Delta in Guangdong Province founded in 1906 by Chin Gee Hee (陳宜禧, Chen Yixi) and Yu Shek (余灼, Yu Zhuo). It was South China's second railway[2][3][4] and one of only three railways in pre-1949 China built solely with private Chinese capital.[5][6] It was destroyed during the Second World War to prevent its use by the Japanese.

Sun Ning Railway
Overview
HeadquartersGuangzhou
LocaleSouth China
Dates of operation1906; 118 years ago (1906) –
1938; 86 years ago (1938)
Technical
Track gauge1,435 mm
Sun Ning Railway Company
Traditional Chinese新寧鐵路[1]
Simplified Chinese新宁铁路
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinXīnníng Tiělù
Wade–GilesHsin-ning Tʻieh-lu
Yue: Cantonese
JyutpingSan1-ning4 Tit8-lou6

Fundraising

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In order to fund the railway, Chin raised $2.75 million, mainly from overseas Chinese; some sources[7] say that further investment came from James J. Hill, but others say that at a time when railway development in China was dominated by European nations,[8] he "vowed not to sell shares to foreigners, to borrow money from them, or to use their engineers".[2] Chin's partner Yu Zhuo raised further funds in China and from overseas Chinese in Southeast Asia. Its benefits to Guangdong's economy were cut short when it was seized by local warlords in 1926; it was finally destroyed during the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1938.[2][3][9][10]

While raising funds and building the railway, Chin encountered numerous obstacles: a magistrate tried to usurp credit for organizing the company; there were many difficulties over obtaining a right of way due to clan feuds and superstitions (geomancy[11]); and gentry-officials repeatedly attempted extortion. Chin bought an official title to become legally one of the gentry himself, which somewhat eased the process. Still, the construction was confronted by over a hundred riots staged by local landlord forces, resulting in thirty-nine otherwise unnecessary turns, which made construction more expensive and affected speed and safety.[2][12]

Construction

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The company was officially chartered in 1906. The first section—15 miles from Kung Yick (公益, Gongyi) at the northern tip of the Taishan district to Taishan—opened in January 1908. In 1909, it reached Doushan and the 54-mile railway was officially open for business. By 1913, it reached another 26 miles to Jiangmen; a further 21-mile branch line from Taishan to Baisha opened in 1920.[2][13] Altogether, construction costs totaled about 9.7 million yuan or US$4.8 million.[12]

Rolling stock was purchased mainly from the United States, although three tank locomotives came from Germany.[2] Trains typically had six or seven cars, carrying both passengers (in three classes) and freight. At its height in the 1920s, it carried three million passengers and approximately a hundred thousand tons of cargo annually, with 80% of income coming from passengers. In this same era, freight was heavily weighted toward imports: the import/export ratio was about thirty to one, in an economy heavily based on remittances from abroad.[12]

By 1922 there was a machine shop in Kung Yick City. Chin Gee Hee claimed that it "could manufacture everything except the locomotive".[14]

Unfulfilled 1924 plans by Chin would have extended the railway in one direction 40 miles from Doushan to the Tonggu Commercial Port and in the other to Foshan, through which would have reached Guangzhou and the domestic mainland. Chin also wanted to continue west through Yangjiang and the west of Guangdong and to the Leizhou peninsula, forming a traffic network throughout the southwest of Guangdong.[2] Several similar proposals met similar fates: the well-connected Yuehan Railway Company had a near-monopoly on railway construction in Guangdong, some of the gentry wished to create their own railways, and while the Sun Ning finally obtained the required formal positions, by the time it got those permissions it was in financial trouble. Furthermore, the Qing government prevented them from borrowing from abroad, despite the fact that the government itself was taking foreign loans at the time. Consequently, the railway never connected to any major port or any other key city of the Chinese economy.[12]

From 1927 to 1929, the government overtly took over the railroad, but it proved to be beyond their ability to operate it, and they returned it to civilian control. The railroad was destroyed in the Second Sino-Japanese War, dismantled in December 1938 to deny its use by the Japanese military, who nonetheless occupied Taishan. 23,782 rails were shipped to Guangxi in 1942 to build the Qianguei Railway; all other assets, which were worth over three million yuan, were carried off by the Japanese.[2]

Lucie Cheng and Liu Yuzun write that, while the railway did not play major economic or strategic role in the history of Chinese transportation, "its entire life reflects the interlocking but conflicting pressures of Western imperialism, bureaucratic capitalism and feudalism which characterized early twentieth century China... Moreover [it] reflects the role of emigrant capital and nationalism on the development of enterprises in the emigrant motherland," reflecting especially the investment by overseas Chinese in a geographic area (Taishan) which had been the homeland for so many of them.[12]

See also

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References

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Citations

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  1. ^ "第四集:新宁铁路 (Episode 4: The Xinning Railway)" (in Chinese). China Radio International. 2006-05-22. Retrieved 2007-09-28.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h The History of Xinning Railway Archived 2004-12-10 at the Wayback Machine, Bureau of Archives of Taishan City ( some of this is copied verbatim from the Hong Kong Railway Society website article by Peter Crush).
  3. ^ a b Scigliano 2007.
  4. ^ Another transliteration of 余灼 (pinyin: Yu Zhuo) is Yu Chuek (Editors' note, p. 125, Chin Gee Hee, "Letter Asking for Support to Build the Sunning Railroad" (1911), p. 125–128 in Judy Yung, Gordon H. Chang, and Him Mark Lai (compilers and editors), Chinese American Voices, University of California Press (2006). ISBN 0-520-24310-2.)
  5. ^ Don T. Nakanishi and Tina Yamano Nishida, The Asian American Educational Experience: A Source Book for Teachers and Students, Routledge (1995). ISBN 0-415-90872-8. p. 55.
  6. ^ Jue (1983) for the ideographs and Taishanese spellings.
  7. ^ Eric Scigliano, for example. Cheng and Yuzun (1982) seem to say that initial fundraising was entirely from China and from overseas Chinese, but some later funds were borrowed from abroad.
  8. ^ Cheng and Yuzun (1982) record that "by 1911, over ninety percent of Chinese railroad lines were built by Westerners or by foreign loans."
  9. ^ Guide to the Willard G. Jue Papers, 1880-1983 on the site of the University of Washington Libraries, accessed July 19, 2007.
  10. ^ Xiao-huang Yin & Zhiyong Lan (2003), p. 9.
  11. ^ Helen F. Siu, Agents and Victims in South China: Accomplices in Rural Revolution, Yale University Press (1989). ISBN 0-300-05265-0. p. 71.
  12. ^ a b c d e Cheng and Yuzun (1982)
  13. ^ Jue (1983) p. 34 is the source for the spelling Kung Yick and the location of the city.
  14. ^ Jue (1983), p. 34.

Bibliography

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  • Lucie Cheng and Liu Yuzun with Zheng Dehua, "Chinese Emigration, the Sunning Railway and the Development of Toisan", Amerasia 9(1): 59-74, 1982; transcribed online, accessed 22 September 2007.
  • Peter Crush, "The Sunning Railway", Hong Kong Railway Society Under "English, Members Corner, Feature Articles", Retrieved January 2009; source for the Chinese characters for the railway name. This article includes numerous photographs.
  • Willard G. Jue, "Chin Gee-hee, Chinese Pioneer Entrepreneur in Seattle and Toishan", The Annals of the Chinese Historical Society of the Pacific Northwest, 1983, 31:38. This is the source for ideographs and for (non-pinyin) transliteration of Taishanese names.
  • The History of Xinning Railway, Bureau of Archives of Taishan City. Undated; the Internet Archive shows the page already existing December 10, 2004. Accessed online 22 September 2007. This appears to draw heavily on the Cheng and Yuzun paper.
  • Eric Scigliano, "Seattle's Chinese Founding Father", Seattle Metropolitan, May 2007, p. 48.
  • Xiao-huang Yin & Zhiyong Lan, Why Do They Give? Change and Continuity in Chinese American Transnational Philanthropy since the 1970s, commissioned by the Global Equity Initiative for a workshop on Diaspora Philanthropy to China and India, held in May 2003. p. 9. Accessed online 22 September 2007.
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  • Gallery of the Xinning Railway, Archives of Taishan City.
  • Peter Crush, [1], Hong Kong Railway Society. Includes a map of the railway and many pictures of the railway's rolling stock. (Link updated Sep 2009. Select ENGLISH, Member's Corner, Feature Articles)