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Huangpu Three

  Huangpu (Three)

  Fengshan period

  The 24th Issue

  In 1947, Sun Li-ren was ordered to train a new army in Taiwan and decided to use the natural training base of the former Japanese invading army in Fengshan to establish the "Fourth Military Officer Training Class of the Army Officer School". He concurrently served as the director, directly under the Chengdu headquarters; hired members of the US Military Advisory Group as consultants, trained officers, lieutenants, and various branches, and opened the first session of the Fengshan Military Academy. In March 1950, Chiang Kai-shek returned to Taiwan and formally decided to restore the military school in Chengdu at that time. The Fourth Military Officer Training Class was renamed the Student Corps, the 19th Student Corps was reorganized into the Cadet Corps, the Teaching Battalion was renamed the First Teaching Battalion, and the students of the Jinmen Angry Tide Military-Political School were organized into the Second Teaching Battalion. In addition, the Chengdu Military Academy period was continued, and the 24th Student Corps was established to recruit young people to study.

  The Twenty-Fifth Issue

  In March 1952, the training battalion and the first teaching battalion were transferred to the infantry school. The student battalion was reorganized into the 25th Student Battalion and continued to recruit new students. Training began in April 1952 and graduated on August 31, 1954.

  The 26th Issue

  In 1953, the enrollment was conducted. The educational content, in addition to "inheriting" the Whampoa tradition, still divided students into two training stages: enlisted and student. After completing the enlisted stage, comprehensive military education was added; after completing the student stage, political education and night combat training were added. They entered school on September 28, 1953, and graduated on August 31, 1955.

  Twenty-Seventh Period to Forty-Sixth Period

  To adapt to the rapid progress of modern military technology, and the increasingly broad knowledge and skills that officers should possess, on June 16, 1954, the 30th anniversary of the school's founding, a new educational system was announced. Starting from the 27th term, the three-year system was changed to a four-year system. The goal of education is to integrate philosophy, science, and military studies into one body, with the aim of "combining civil and military, and cultivating both skills and virtues." On October 25, 1954, Chiang Kai-shek personally presided over the opening ceremony of the new system. Students still followed the Huangpu era's class, platoon, company organization, and set up team officers. Starting in 1955, incoming students had to participate in joint recruitment and examinations with other colleges and universities. High school graduates who were excellent in both character and learning, and physically qualified, could be exempt from examination and directly admitted.

  The 47th Issue

  In 1975, the new education system was revised again. From this period on, the student's education time was increased to four years and three months. In teaching, the previous military subjects were changed from the main to the auxiliary, and the ordinary subjects accounted for more than 55% of the time, in order to increase the basic subjects' time to accept new knowledge, lay a scientific foundation, improve the scientific level, and meet the general university standards. After graduation, students not only obtained officer qualifications but also received bachelor's degrees, with a requirement to serve for ten years.

  Issue 48 to Issue 49

  In 1977, in order to cater to the different inclinations of students and allow them to develop their interests in science and technology or liberal arts courses, the school added a liberal arts program from this semester onwards. Graduates can be awarded Bachelor of Science or Bachelor of Arts degrees based on their accumulated credits. While claiming to inherit the tradition of Huangpu, it also referenced and adopted the teaching settings of West Point Military Academy in the United States. The subjects studied include: (1) General education courses, including departments such as politics, liberal arts, foreign languages, mathematics, physics, electrical engineering, mechanical engineering, military engineering, and surveying, taught by civilian professors. (2) Military academic subjects, with a military training department under which there are four groups: tactics, general affairs, ordnance, and physical education, all taught by military officers. The teaching method was changed from the "injection type" to the "enlightenment type", called the "five-stage teaching method", in order to encourage students to learn independently.

  The 50th Issue

  In 1979, under the order of Hao Pei-tsun, from this semester onwards, on the basis of the original teaching content and methods, wilderness training was added to students, with one implementation each in winter and summer vacations every year, to train them to endure hardship, experience battlefield life, and ensure that students can take up grassroots cadre work after graduation.

  From 51st in 1980 to 64th in 1993, temporarily missing due to limited data on hand.

  According to statistics: From August 1950 when the Fengshan Military Academy reopened until the end of 1983, graduates from the 24th period to the 52nd period totaled over 11,500 people. During this period, there were also many temporary officer training classes, such as night combat training classes, overseas student military training classes, reserve officer training classes, supplementary training corps, reserve student classes, specialized student classes, and enlisted student battalions. The number of students who graduated or completed their studies also exceeded 50,000 people.

  The first batch of graduates from Whampoa Military Academy will be recorded as generals

  Name Style Number Native Place Birth and Death Years Highest Military and Political Positions Held Military Rank Party Affiliation

  Ding Bingquan Commander of the 8th Army, 197th Division, and Garrison Commander of Changsha Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Ding Delong Guangzhou Hunan Youxian 1904 - ? Commander of the 37th Army Group, Alternate Member of the Sixth Central Supervisory Committee of the Kuomintang Lieutenant General Kuomintang

  Wanquan Strategy Guangxi Cangwu 1902-1937 Central Military Academy Teaching Corps First Division Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Ma Shikong's son Jing Shaanxi Mizhi 1903-1973 Deputy Commander of the Seventh Pacification Zone and Commander of the 88th Army Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Ma Zhi-chao, born in Hua County, Shaanxi Province in 1903, died in 1973. He was the Director-General of the National Police Administration and a Lieutenant General and Commander of the 19th Army of the Kuomintang.

  Ma Lüwu Kuo-chang Shaanxi Huaxian 1904 - ? Commander of the 26th Army Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Ma Huihan Hunan Changsha 1900 - ? Deputy Commander of the Fifth Administrative District of Hunan Province, Lieutenant General of the Nationalist Party

  Wang Qi-jin, born in Hengyang, Hunan in 1901, died in Chengdu in 1941. He was the head of education at the Central Military Academy and a lieutenant general of the Nationalist Party.

  Wang Mengmin, Hunan Changsha 1902-1968 Director of the Political Department of the Army Infantry School, High-ranking Advisor to the First Army Corps, Lieutenant General of the Nationalist Party

  Wang Xiong Jingbo Hainan Wen Chang 1902-1951 Commander-in-Chief of the Qiongya Defense Command Deputy Commander Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Wang Zhiyu Xiaoqin Henan Luoyang 1906-1988 Chongqing Garrison Command Third District Commander Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Wang Wanling Song Ya Yunnan Tengchong 1903-1992 Deputy Commander of the 85th Army, Director of the New Soldier Training Department of the Military and Political Department Major General Nationalist Party

  Wang Wenyuan, a native of Xingyi, Guizhou Province, was born in 1902. He served as the Deputy Director of the Guizhou Pacification Office and held the rank of Lieutenant General in the Nationalist Party.

  Wang Quan was born in Lintong, Hunan Province in 1903 and died in 1966. He was a high-ranking advisor to the Northeast "Bandit-Suppression" Generalissimo of the Nationalist Party.

  Wang Gongliang Sichuan Xuyong 1901-1972 Deputy Commander of the 13th Army, Commander-in-Chief of the Sixth Column of Sichuan-Shaanxi-Hubei Border Region General of the Nationalist Party

  Wang Shihe (Zhejiang, Fenghua 1899-1960) Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Third Group Army, Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Hexi Garrison General KMT

  Wang Erlie Hunan Shimen 1903-1928 Fourth Army of the Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army Chief of Staff Communist Party

  Wang Zhonglian, courtesy name Ren, from Anhui Province's Xiao County, 1903 - ? Commander of the Fourth Army Corps, Alternate Member of the Sixth Central Supervisory Committee of the Kuomintang, Lieutenant General of the Kuomintang

  Wang Tingzhu, from Lüeyang, Shaanxi Province, 1905-?. Deputy Commander of the 14th Army Group and Commander-in-Chief of the New Eighth Army, Lieutenant General of the Nationalist Party.

  Wang Lianqing, also known as Jiangsu Lianshui, 1900-?, Deputy Commander of the 14th Army, Major General, Nationalist Party.

  Wang Zhiqi, Fengshan, Gansu, Tianshui 1901-1985 Deputy Commander of the Fifth Army Corps and Commander of the 119th Army, Acting Chairman of the Gansu Provincial Government Major General Revolutionary Committee

  Wang Shuming, Xunshan, Shandong Province 1905-? Commander-in-Chief of the Air Force, Chief of Staff, Kuomintang Central Committee member, First-class General of the Air Force, Kuomintang

  Wang Jinxin (1900-1951), Commander of the 97th Army, Deputy Commander-in-Chief of Hunan Provincial Security Department, Major General of the People's Liberation Army.

  Wang Zhenxiang Hunan Liling 1901-1938 Deputy Commander of the 20th Division of the National Revolutionary Army Major General Kuomintang

  Wang Jingjiu, also known as Ping Jiangsu Fengxian 1902-1964 Commander of the Second Army Corps, Commander-in-Chief of the First Army Training Command General KMT

  Wang Zhen Yu Youhuan Hunan Youxian 1902 - ? Chengdu Central Military Academy Senior Instructor Major General Nationalist Party

  Wang Fuqian, male, Guangdong Dongguan 1904-1931 Commander of the 52nd Division's supplementary brigade, Major General, Nationalist Party

  Wang Yichang (Pure Hui) Anhui Lu'an 1896-1986 Deputy Director of the Political Department of the Headquarters of the First War Zone Major General Nationalist Party

  Wang Taiji, Shaanxi Lintong 1906-1934 Red Army Twenty-sixth Army Forty-second Division Commander Communist Party

  Wang Xijun, from Lianhua, Hunan Province, 1906-1966. Director of the Political Department of the Nationalist Army University, and Major General and Head of the Anhui Provincial Security Bureau of the Nationalist Party.

  Wang Hui was born in Guiding, Guizhou Province in 1900. He served as the Chief of Staff of the Military Control Zone Command of Guizhou Province and held the rank of Lieutenant General in the Nationalist Party.

  Deng Zichao was born in Shicheng County, Jiangxi Province in 1898 and died in 1951. He served as the Administrative Supervisor of the 9th and 5th Districts of Jiangxi Province and concurrently as the Commander-in-Chief of the Security Command, with the rank of Lieutenant General in the Nationalist Party.

  Deng Wenyi Xue Bing Hunan Liling 1905-1997 Director of the Political Department of the Third War Zone, Director of the News Bureau of the Ministry of National Defense, Kuomintang Central Standing Committee Major General

  Deng Jingru Guangdong Dianbai 1902-1972 Deputy Commander of the 91st Army, Director of the 21st Supplementary Training Department of the Military Administration Bureau Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Deng Chunhua Hainan Lingshui 1900-1970 Commander of the 109th Army, Commander-in-Chief of the Third Route of Hainan Defense General KMT

  Deng Yumei, Hanguang Shaanxi Xianyang 1900-1967 Deputy Commander of the Eighth Army Group, Deputy Director of the Sichuan-Shaanxi-Gansu Border Region Pacification Office Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Kong Zhaolin (1901-1930), Shanxi Province, Fifth Mixed Brigade Deputy Commander-in-Chief, Lieutenant General of the Nationalist Party.

  Qiu Shi Fa was born in Yangshan, Guangdong Province in 1906-1973. He served as the Director of the Office of the Central Training Corps and the Chief of the General Affairs Bureau of the Ministry of National Defense with the rank of Lieutenant General in the Kuomintang.

  Qiu Zongwu Hainan Chengmai 1899 - ? Central Military Academy 10th term First Corps Commander Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Yin Rongguang, born in Chaling, Hunan Province in 1900, was the director of the Political Department of the Headquarters of the Eighth Army Corps and a lieutenant general of the Nationalist Party.

  Wen Zhiwen Hunan Yiyang 1900-1926 Commander of the 5th Regiment, 2nd Division, 1st Army of the National Revolutionary Army Posthumously promoted to Lieutenant General Kuomintang

  You Fang Xie Ting Hainan Wenchang 1904 - ? Nineteenth Army General Headquarters High Adviser Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Fang Riheng Guangdong Zhongshan 1901 - ? Commander of the 86th Army Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Shi Zude, born in Zhuji, Zhejiang in 1900 and died in 1972, was the Deputy Director of the Fujian Pacification Office and the Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the 22nd Army Corps with the rank of Lieutenant General in the Nationalist Party.

  Gan Jing Sheng, a Guangxi native from Wuzhou, born in 1904. Deputy Commander of the Guilin Garrison Command of the Nationalist Government.

  Gan Da Chao Guangdong Xinyi 1903-1931 Director of the Political Department of the 25th Division Kuomintang

  Gan Qingchi Guangdong Xinyi 1900-1951 Deputy commander of the 69th and 99th Armies, Administrative Inspector of Guangdong's 7th District and Commander-in-Chief of the Security Forces General KMT

  Tong Renzi, born in Meng County, Henan Province in 1903, died in 1943. He was the deputy commander of the 16th Independent Brigade and a lieutenant general of the Nationalist Party.

  Ye Moxie Huajiang Hunan Liling 1903 - ? Supplemental Travel Substitute Brigade Commander Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Ye Ganwu Guangdong Meixian 1900-1950 Gansu Hexi Garrison Command High Adviser Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Shen Maosheng was born in Hengyang, Hunan Province in 1896 and died in 1974. He served as a high-ranking advisor to the First Army Corps Command of the Nationalist Party with the rank of Lieutenant General.

  Tian Wei'an Shaanxi Lintong 1899 - ? - First National People's Political Councilor, National Government Supervisor Committee Major General Kuomintang

  Zuo Quan Hunan Liling 1905-1942 Red Army First Corps Deputy Commander, Eighth Route Army Deputy Chief of Staff Major General Communist Party

  Historical book Yu Shu Yu Hunan Liling 1902 - ? First Army Corps Headquarters High Adviser Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Shi Zhongyu, a native of Hua County, Shaanxi Province, 1895-1959. He was the Fourth Administrative Supervisor and Commander-in-Chief of the Nationalist Party in Shaanxi Province.

  Shi Honglie, Jiangxi Nanchang 1903-1970 Deputy Commander of the First Army Corps, Director of the Military Law Enforcement Department of the "Bandit Suppression" Headquarters in North China Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Feng Yi Qi Hou Hunan Xiangxiang 1901 - ? Military Commission Political Department War Zone Party and Government Guidance Committee Office Director Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Feng Shiyin Sichuan Quxian 1902-1940 Eighteenth Army New Reorganized Division Commander Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Wei Rijiu was born in Guangxi Liujiang in 1897. He served as the commander of the Liuzhou garrison and a lieutenant general on the Military Affairs Committee of the Nationalist Party.

  Feng Dafei Guangdong Lianxian 1899-1942 Red Army Eighth Army Acting Commander, New Fourth Army Second Column Deputy Commander Communist Party

  Feng Shengfa, Zhejiang Linpu 1903-1957 Commander of the 86th and 91st Armies, Director-General of the Second Police Headquarters Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Feng Chongshen (Yunnan, Heqing 1903-1991) Chief of the General Affairs Department of the Office of the Central Military Academy, Senior Advisor to the Headquarters of the 15th Army Group, Nationalist Party.

  Feng Jianfei, born in Pan County, Guizhou Province in 1902, was a lieutenant general and director of the Security Bureau of Henan Province and Guizhou Province.

  Bai Longting Shanxi Wutai 1899 - ? Hebei-Chahar War Zone Third Column Commander-in-Chief Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Baikal Swan Autumn Inner Mongolia Chifeng 1904-1956 Cavalry Seventh Division Commander, Nationalist Party Sixth Central Alternate Executive Committee Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Liu Yun followed Wu Yuzhang to Hubei and Hunan, Yizhang 1904-1930 Communist Party Military Commission Yangtze River Office Chief of Staff Communist Party

  Liu Jinzhe, Hunan Province, You County 1904-1950 Commander of the 27th Army, Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the First Army Corps Major General Nationalist Party

  Liu Jiechen, Hanguang, Guangxi Liujiang 1896 - ? Deputy Commander of the First Column of the Henan-Hubei-Anhui Border Region, Major General of the Nationalist Party

  Liu Guanglin wrote Hunan Taoyuan 1907-1948 compiled the 29th Army commander, Kuomintang sixth Central alternate executive committee member posthumously promoted to second-class general Kuomintang

  Liu ZijunMolingHunan Taoyuan1903-?Central Military Academy Eighth Period First Corps Deputy CommanderMajor GeneralKuomintang

  Liu Quxian, Commander of the 10th Army Corps of the Red Army, Central Executive Committee member of the Chinese Soviet Republic, Communist Party.

  Liu Lidao Guangxi Guilin 1899 - ? Qiangui border pacification commander's office secretary general lieutenant general Nationalist Party

  Liu Xianlin, Henan Tonghe 1903 - ? Seventh Branch School of the Central Military Academy, Deputy Director of the Registration and Investigation Department of the Central Military Schools, Lieutenant General of the Kuomintang

  Liu Weishu was born in Liling, Hunan in 1902. He was a high-ranking advisor to the Ministry of National Defense and a lieutenant general of the Kuomintang.

  Liu Bai Xin, a handsome man from Hunan Baoqing, 1901 - ? Deputy Commander of the 18th Army Officer Corps, Major General of the Nationalist Party.

  Liu Jia Yan Hunan Liling 1900 - ? Deputy Commander of the Training General Headquarters, Kunming Garrison Command High-ranking Advisor Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Liu Guoxun Rong Jiuyun Nan Pu'er 1903-1933 Deputy Chief of Staff Major General Nationalist Party

  Liu Yongyao Hunan Liling 1909-2001 Deputy Minister of National Defense, Sixth Central Executive Committee of the Kuomintang, Second-class General of the Kuomintang

  Liu Xicheng, also known as Liu Xi, was born in Tanghe, Henan Province in 1905 and died in 1990. He served as the commander of the 98th Army and held the rank of Lieutenant General in the People's Liberation Army.

  Liu Baozhen Hunan Xinhuo 1901-1928 Zhejiang Provincial Reserve Corps Chief of Staff Major General Nationalist Party

  Liu Mingxia Hu Beijing Mountain 1905-1951 Fourteenth Army Ninety-fourth Division Commander Major General Nationalist Party

  Liu Jiao Yuan Guangdong Dapu 1902-1965 Fujian Province Baoan Second Brigade Commander Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Liu Hongxun's son Liu Ziqin Shaanxi Chenggu 1898-1940 Hanzhong Garrison Commander, Central Training Corps Commander General KMT

  Liu Zixian Fu Weihunan Xiangtan 1902-1930 Military Commission Member Chief of Staff Nationalist Party

  Liu Zhujun, also known as Liu Jun, was born in Xingning, Guangdong Province in 1902. He served as the Chief of Staff of the General Headquarters of the Nationalist Party and held the rank of Lieutenant General.

  Liu Zhen Guo Song Xuan Hunan Shaodong 1902-1986 Deputy Director of the Second Pacification Zone of Guizhou Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Liu Jia Shu Zhi Shan Hunan Yiyang 1903-1972 Commander of the 17th Army Corps Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Xu Yongxiang Zhejiang Zhuji 1900-1934 Commander of the 26th Division's Independent 1st Brigade Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Xu Jishen, born in 1901 in Lu'an, Anhui Province, died in 1931. He was the commander of the First Red Army of Hubei, Henan and Anhui Provinces and a member of the Front Committee of the Communist Party.

  Sun Tianfang Anhui Huaiyuan 1903-1951 Jiangsu Province Deputy Commander-in-Chief Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Sun Yuanliang Sichuan Chengdu 1904- Commander of the 16th Army, Deputy Director of the Sichuan-Hubei Pacification Headquarters, Lieutenant General of the Nationalist Party

  Sun Changjun, Hunan Changsha 1897-1952, the eighth and third district administrative supervisor of Hunan Province, concurrently the commander-in-chief of the security department, lieutenant general of the Nationalist Party.

  Sun Deqing Anhui Shou County 1904-1932 Red Army Sixth Corps Commander, Red Second Corps Chief of Staff Communist Party

  Guan Gongguo (also known as Kwan Kung-yiu) Guangdong Panyu 1904-1960 Guangzhou Garrison Commander-in-Chief Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Guan Linzheng (1905-1980) was a Chinese general and politician. He served as the President of the Central Military Academy, Commander-in-Chief of the Army, and a member of the 6th Central Executive Committee of the Kuomintang.

  Wu Xiangyi flew to Fujian Jinjiang in 1901 - ? Director of Political Training Department of Central Military Academy Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Wu Chengren Ke Zhai Fujian Putian 1896-1970 Deputy Commander of the 65th Army, Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Fujian Provincial Garrison Command General KMT

  Wu Jintang Hunan Changsha 1900 - ? Deputy Chief of Staff, Tenth Army Group, Honorary Military Man Production Affairs Bureau Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Mou Tingfang Guizhou Langdai 1900-1953 Commander of the 94th Army Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Jiang Zhenhuan, also known as Jiang Huaxun, was a member of the Communist Party. He served as the head of the Organization Department of the Tianjin Municipal Committee of the Communist Youth League from 1904 to 1927 and was a standing committee member of the Tianjin Municipal Party Committee of the Kuomintang.

