Krags and Lees

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  • jon_norstog
    Senior Member
    • Sep 2009
    • 3896

    #1

    Krags and Lees

    The reason I couldn't find the rather startling quote below is I was looking in primary sources - I thought I had seen it in the Reports. Anyway, it's from a secondary source.

    “Throughout the campaign each contingent had scrutinized the equipment of the others with professional curiosity. Of particular interest to the Marines were the two mtypes of tifles with which they were armed: the Krag-Jorgenson was much admired by allied soldiers; the other, the Lee, was not.”

    Biggs, Chester M. The United States Marines in North China, 1894-1942 Jefferson N. Carolina: MacFarland & Co 2003. p. 128

    The book is almost $50 in paperback. I think I'll try to find it in a library and see what was the source for that bit of information. Here's a link to the eBook.

    Like most foreign troops stationed in China, the United States Marines' mission was to protect the American embassy and American consulates, missionaries, tourists, and other citizens in China. During the half century covered by this book, the Marines saw China as it would never again be. The Opium Wars and Boxer Rebellion gave the Europeans a certain standing, with prerogatives and privileges that were looked upon by everyone, even the Chinese, as a natural order of existence. The author discusses early military operations in north China, the early legation guards, the Boxer Rebellion in 1900, and the Marine legation guard in Peking also in 1900. It also discusses Seymour's relief column, Waller's column, the capture of the Walled City of Tien-Tsin, the siege of the legations at Peking, the relief of Peking, and the Marines' return to Peking.


    There's a pretty decent map illustrating the attack on Peking a few pages down.

    jn
  • madsenshooter
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2009
    • 1476

    #2
    I've read that somewhere Jon, maybe I read the ebook, or parts thereof.
    "I have sworn upon the Altar of God, eternity hostility upon all forms of tyranny over the minds of man." - Thomas Jefferson

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