Great Strike of February 7
Appearance
Great Strike of February 7th Peking-Hankow Railway Workers Great Strike | |||
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Part of the first labor movement upsurge in China | |||
Date | 4th–7th Feb 1923 | ||
Location | |||
Caused by | At the beginning of the 20th century, Chinese workers were treated poorly and were deeply exploited; The establishment of trade unions was blocked. | ||
Goals |
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Methods | Strikes, processions, collective agreements, solidarity actions and picketings | ||
Resulted in | Failed. Wuhan, Changxindian, and Zhengzhou were under martial law. The Beiyang Army and police entered Jiang'an and Changxindian to intervene and disperse the striking workers. Before the National Revolutionary Army's Northern Expedition to liberate Wuhan, the trade unions went underground. | ||
Parties | |||
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Lead figures | |||
Zhang Guotao | |||
Casualties and losses | |||
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The Great Strike of February 7th[a] or Peking-Hankow Railway Workers' Great Strike[b] was a general strike which took place in February 1923.[1]
At the beginning it was only an internal rally, but under the intervention of Beiyang cliques it eventually developed into a general strike. The situation uncontrollably escalated into bloody clashes in which soldiers and police shot workers, 52 of whom were killed. In the strike also about hundred people injured and thousands of workers were expelled.
Notelist
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ The Compilation Committee of the Factory Chronicle of Jiang'an Vehicle Factory in Wuhan (1993). The Factory Chronicle of Jiang'an Vehicle Factory in Wuhan.