  Ren Wenhai Sichuan Guanxian 1903 - ? Military and Political Department Military Medical Bureau Deputy Inspector General KMT

  Ren Hongyiji San Shanxi Lishi 1899-1990 Military Commission Northwest War Dry Corps Deputy Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Cheng Siyuan Hunan Xiangxiang 1903-1952 Ministry of National Defense Reserve Corps Commander Lieutenant General Kuomintang

  Zhu Bingxi Zhejiang Qingtian 1899 - ? Director of the Guard Office of the General Office of the Military Commission Major General Nationalist Party

  Zhu Pengfei Gansu Lanzhou 1899 - ? Chief of Political Affairs Department of the General Command of the Army Lieutenant General Nationalist Party

  Zhu Yaowu Shanxi Right Jade 1905-1979 Jin-Shaan-Gan Border Region General Headquarters Political Department Director, Deputy Commander of the 121st Army Major General Nationalist Party

  Whampoa First to Fifth Term Special Party Committee Member List

  The First Special Party Branch: (July 6, 1924)

  Executive Committee: Chiang Chung-cheng, Yen Feng-yi, Chin Fo-chuan, Chen Fu, Li Tzu-lung.

  Supervisory Committee: Chiang Chung-cheng (concurrent).

  The Second Special Party Branch: (January 14, 1925)

  Executive Committee: Chiang Chung-cheng, Wu Ming, Chen Zuowei, Luo Zhensheng, Zhou Yiqun.

  Alternate Executive Committee Members: Wang Baicang, Cheng Gongyin, Huang Jinhui.

  Third Special Department: (September 13, 1925)

  Executive Directors: Shao Lizi, Wang Boling, Yuan Tongchou, Yu Hanbang, Jiao Qikun.

  Alternate Executive Committee Members: Li Bingzhong, Wu Danren, Zhang Fubang.

  Supervisory Committee Members: Chiang Chung-cheng, Yen Chia-kan

  Alternate Supervisor: Zhang Yuanhou.

  The Fourth Special Department: (May 22, 1926)

  Executive Committee: Zhang Zhizhong, Yuan Tongchou, Jiang Xianyun, Jia Boda, Fan Quan, Du Xintu, Chen Chao, Jia Sheng, Huo Yu.

  Alternate members of the Executive Committee: Li Shanglian, Li Yuan, Zhang Yuren, Wang Tinghan, Bai Xin.

  Supervisory Committee Members: Yan Zhong, Fang Dingying, Xiong Xiong.

  Alternate Supervisory Commissioner: Kong Qingrui.

  Draft History of the Central Army Officer Academy Sixth Edition 1936

  List of Special Party Committee Members of This School in March 1927

  Executive Committee: Kong Weihu, Chen Liang, Gan Zhuxi, Li Cheng, Zou Jinhai, Zeng Wulie, Wei Fengji, Hu Qitu, Chen Baohua.

  Alternate Executive Committee Members: Li Yongguang, Yin Peilin, Zhou Zhongying, Liao Pu, Yang Ruotao, Chen Jianwen, Qiu Ling.

  Supervisors: Fang Dingying, Xiong Xiong, Wu Siyu, Tan Qijing, He Bian.

  Alternate Supervisors: You Yu-yi, Hu Bin-wen, Jin Meng-jian.

  August 4, 1927 Whampoa Daily

  List of notable faculty members of Whampoa Military Academy

  Wang Jun served as a military instructor and later became the deputy director of the Military Training Department of the National Government.

  Wang Boling Military School Education Long Northern Expedition Army General Reserve Team Commander and Deputy Commander of the First Army and Commander of the First Division

  Wang Maogong entered the army as a soldier and became the commander of the 10th War Zone Deputy Commander-in-Chief.

  Mao Zedong's political department staff member, Red Sixth Army Political Department Director and Acting Political Commissar

  Fang Dingying, Director of Military Education and Acting President of the Whampoa Academy, Commander-in-Chief of the 3rd Corps of the Northern Expeditionary Army and Commander of the 46th Army.

  Teng Yingzhao Military School Education Minister Director of the General Political Department of the National Revolutionary Army

  Kan No Hikari, Secretary of Political Department and Political Instructor, Deputy Secretary-General of National Defense Supreme Committee

  Ye Jianying Professor Deputy Head of Department People's Liberation Army Chief of Staff, Minister of National Defense, Vice Chairman of the Central Military Commission of the Communist Party of China

  Bao Hui-seng, Director of the Political Department, National Government Land, Sea and Air Forces General Headquarters Advisory Group

  Cheng Fangwu, commander of the 5th column of the Eighth Route Army and political commissar of the independent brigade.

  Liu Jianjun Military Instructor Xu Zhou Pacification Bandit General Commander

  Sun Yat-sen Military Academy Chancellor

  Sun Bingwen Political Department Director Instructor

  Yang Lin (Korean) student team captain

  Li Shizhang political instructor

  Li Jishen Military Academy Vice President

  Serious student corps commander-in-chief

  Wu Zhihui political lecturer

  He Yingqin Military Academy Education Director

  He Hao as political instructor

  Wang Jingwei's military school party representative and director of the political department

  Shao Lizi, Secretary of the Military School and Director of the Political Department

  Shao Yuanzhong, Director of Political Department

  Chen Cheng's special officer

  Chen Gongbo's political lectures

  Chen Lifu Military Academy Office Secretary

  Chen Qihan student team captain

  Chen Jicheng military instructor

  Zhang Zhizhong joined the army as the deputy commander of the training regiment

  Zhang Jingyu's office secretary

  Jin Fo Zhuang student team captain

  Zhou Enlai Director of the Political Department

  Jì Fāng tè bié guān zuǒ

  Zhou Zhiyou Military Instructor

  Liu Jieming Military Instructor

  Hu Qian Education Long

  Marquis Hu's Imperial Guard Commander

  Hu Hanmin's political instructor

  Yao Cong Military Instructor

  Yu Feiteng, Director of General Manager's Office

  British Deputy Political Instructor

  Yuan Ye Lie joined the Wu Sheng team as an instructor

  Gu Zuotong, Director of the Administrative Department

  Nie Rongzhen's political secretary and political instructor

  Qian Dajun Military Instructor

  Xu Chengzhang Special Officer

  Guo Jun student team district team leader

  Tang Xingjun Military Instructor Corps Commander

  Chiang Kai-shek Principal

  Jiang Dingwen student team district team leader

  Deputy Director of the Political Department of Lu Yi

  Director of Propaganda Department of Lei Jing Tian Politics Bureau

  Liao Zhongkai's representative at the Whampoa Military Academy

  Miao Bin Military Instructor

  Xiong Xiong, Director of the Political Department

  Dai Jitao, Director of the Political Department

  Whampoa Military Academy Faculty Introduction

  Principal of this school

  Education Dragon

  Faculty

  Vice President - Li Jishen Minister of Education - Deng Yanda Dean of Faculty - Wang Boling

