|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewThis work describes the activities of a handful of American companies and about eighty American captains who were trying to run ships on China's great river during the treacherous days between the two world wars. The considerable physical dangers of the Yangtze itself were compounded by the greater human hazards imposed by constant fighting among warlords, piracy, brigandry, kidnapping, opium and munitions smuggling, corruption, seizures, and other forms of intimidation. The events recall--and surpass--anything of the Wild West in American frontier history. No American steamship company survived longer than twelve years in this environment, but Standard Oil, which was sheltered from the worst of the violence, was able to operate its ships throughout the entire period. More than a naval/military, or even economic, history, this book is also a commentary on a significant but largely unsuccessful American commercial venture overseas--one that was eventually scuttled by the actions of the Chinese and the American companies themselves. Ship buffs, maritime historians, students of the evolution of modern China, and those interested in American commercial history will find this study useful and entertaining. Full Product DetailsAuthor: David H. GroverPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc Imprint: Praeger Publishers Inc Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 0.567kg ISBN: 9780275943370ISBN 10: 0275943372 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 17 November 1992 Recommended Age: From 7 to 17 years Audience: College/higher education , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsThe Arena The Yangtze as Frontier A Yangtze Sampler Antecedent Years: Steam Navigation on the Yangtze, 1860-1920 Yangtze Kiang: Geography and Natural Setting American Ship Operations on the Yangtze River The Players Standard Oil Company of New York The Dollar Line Yangtze Rapid Steamship Company The Other Companies Convoys and Armed Guards: The Navy and Merchant Ships The Contests Demons, Shipwrecks, and Salvage Piracy Opium and Other Contraband The Crises The Communists' Kidnapping of Captain Charles Baker The Japanese and the Panay Convoy Incident Epilogue; The Passing of the Far Frontier Bibliography IndexReviews.,. well worth reading, both for the historian of the period and for anyone interested in America's foreign adventures early in this century. -The Friday Review of Defense Literature Grover has provided a careful study of American merchant ships and their captains on the Yangtze River in the interwar years. It will be particularly useful for those interested in Sino-American relations or U.S. foreign commercial activity between the wars. The general reader will find it an entertaining chronicle of a relatively little known area of American maritime adventure. -The Historian Autumn, 1993 ... well worth reading, both for the historian of the period and for anyone interested in America's foreign adventures early in this century. -The Friday Review of Defense Literature ?...well worth reading, both for the historian of the period and for anyone interested in America's foreign adventures early in this century.?-The Friday Review of Defense Literature ?Grover has provided a careful study of American merchant ships and their captains on the Yangtze River in the interwar years. It will be particularly useful for those interested in Sino-American relations or U.S. foreign commercial activity between the wars. The general reader will find it an entertaining chronicle of a relatively little known area of American maritime adventure.?-The Historian Autumn, 1993 .,. well worth reading, both for the historian of the period and for anyone interested in America's foreign adventures early in this century. -The Friday Review of Defense Literature Grover has provided a careful study of American merchant ships and their captains on the Yangtze River in the interwar years. It will be particularly useful for those interested in Sino-American relations or U.S. foreign commercial activity between the wars. The general reader will find it an entertaining chronicle of a relatively little known area of American maritime adventure. -The Historian Autumn, 1993 ... well worth reading, both for the historian of the period and for anyone interested in America's foreign adventures early in this century. -The Friday Review of Defense Literature ?Grover has provided a careful study of American merchant ships and their captains on the Yangtze River in the interwar years. It will be particularly useful for those interested in Sino-American relations or U.S. foreign commercial activity between the wars. The general reader will find it an entertaining chronicle of a relatively little known area of American maritime adventure.?-The Historian Autumn, 1993 ?...well worth reading, both for the historian of the period and for anyone interested in America's foreign adventures early in this century.?-The Friday Review of Defense Literature .,. well worth reading, both for the historian of the period and for anyone interested in America's foreign adventures early in this century. -The Friday Review of Defense Literature Author InformationDAVID H. GROVER, a 1945 graduate of the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, spent several years at sea as a merchant marine and naval officer. Later, he went to graduate school and became a university teacher. He was also Academic Dean of the California Maritime Academy. Now retired, he has published numerous articles and four books--two of western American history and two of maritime history. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |