Yangtze Patrol
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Yangtze Patrol | |
---|---|
Qing Empire from Chinese insurgents and river pirates | |
Date | 1854–1949 |
Executed by | United States Navy |
Outcome | avoided internal Chinese conflicts in mid-19th to mid-20th century, except for World War II |
The Yangtze Patrol, also known as the Yangtze River Patrol Force, Yangtze River Patrol, YangPat, and ComYangPat, was a prolonged naval operation initiated after the
The Yangtze River is the longest river in China, and it plays an important commercial role, with ocean-bound vessels proceeding as far upstream as the city of Wuhan. This squadron-sized unit cruised the waters of the Yangtze from Shanghai on the Pacific Ocean into the far interior of China at Chongqing.[1]
Initially, the Yangtze Patrol was formed from ships of the
In 1902, the United States Asiatic Fleet took control of the operations of the Yangtze Patrol.
In 1922, Yangtze Patrol was established as a formal component of the United States Navy in China.
In 1942, when the United States entered World War II, the Yangtze Patrol effectively ceased operations in China because of the limited resources of the United States Navy, which needed the patrol crews and their ships elsewhere in fighting with Japanese forces throughout the Pacific.
Following the end of World War II, the Yangtze Patrol resumed its duties in 1945, but on a more limited basis with fewer ships during the Chinese Civil War. When the Chinese Communist forces eventually occupied the Yangtze River valley in 1949, the United States Navy permanently ceased operations and disbanded the Yangtze Patrol.
Operations (1854–1949)


19th century
1854–1860
As a result of treaties imposed on China by foreign powers after the First (1839–1842) and Second Opium Wars (1856–1860), China was opened to foreign trade at a number of locations known as "treaty ports" where foreigners were permitted to live and conduct business. Also, created by the treaties was the doctrine of extraterritoriality, a system whereby citizens of foreign countries living in China were subject to the laws of their home country. Most favoured nation treatment under the treaties assured other countries of the fact that the same privileges would be afforded to them as well, and soon many nations, including the United States, operated merchant ships and navy gunboats on the waterways of China.
1860–1900
During the 1860s and 1870s, American merchant ships were prominent on the lower Yangtze River, operating up to the deepwater port of



20th century
1900–1920
In 1901, American-flagged merchant vessels returned to the Yangtze when
USS Palos and Monocacy were the first American gunboats built specifically for service on the Yangtze River. The Mare Island Naval Shipyard in Vallejo, California built them in 1913. The U.S. Navy then had them disassembled and shipped to China aboard the American steamer Mongolia. The Jiangnan Shipyard in Shanghai reassembled them and put them into service in 1914.
Later in 1914, both vessels demonstrated their ability to handle the rapids of the upper river when they reached Chongqing, which was more than 1,300 mi (2,100 km) from the sea, and then went further to Jiading on the Min River. In 1917, the U.S. entered World War I. The U.S. rendered the guns of Palos and Monocacy inoperable to protect Chinese neutrality. After China entered the war on the side of the Allies, the U.S. Navy reactivated the guns.
In 1917, the first Standard Oil tanker reached Chongqing, and a pattern of American commerce on the river began to emerge. On 17 January 1918, armed Chinese men attacked Monocacy and she was forced to return fire with her 6-pounder gun. Passenger and cargo service by American-flag ships began in 1920 with the Robert Dollar Line and the American West China Company. They were followed in 1923 by the Yangtze River Steamship Company, which stayed on the river until 1935, long after the other American passenger-cargo ships were gone.
1920–1930
In the early 1920s, the patrol found itself fighting the forces of warlords and bandits. To accommodate its increased responsibilities on the river, the United States Navy constructed six new gunboats in Shanghai during 1926–1927 and commissioned them in late 1927–1928 during the command of Rear Admiral Yates Stirling Jr. to replace four craft, originally seized from Spain during the Spanish–American War, that had been patrolling since 1903. All were capable of reaching Chongqing at high water, and all year-round. Collectively referred to by the U.S. press as "the new six", USS Luzon and Mindanao were the largest, USS Oahu and Panay next in size, and USS Guam and Tutuila the smallest. These vessels gave the Navy the capability it needed at a time when operational requirements were growing rapidly.
In the late 1920s, Chiang Kai-shek and the Northern Expedition created a volatile military situation for the patrol along the Yangtze.
1930–1942
After the Japanese took control of much of the middle and lower Yangtze in the 1930s, American river gunboats entered into a period of inactivity and impotence. During the early-1930s,
During different periods of time, Naval and Marine Corps personnel, who were in the patrol, were eligible for either the Yangtze Service Medal or the China Service Medal.
1945–1949