  Educational Long - Fang Dingying Professor Department Deputy Director - Ye Jianying

  Deputy Director of Education - Wang Boling

  Deputy Director of Education - Hu Qian

  President's Office

  Conscripts

  Student Army

  Principal's Office Director - Li Anding

  Enlisted in the Political Department of the Ministry of Education - Tan Qijing

  Party Representative of the Instructional Team Battalion - Cai Guangju

  Principal's English Secretary - Zhang Jingyu

  Director of Politics - Hu Jing'an

  Huangpu Military Academy Rear Service Director - Li Labour

  Office of the Secretary - Chen Lifu

  Examination Officer for the 1st and 2nd periods of the Infantry Corps - Zhang Lie

  Director of Logistics, Whampoa Military Academy - Wu Zhenmin

  Principal's Office Attendant - Feng Erjun

  Department of Student Affairs

  Special Party Branch

  Training Department

  Whampoa Military Academy Affairs Committee Member - Wu Yuzhang

  Special Party Department Executive Committee Member - Jin Fuzhuang

  Commander-in-Chief, Training Department Director - Yan Lisan

  Secretary-General - Shao Lizi

  Military hospital

  Ordnance Bureau

  Hospital Director - Du Jingqi Military Supplies Department Party Representative - Lei Zhen

  Political Commissar

  Political Department

  Political Commissar - Feng Zhaoguang

  Political Instructor - Mikhail Borodin

  Director of the Political Department - Zhou Enlai

  Director of Political Department - Niu Yongzhen

  Political Instructor - Galen

  Deputy Director of Political Department - Bao Huiseng

  Political Instructor - Zhang Qiuren

  Political Instructor - Chen Baojin

  Second Director of Political Department - Xiong Xiong

  Director of Political Department - Dai Jitao

  Political Instructor - Chen Zukang

  Director of General Political Department - Xiong Xiong

  Political Instructor - Xiao Chufu

  Political Instructor - Kuang Yumin

  Secretary of Political Department - Nie Rongzhen

  Political Commissar - Gan Naiguang

  Deputy Political Commissar - Xun Daiying

  Secretary of the Political Department - Zhou Fu

  Political Instructor - Shao Yuan Chong

  Political Instructor - Xiao Chu Nu

  Deputy Director of Political Department - Shao Yuan Chong

  Political Instructor - Xie Wuliang Political Department Secretary and Instructor - Gan Naiguang

  Head of Propaganda Department - Lei Jing Tian

  Deputy Director of the Second Bureau of Political Department - Huang Ao

  Director of Political Department - Zhang Zhen

  Department of Politics Organizational Section Officer - Lu Deming

  Military Instructor

  Huangpu Academy Chief Instructor - He Yingqin

  Huangpu Academy Political and Military Instructor - Xiong Xiong

  Huangpu Fourth Period Tactics Chief Instructor - Zhang Zhen

  Huangpu Military Academy Instructor - Li Zongren

  Huangpu Military Academy Instructor - Liu Yaoshen

  Huangpu Military Academy Political and Military Instructor - Nie Rongzhen

  Huangpu Military Academy Instructor - Bai Chongxi

  Huangpu Military Academy Special Officer - Chen Cheng

  Huangpu Military Academy Tactics Instructor - Zhou Zhiyou

  Whampoa Academy Military Instructor - Gu Zhutong

  Whampoa Military Academy 4th term military instructor - He Haoruo

  Whampoa Military Academy Military Instructor - Shen Yingshi

  Huangpu Academy Tactical Instructor - Chen Jicheng

  Huangpu Military Academy 4th Term Military Instructor - Shan Mutong

  Huangpu Academy Ordnance Instructor - Qian Dajun

  Huangpu Military Academy Instructor - Wang Boling

  Huangpu Military Academy Instructor - Kwan Shan

  Whampoa Military Academy Instructor - Liu Ye

  Whampoa Military Academy Instructor - Xue Yue

  Early CPC members among Whampoa Military Academy alumni

  Since the establishment of the Whampoa Military Academy by Sun Yat-sen in June 1924, a large number of young people with lofty ideals took it as their duty to overthrow the warlords and joined the army. By July 1927, during the period of cooperation between the Kuomintang and the Communist Party, the Whampoa Academy had enrolled six classes, plus students from its branch school in Wuhan, totaling nearly 10,000 people. These students participated in the Eastern Expedition and the Northern Expedition before they even graduated, and a considerable number of them sacrificed their lives on the battlefield at that time. Those who survived later became the backbone commanders of both the Kuomintang and Communist armies.

  The principal of the Whampoa Military Academy was Chiang Kai-shek, who regarded himself as the "Father of Whampoa", and the sole representative of the Whampoa Clique. The army with the Whampoa Clique as its backbone was his private army. However, in the Communist Army, there were also a large number of Whampoa students, who openly fought against their former principal, and were called "Red Whampoa Clique" by the Nationalist side.

  Among the first batch of students at Huangpu, Xu Xiangqian was the highest-ranking military leader on the Communist side. He had been the commander-in-chief of the Fourth Front Army for a long time and was worth 100,000 heads, just like Zhu De and Mao Zedong. Xu Xiangqian was once summoned by Chiang Kai-shek, but he was born with few words and was a northerner, so he didn't get much attention from the principal.

  Chen Gong was the one who broke into Huangpu himself, bringing a group of classmates from the Army Military Academy to transfer schools voluntarily. He was a well-known activist in Huangpu and was called one of the "Three Heroes of Huangpu". At that time, there was a saying circulating in the military school: "Jiang Xianyun's pen, He Zhenhan's mouth, not as good as Chen Gong's legs", which can be seen from Chen Gong's personality characteristics. Chen Gong saved Chiang Kai-shek's life during the Second Eastern Expedition and was entrusted with the heavy responsibility of deputy officer. Also for this reason, after being captured in Shanghai, he escaped with his life. Chen Gong had been a division commander in the Fourth Route Army and was Xu Haidong's superior. Later, he went to the First Route Army as the head of the Cadre Regiment and saved Zhou Enlai's life again on the grassland.

  Zuo Quan was also brought into Huangpu by Chen Gong at that time, and later his military position was above Chen Gong's. Zuo Quan got involved in the mysterious "Jiangsu-Zhejiang Fellow-Provincials' Association" incident while studying military science in Moscow, and was struck off the list by Wang Ming. Until he died a martyr in Shanxi Province at Shiziling in 1942, his file still carried the suspicion of being a Trotskyist.

