92
TAKU
he two columns marched back to the settlements, bringing in their wounded safely. After Admiral Seymour had left Taku, the Russian Admiral Hildebrant became senior fficer.
During the week, June 10th to 16th, the general situation in Chihli became critical n the extreme, and it was a fine point to determine whether the Taku Forts command- ng the entrance of the Peiho should be seized. It will probably be a contentious ques- ion to the end of time if the ultimatum sent in by the Allied Admirals to the Comman- er on Saturday, June 16th, to hand over the Forts before next morning, precipitated the risis in Tientsin and Peking or not. The official people in general held that it did, y observers affirm that it made no difference: that the Imperial Government now aptured by the Reactionaries was fully committed to the Boxer movement, and that he non-capture of the Forts would have involved the destruction of every foreigner nd native Christian in North China. The admirals had to decide this fine oint, and, with the exception of the American Officer, they took the line of men of ction. After a council of war they sent in the ultimatum that they would open fire at aybreak next day if the Forts were not surrendered. Mr. Johnson, of the Taku Tug and ighter Company and a Chinese scholar, carrying his life in his hand, delivered the Itimatum. His services have not been recognized by the British Authorities. The Commander referred the matter to Tientsin, and was ordered not only to resist but o take the initiative. He did so by opening fire at the six gunboats lying in the Tong- u reaches of the Peiho, about 2,000 yards in a bee line above the forts (three miles by river). here is much general misapprehension about this brilliant feat of war. The allied Fleet ad nothing in the world to do with it, lying as it was twelve miles distant with a shallow welve foot bar between it and the forts. The entire weight of the business fell on six ttle cockleshells of gunboats the British Algerine, French Lion, German Iltis, nd the Russian Bobr, Gelek and Korietz--and two landing parties of British and apanese numbering about 300 each. The residents of Taku village found refuge in the I. S. Monocacy, which, after getting a shell through her bows, steamed up the river out frange. Many refugees fleeing from Tientsin were on the merchant steamers at the harves, and were under fire for some hours. The firing was somewhat wild during he darkness, but when dawn appeared, at 3.45, the gunboats, led at first by the Algerine nd afterwards by the Iltis, steamed down the river and took up a position close under he N. W. Fort. A single well-timed shell would have utterly destroyed any one of the ix vessels, but Chinese gunnery was once more at fault. The naval guns soon mastered the heavy and modern weapons on the Forts, and before 5 a.m. the two landing arties had rushed the North-west Fort, and then proceeded along the causeway to the arge North Fort at the river mouth. This was also escaladed and its great guns turned gainst the two fortifications on the South side of the river at close range. The whole ffair was finished before 6 a.m.---a large number of Chinese dead testifying to the ccuracy of the Allies' fire. Four Chinese torpedo-boat destroyers were captured with onspicuous bravery by the British torpedo-boat destroyers Whiting and Fame, and istributed amongst the Allies. The demolition of the Forts was effected during 1901-2.
DIRECTORY
古太
Tai-koo
BUTTERFIELD & SWIRE, Merchants
H. H. Brown, agent (Tongku)
Agencies
Tientsin Lighter Company, Limited!
China Navigation Co., Ld."
The Leeds Forge Co., Leeds
HINESE ENGINEERING AND MININGCO.,LD.;
Tel. Ad: Maishan (Tongku)
J. H. Worth, shipping agent
CUSTOMS, IMPERIAL MARITIME—(Tongku)
Actg.T'surveyor-in-charge--J.R. Heard 1st. Class Tidewaiters-W. Anderson,
W. C. Prahl
2nd Class Tidewaiters-S. Power, O.
Lindsith, S. H. Bentzen, H. Pawelzig Prob. Tidewaiters-G. MacSweeny Gas Lightship “Taku”
Revenue Cruiser "Tienching' Steam Launch “Kweishun
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