After the surrender of Japan, some patrols on the river were resumed in September 1945. A few days after
When the Chinese Civil War finally reached the Yangtze Valley, in 1949, the U.S. Navy permanently ceased operations on the Yangtze River and officially disbanded the Yangtze Patrol.
Yangtze River Patrol gunboats
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USS Yantic (1874)
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USS Elcano (1902–1928)
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USS Villalobos (1903–1928)
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USS Monocacy (1914–1939)
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USS Penguin (1923–1941)
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USS Asheville (1926–1927)
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USS Palos (1926)
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USS Luzon (1927–1942)
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USS Tutuila (1928–1937)
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USS Mindanao (1928–1941)
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USS Tulsa (1929–1941)
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USS Oahu
(1934–1941) -
USS Eaton (1945)
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USS St. Louis (1945)
Popular culture
- The fictional USS San Pablo, the Yangtze Patrol gunboat in Richard McKenna's well-known 1962 novel The Sand Pebbles, set in 1926, was modelled on the USS Villalobos, a 31-year-old vessel originally captured from Spain during the Spanish–American War in 1898. In many respects, it resembled design features of the later 1928 gunboats. McKenna served aboard one of these newer river gunboats a decade after the time of his novel. The 1966 film The Sand Pebbles was based on the novel.
- William Lederer, the author of the 1958 novel The Ugly American, served on the gunboat USS Tutuila around the same time as McKenna.
- Kemp Tolley, an officer who served as executive officer of the gunboat USS Tutuila in the 1930s, wrote Yangtze Patrol, a well-received history of the patrol.
- Actor Jack Warden was an enlisted sailor with the Yangtze Patrol in the late 1930s, before World War II.
- Fictional character Bobby Shaftoe served on the Yangtze Patrol in the Neal Stephenson book Cryptonomicon.
See also
- China Marines
- Extraterritoriality § China
- Yangtze Service Medal
- China Service Medal
- Alice Dollar incident
- Battle of Ty-ho Bay
- Gunboat diplomacy
- Nanking incident of 1927
- Pirates of the South China Coast
- Operation Beleaguer
- Amethyst incident
References
- ^ a b Tolley, Kemp (2013), Yangtze Patrol: The U.S. Navy in China, Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press
- ^ Gale, Esson M. (March 1, 1955). "The Yangtze Patrol". United States Naval Institute Proceedings. pp. 12–13. Retrieved January 22, 2025.
- ^ Wheeler, Dan (July 1978). "Yangtze River Patrol. River Rats Remember..." (PDF). All Hands. No. 738. United States Navy. pp. 12–15.
- ^ Davis, Tom (March 1977). "Grains of Salt. The Yangtze Was Their Home" (PDF). All Hands. No. 722. United States Navy. pp. 14–15.
Sources
- Konstam, Angus (2011). Yangtze River Gunboats 1900–49. Oxford; Long Island City, New York: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84908-408-6.
- Tolley, Kemp (2000). Yangtze Patrol: The U.S. Navy in China. Annapolis, Maryland: Bluejacket Books, Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-0-87021-798-2.
External links
- USSPanay.org Webpage concerning the Yangtze Patrol, USS Panay, and the Panay incident
- "Chinese Pirates", February 1932, Popular Mechanics
- "A Short Philatelic History of The Yangtze Patrol" by George Saqqal, Universal Ship Cancellation Society, February, March, April and May 2004 volumes of the LOG (Monthly Journal)
- The Yangtze Patrol and South China Patrol – The U.S. Navy in China: A Brief Historical Chronology
- Uniforms of the United States Navy in China 1920–1941 by Gary Joseph Cieradkowski
- Inside the Archives: The Yangtze River Patrol Collection
- Yangtze Patrol U.S. Navy 1935 (YouTube documentary video)
- Richard Crenna's The Sand Pebbles CasaQ Cookbook, Captain, (Richard Crenna) in the film, The Sand Pebbles (Yangtze Patrol – U.S. Navy Chow and Recipes)