  Wang Erzuo was among the last batch of recruits when he took the exam at Huangpu, fortunately, he and his fellow villagers Huang Ao and Zheng Dongguo were all on the list. Wang Erzuo was only a regimental chief of staff during the Nanchang Uprising, but because the main officers of the troops had all escaped, he became the third most important person after Zhu De and Chen Yi. Later, when he went to Jinggangshan, he became the fourth most important person in the Red Army. Wang Erzuo was known for his bravery in battle, and his battalion commander Lin Biao privately criticized him for not using tactics. Wang Erzuo had once vowed that if the revolution did not succeed, he would not shave his beard, when he died under the traitor's gun, a handful of long whiskers fluttered on his chest.

  Xu Jishen was a famous figure in the first phase, able to talk and fight, making right-wing students very headache. In the early days of E Yu Wan, he was Xu Xiangqian's superior, and later became Xu Xiangqian's division commander. Xu looked down on Zhang Guotao very much, privately calling him "old rightist". Zhang Guotao was also not polite, in the White Sparrow Garden's big anti-reverse movement, Xu was dragged to death by a horse. At that time, Xu's wife was the secretary of the division's political department, already pregnant, but still secretly executed.

  Jiang Xianyun was first in his class when he entered the Huangpu Military Academy and again graduated at the top of his class. He was considered one of the three most outstanding students, with him as the leader. Mao Zedong was Jiang's sponsor for joining the Communist Party, which shows the high regard in which he was held. Chiang Kai-shek had great admiration for him and waited patiently for him to change his mind. When the KMT and CPC split, Chiang promised that if Jiang would join him, he could become a regimental commander, at a time when few Huangpu students were qualified to be battalion commanders. However, Jiang was resolute in following the Communist Party and eventually left without saying goodbye. On May 28, 1927, Jiang Xianyun died in battle against Zhang Xueliang's forces in Linying, Henan Province, at the age of 25.

  Li Zilong is a figure familiar to anyone who has studied modern Chinese history, and his name is forever linked with the "Zhongshan Warship Incident". Before entering Huangpu, Li was already the political secretary of Mikhail Borodin, an advisor to the Communist International, and had considerable seniority. Li and Jiang Xianyun were both leaders of the left-wing students at Huangpu, which made them hated by the right-wing students. Before the Zhongshan Warship Incident, Li was promoted to Director of the Naval Bureau, with the rank of Lieutenant General, making him equal in rank to Principal Chiang Kai-shek, which inevitably led to dissatisfaction from Chiang, who saw Huangpu as his own domain. The selection of Li as a target for attack can be said to have been the result of a concerted effort by all parties. From then on, Li's fortunes declined, and he was shunned by his comrades in the party, eventually fleeing to Japan. After the split between the Nationalists and Communists, Li returned to China to oppose Chiang, but was captured in Guangzhou. According to reports, when Chiang Kai-shek heard the news, he telegraphed Li Jishen ordering him to send Li Zilong to Nanjing. However, by the time the telegram arrived, Li had already been taken to the execution ground and executed at Honghuagang.

  Zhou Shidi was known as the "Fierce General" during his time in Huangpu, and had served as the commander of an armored vehicle squadron. During the Nanchang Uprising, he was also the commander of the 25th Division under Ye Ting's command, making him a high-ranking officer at the time. After the defeat of the Southern Expeditionary Army, Zhou Shidi left his unit and returned to Shanghai, causing a period of estrangement from the party, which had a significant impact on his later position in the military. Later, Zhou Shidi followed He Long, serving as the chief of staff of the Second Red Front Army and then as the chief of staff of the 120th Division of the Eighth Route Army, managing to keep up with the times. In 1955, he was awarded the rank of General.

  Liu Chouhsi was also an activist in his early years, and was wounded with a lone arm at a very young age. He had been the commander of the Red Tenth Army Corps. Later, he was captured along with Fang Zhimin in the Huaiyu Mountains area of Jiangxi Province. At that time, Liu Chouhsi had been frozen and starved for many days, shivering all over, and it was his classmate Yu Jishi who interrogated him. Yu didn't pay much attention to him at the time, and just let people take him away. Later, Huang Wei mocked Yu Jishi: "We were classmates after all, shouldn't you have let him eat a full meal? Your heart is too cruel!" Liu Chouhsi remained unyielding in prison, and died with Fang Zhimin.

  Cai Shenxi was the military leader second only to Xu Xiangqian in E Yu Wan. Zhang Guotao had a killing spree against people from Huangpu, but he highly appreciated Cai Shenxi and intentionally appointed him as the deputy commander-in-chief of the Fourth Front Army. Unfortunately, his luck ran out, and during the four breakout battles, Cai Shenxi personally went to the front line and was killed in action after being shot.

  Zhao Zixuan was admitted to Huangpu with the second highest score, next only to Jiang Xianyun, and became the first commander of the armored vehicle team in the Huangpu Army. Later he followed Peng Pai to organize the Red Army and died in Haifeng, Guangdong.

  Xuan Xiaofu was a special figure in the first generation, who disobeyed Chiang Kai-shek's order to destroy the system of party control over the military and was expelled from Huangpu. Before leaving, he left two lines of poetry: The great jade is not yet complete, it is better to be broken than to be bent into a hook. Later, Xuan Xiaofu joined Ji Hongchang's department to do united front work, and during the Eighth Route Army period, he served as a senior advisor, openly asking the Nationalist Party for money and guns. Chiang Kai-shek was annoyed with him and ordered the Military Bureau's special agents to assassinate him.

  Huang Yong was also a famous Communist in the first period, and later followed Zhu De and Chen Yi to Jinggangshan, where he died in battle in southern Hunan.

  Yan Xishan was among a group of people from Shaanxi, including Du Yuming and Guan Linzheng, who traveled thousands of miles to take the entrance exam for Huangpu. Among these dozen or so people from Shaanxi, six became lieutenant generals, while Yan Xishan was the only one to become a People's Liberation Army lieutenant general.

  Peng Gan-shen was the director of the Public Security Bureau during the Nanchang Uprising, and took over Zhu De's post, which became a public case in party history research. Later he followed Fang Zhimin to northeastern Jiangxi, where he died in battle.

  In the first generation, it is a pity that Sun Deqing, Wu Zhan and Dong Lang died in the suppression of counter-revolutionaries, all of whom were good at military affairs.

  In the Second Red Front, the famous communists were Zhou Yiqun and Lu Deming. Zhou Yiqun was the political commissar of the 2nd Red Army Corps and, like He Long, a representative of the 2nd Red Front Army. Zhou Yiqun died in an encounter with the enemy, always suspected to be a betrayal, but there is no evidence.

  Lu Deming's difficulties in taking the entrance exam for Huangpu Military Academy were probably unmatched by anyone. He set out from Zigong, Sichuan, originally planning to head to Yunnan first, then take a detour through Guangxi and travel along the Xijiang River to Guangzhou. After walking to Yunnan, he discovered that Li Zongren of Guangxi was at war with Tang Jiyao, and all water and land transportation had been cut off, so he was delayed for over a month and couldn't get through, and had no choice but to return to Sichuan. Lu Deming passed through Chengdu and arrived in Chongqing, then traveled down the river to Wuhan. Originally, he wanted to take the land route from there to Guangzhou, but after asking around, he found that the land route only went as far as Hunan. With no other choice, he took a boat to Shanghai, transferred to a foreign cargo ship and sailed to Hong Kong, then transferred again to reach Guangzhou. Half a year had passed in this way, and the first term at Huangpu Military Academy had already started for a month. Lu Deming was not discouraged, and directly went to find Sun Yat-sen, obtaining a special letter of introduction for admission. Chiang Kai-shek showed his iron face and impartiality this time, and didn't let him join the first term, but instead made him the top student in the second term.

  Lu Deming later served as the commander of the Wuhan Garrison Regiment, participated in the Autumn Harvest Uprising, and became the commander-in-chief. He was killed while covering the retreat of his troops. If he had not died, he would likely have become the deputy commander of the Fourth Red Army after the meeting between Zhu and Mao, and a marshal after the founding of the country.

  Yu Saode is worth mentioning in the second phase, he was a good friend of Li Zilong, participated in the Autumn Harvest Uprising, and was the first division commander in the Red Army. Later returned to Shanghai Central Report, lost contact with the Communist Party, and defected to Chiang Kai-shek again. Yu Saode later served as a lieutenant general in the National Army, was corrupt and embezzled in Beiping, and was executed by firing squad on Chiang Kai-shek's orders.

  Zhu Yunqing, a third-term student at Huangpu, was a hero of the defense war in Huangyangjie, Jinggangshan. He served as the chief of staff of the First Red Army and was highly appreciated by Zhu De. Later, while recovering from illness in a hospital in the Soviet area, he was assassinated by secret agents, which to a large extent stimulated the rectification movement at that time.

  Wu Guanghao was the deputy commander-in-chief of the Huangma Uprising and one of the founders of the Eyuwu Su District, with extremely high prestige in the local area. Later, while organizing an uprising on his way to Henan, he was ambushed by a militia and sacrificed. After his death, the Central Committee sent Xu Xiangqian to take over as military commander.

  The most people from Huangpu Fourth Period are on both sides of the KMT and the CPC. Lin Biao doesn't need to be mentioned. Liu Zhidan, the founder of the Shaanbei Red Army, is a person with profound influence in party history. Zeng Zhongsheng, chief of staff of the Fourth Red Army, deputy commander-in-chief of Xu Xiangqian, was famous for his guerrilla warfare strategy throughout the army. Later he was detained by Zhang Guotao for a long time, after the meeting of the First and Fourth Armies, Mao Zedong specifically asked to see him, as a result, Zeng disappeared inexplicably, even his body could not be found, becoming an unsolved case.

  Duan Dechang, Peng Dehuai's introducer to the party, founder of Honghu Soviet Area, representative figure of the Second Red Army, known as "Fire Dragon General". Later killed by Xia Xi during the Campaign to Suppress Counterrevolutionaries.

  Wu Zhonghao, a general of the First Red Army, one of Mao Zedong's "Four Marshals". He was once a student in the liberal arts department at Peking University. In his spare time during military campaigns, he enjoyed drinking and reciting poetry. Zhu De had intended to let him take over as commander-in-chief of the First Red Army after he himself entered the Military Commission, but Wu was killed by a militia in Anfu County, Jiangxi while pursuing the enemy after recovering from illness. Later, Peng Dehuai sent troops to exterminate this militia, and Tan Zhenlin beheaded the killer who killed Wu Zhonghao.

  Ye Jianying was the earliest commander of the Hubei-Henan-Anhui-Sichuan district, with Xu Xiangqian as his chief-of-staff. He was later captured and martyred while recovering from illness.

  Chen Yi'an, one of the Red Army's bravest generals in Jinggang Mountains and founder of the 8th Red Army.

  Yuan Guoping, Director of the Political Department of the New Fourth Army, became famous all over the world due to the Wannan Incident.

  Huang Kuan, Vietnamese, the only foreign general in the Liberation Army. At the time of his promotion, he had enough seniority to be a lieutenant general, but was promoted to major general to balance the Vietnamese military system.

  Kuo Hua-jo, one of Mao Zedong's earliest military secretaries, later served as the political commissar of the 9th Army Corps of the Third Field Army.

  In addition to the above, other Communist leaders of the Fourth Generation include Wang Shiying, Fang Zhongzheng, Li Tianzhu, Li Mingke, Li Yunchang, Li Yimin, Xiao Fang, Ji Bogao, Hu Chenjie, Ni Ziliang, Tang Tianji and Cao Guanghua.

  Several heavyweight figures emerged from Huangpu Fifth Class.

  Xu Guangda was later awarded the rank of General and became one of the representative figures of the Second Red Army.

  Song Shi-lun, commander of the 9th Corps of the Third Field Army, is most famous for commanding in the Battle of Chosin Reservoir during the Korean War, and was also highly controversial because of it.

  Zhang Zongxun, born with a majestic image, followed Peng Dehuai during the Red Army and Liberation War, later became Vice Minister of National Defense, Peng's deputy. In 1958, he was a famous general in the anti-military dogmatism campaign and was seen as one body with Peng Zhang. After the Lushan Conference a year later, he promptly defected and expressed his criticism of Peng without being implicated. In his later years, he lived a quiet life without fame, not even listed on Deng Xiaoping's funeral committee, the only living general at that time.

  Tao Zhu, a powerful figure in the Central-South region, was transferred to the Center during the Cultural Revolution and became the fourth-ranking leader. He was targeted by Jiang Qing for protecting veteran cadres and later died in prison in Hefei, Anhui.

  Zhao Shangzhi, the soul of the Northeast Anti-Japanese United Army, was known as "Southern Yang and Northern Zhao" along with Yang Jingyu. Japanese General Okamura Yasuji repeatedly attempted to capture Zhao in Manchuria but failed, writing about it in his autobiography. Despite fighting bravely against the enemy, Zhao was twice expelled from the party by the Central Committee, only being rehabilitated 40 years after his death as one of the earliest founders of the Eyuwan Soviet Area.

  In addition, Yang Zhicheng, a general of the People's Liberation Army, and Lieutenant General Tan Xilin also graduated from this school.

  Huangpu Sixth Class produced PLA generals such as Guo Tianmin (General), Wang Yi (Lieutenant General) and Zhang Kaiqing (Major General). In the advanced class, there were two famous figures. One was Huang Gonglue, one of Mao Zedong's most respected Red Army generals, who wrote about him in poetry. The other was He Guozhong, Peng Dehuai's iron rod, one of the earliest party members in the Fifth Red Army.

  Huangpu had a branch school in Wuhan and also produced some famous Communist generals.

  Zhang Ziqing, commander of the 11th Division of the Fourth Red Army, a trusted follower of Mao Zedong. After being wounded, he often gave his medicine to other wounded soldiers and eventually died from his injuries.

  Wang Liang succeeded Lin Biao as commander of the 4th Red Army, a good friend of Luo Ruiqing. He was killed by a stray bullet while fighting against the militia.

  Luo Ruiqing, nearly 1.9 meters tall, was mistaken for dead after being wounded in battle and put into a coffin, but his legs couldn't fit in, earning him the nickname "Luo Changzi" from Mao Zedong. He was later awarded the rank of General.

  Zhou Weikun, a famous Red Army general in Hubei, Henan and Anhui provinces, was executed by Zhang Guotao along with Xu Jishen.

  Deng Ping, Chief of Staff of the 3rd Red Army Corps, died in battle at Loushan Pass.

  Cheng Zihua was an important military leader in the Red Army, Eighth Route Army and People's Liberation Army. After the founding of the country, he transferred to work in the economic department. In 1955, he was not awarded a rank, which is a pity.

  Zhao Yiman, a native of Yibin, Sichuan Province, originally surnamed Li, was a famous female hero in the Anti-Japanese United Army. She served as the political commissar of the 2nd Regiment of the 3rd Military District of the Anti-Japanese United Army. During the battle of Zhuhe River in Jilin Province, she was wounded and captured. While being treated for her injuries at a hospital, she persuaded nurse Han Yongyi and the guards to help her escape by hiring a horse-drawn carriage. However, due to the slow speed of the carriage, they were caught up by Japanese troops just 20 miles from the guerrilla zone, and soon after, Zhao Yiman heroically sacrificed herself. For a long time after her death, her identity remained unclear, but with the help of her classmate Luo Ruiqing, her true identity was finally confirmed.

  Hu Jun, the female general with two guns, was extremely capable and served as the chairwoman of the Pingjiang Soviet Area. Peng Dehuai was then a commissioner under her. She was later wrongly killed during the purges.

  Duan Yulin, commander of the 8th Division of the Red Third Army, a trusted general of He Long, died in the Campaign to Suppress Counter-Revolutionaries.

  You Xi, a famous female hero of the Guangzhou Uprising. Led a group of female soldiers to fight against the enemy in an alley battle, all sacrificed. After death, the enemy army stripped and dismembered her, displaying her corpse at Tianzi Wharf, only 19 years old.

  Wuhan Branch also produced Chen Bojun (General), Xu Yanguang, Liu Xing, Li Qingyun, Li Chaoshi, Zhang Chiman and Zhang Youqing and other Communist Party generals.

  List of Instructors and Cadre Officers Above Battalion Level (September 1924 - April 1925)

  Professional Title Name

  Class

  Original position

  Appointment time

  Promotion and transfer process

  Teach the First Regiment

  Squad leader

  He Yingqin

  Major General

  Commandant of Military Academy Tactics

  October 1992

  Party Representative

  Wang Dengyun

  Middle school

  Principal's Office Western Secretary

  November 24

  Party Representative

  Successor

  Miao Bin

  Lieutenant Colonel

  Instructor

  February 25th

  Chief of Staff

  Zhu Tang

  Lieutenant Colonel

  Instructor of Arms

  January 25th

  Formerly served as instructor of the 1st Battalion of the 1st Regiment.

  First Battalion Commander

  Shen Ying Shi

  Lieutenant Colonel

  Head Coach of the National Team

  October 1996

  First Battalion Party Representative

  Marquis Hu

  Lieutenant

  Head of Security Department

  November 24

  In February 1925, he was appointed as the Party Representative of the 1st Battalion of the 2nd Regiment. On March 16, he was appointed as the Party Representative of the 2nd Battalion of the 2nd Regiment. On April 13, 1925, he acted as the Commander of the 2nd Battalion of the 2nd Regiment.

  Second Battalion Commander

  Chen Jicheng

  Junior high school

  Faculty member

  October 1996

  Second Battalion Commander

  Liu Zhen

  Faculty member

  January 25th

  Second Battalion Party Representative

  Mao Yanzi

  Captain

  Coach Team Leader

  November 24

  Third Battalion Commander

  Wang Jun

  Lieutenant Colonel

  Faculty member

  November 24

  January 1925, served as instructor of the 1st Regiment of the 1st Division, April 1925 became commander of the 1st Battalion of the 3rd Regiment

  Succeeded as commander of the 3rd Battalion

  Yan Fengyi

  Lieutenant

  Deputy Captain of Coaching Department

  January 25th

  Third Plenary Session of the Party Representatives

  Cai Guangjie

  Whampoa First Class

  November 24

  Detective team leader

  Sun Changjun

  Whampoa First Class

  Third Battalion Captain Reconnaissance Platoon Leader, Company Commander

  Special Agent Lian

  Unknown

  Convoy commander

  Deng Zhenqiang

  Junior High School

  Deputy Minister of Training

  Later served as the party's military first division deputy commander

  Teach the second group

  Squad leader

  Wang Boling

  Major General

  Dean of Faculty

  In February 1925, he was transferred as the Chief of Staff of the Military School. The vacancy was filled by Shen Ying-shi's promotion. Before taking office, he was acting in place by Chief of Staff Qian Da-jun, concurrently holding the position.

  Party Representative

  Zhang Jingyu

  Principal's Office English Secretary

  December 24

  Chief of Staff

  Guo Daren

  Lieutenant Colonel

  Instructor

  Appointed as instructor in October 1924 (as shown in historical data)

  Group attached

  Chen Zhuo

  December 24

  First Battalion Commander

  Gu Zhutong

  Junior High School

  Faculty member

  December 24

  Part-time. On January 1, 1925, the head of the management department was replaced by Wang Maogong, and on April 27, 1925, he concurrently served as the chief of staff of the Second Regiment of the Party Army.

  Second Battalion Commander

  Lin Dingqi

  Lieutenant Colonel

  Instructor

  December 24

  Part-time job

  Succeeded as Second Battalion Commander

  Liu Yaochen

  According to historical records

  Instructor

  Appointed as the deputy commander of the 2nd Training Regiment in May 1925

  Second Battalion Party Representative

  Jì Fāng

  Lieutenant Colonel

  Junior Fifth Rank

  February 25th

  March 26, 1995, was transferred to serve as the Party Representative of the First Battalion of the Second Regiment.

  Third Battalion Commander

  Jin Fo Zhai

  Captain

  Third Team Captain of Coaching Department

  Due to Dong's escape, he was demoted and dismissed from office.

  Third Battalion Party Representative

  Zheng Dongguo

  Whampoa First Class

  February 25th

  Formerly served as party representative of the 4th company, 2nd battalion, 1st teaching regiment

  Third Battalion Party Representative

  Song Wenbin

  Whampoa First Class

  February 25th

  Formerly served as instructor of the 2nd Battalion's 3rd Company and Platoon Leader (Captain)

  Independent Regiment Commander

  Yang Tianchuang

  December 24

  Special Agent Lian

  Lou Jingyi

  Whampoa First Class

  Artillery Battalion

  1st Battalion Artillery Commander

  Tsai Chung-kuei

  Junior High School

  Instructor

  January 25th

  Temporary Independent Regiment

  Battalion Commander

  Luó Wéi Xióng

  January 25th

  December 17, 1924 was appointed as the deputy commander of the Second Division

  Communist Party Representative

  Tang Zhen

  Whampoa First Class

  February 25th

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