News Flash!!!
War with China Ends!
UNION VICTORIOUS!!!
September 6, 1889
Readers will no doubt have been as closely interested as we in events not so distant from this town, west of the border. The Chinese attempt to recover the lands forfeited in the Campaign of twenty years ago has at last been thwarted and defeated. Two months' campaigning, over half a dozen combats and battles, vast treasure and resources expended, have all led to this much sought-after outcome.
That Major-General Jackson's frenetic bumbling - four battles within the first week of contact, forsooth! - did not bring his army altogether to ruin can only be called miraculous. At that, after that week, the Department of Defence had to call upon two weak brigades of Fifth Army to supply the losses of the Tenth. Those brigades, 17th and 19th, themselves badly short of establishment in personnel, were in the event to be decimated in a single battle, and one of its commanders killed in action.
* * *
So close! So close! In the midst of the ragged remnants of his army trudging the couple of hundred miles westward to reach the present Imperial frontier, T'ai Kun Wu measured the tale of failure. Could he face his Emperor with such a sorry story to tell? Was it indeed so sorry?
On the whole, he was inclined to think the expedition not a complete failure even if it did fall short of its stated objectives. A good many questions had been answered, concerning Union readiness, and especially in terms of the Union Army's technical superiority. If the captured weapons he had sent on arrived safely at the capital, and he was given the opportunity to demonstrate the ascent in firepower the Union had achieved in recent decades, there might be some way to supply China's own armies with weapons that could compete in battle. Perhaps some such demonstration would keep the T'ai Kun's head secure upon his shoulders.
One of the reasons for not arming his own troops with these captured weapons, he would explain, was the want of ammunition in sufficient quantities. A few dozen bandoliers and cartouche boxes had been gathered up, and he needed what they contained for demonstration and training purposes. Even then the supply was none too abundant. How he wished, too, that he might have taken a working machine gun! The couple of broken examples he had taken were unlikely to be of much benefit to China's military construction industry...
Phlegmatic and stoic as always, T'ai Kun Wu determined that he would see out the unpleasantnesses of the next few weeks with as much fortitude as he could muster. He dismissed with hardly a second thought the notion of cheating fate by ending his life during the retreat. One way or another, even by personal sacrifice, he might still be of service to his Emperor...
* * *
Victory!!!
The Sino-Union War Won: Job Done!
The Denver Daily Post offers, in behalf of its subscribers and readers, our wholehearted and unreserved congratulations upon the brilliant campaign that has brought a swift and decisive end to the war to the west. So might end all such acquisitive aggression by the frantic autocrat and dastardly despot.
______________________________________________________________________________________________________
~~~~Titfer & Frump~~~~
(616 Shawcross St, Denver)
- Millinery and Haberdashery -
Clearance Sale !!!
GENTLEMEN’S HATS:
Silk Hats ……. $5
Kersey Hats…$4
FELT HATS:
All
…………….……$3
CAPS:
All kinds………..$1
STRAW HATS:
Manila
& Panama ……………$3
Course Braids……………………$1
Styles
for daily wear………$0.50
BOYS’ CLOTH & FELT HATS:
SILK GOODS
From $0.75 to $7 each
Gingham Umbrellas
English Mackintosh Goods
per Propontis express train
Every article to be sold!!
And so ends a set of brilliant reports, hats off to keeping the period flavor and two sides threads so entertaining.
ReplyDeleteThere is one more report to come: the After Battle report that ended the war. I thought I'd do the 'newspaper' thing first.
DeleteThanks for your positive comments!
I am so relieved to hear of a final Union victory. The newspaper reports are just so good and the adverts are excellent, so of the period. I now need to await the final battle report and then start drafting the next chapter of my Imagi-Nations. It will not be as I expected for sure after your superb campaign. Regards
ReplyDeleteTony -
DeleteThought you would be pleased. The end result was a little surprising - you'll see why soon - but reasonably credible. Union firepower was very much in evidence! I did expect the defence to be tougher than it was, though...
Cheers,
Archduke Piccolo
An excellent set of articles that are wonderfully enhanced by the adverts. The gardener's seat was of particular interest, given my aching knees these days! Looking forward to the final AAR in what has been a brilliant campaign to follow:).
ReplyDeleteSteve J.
DeleteThe 'gardener's seat' ad was the one I didn't modify - it seemed apt without it! All of them were otherwise gleaned from stock images from the internet, with such little emendments I thought amusing. Thanks for your comments so far!
Cheers
Archduke Piccolo
Archduke Piccolo,
ReplyDeleteHaving been away for nearly two weeks, I had a lot battle report reading to catch up … and I’ve thoroughly enjoyed your most recent three blog posts.
Going back to the beginning, you have written a narrative that is both inspiring and credible. It could easily be read as if it was the story of a real war. I am looking forward to the final part.
All the best,
Bob
Hi Bob -
DeleteYou know, I've sometimes wondered how the thing would read, previously unseen and 'en bloc'. The Newspaper thing was inspired mostly by the 'Stevenson At Play' article in Scribner, 1898; but also by the newssheets from the 'Madasahatta' campaign. Tim Gow you can thank/blame for the ads.
The battle of Xiaozheng Creek will be narrated in the next few days...
Cheers,
Archduke Piccolo
You have really put a lot of thought and effort into this campaign and particularly the reporting of it! I will be interested to see the AAR of the final battle.....but don't forget those Union repeating rifles that were shipped back to China and are even now being studied, with a view to retooling factories to produce a cheap copy of the technology! The Chines Army will be back......
ReplyDeleterross -
DeleteSeems that a sequel might be possible! But if China is to start up a modern arms industry to equip its military, that will take a while, a few years, more than likely. That is up to the originator of the Tian world to determine.
Thanks for following the narrative so far. The responses I've been getting make the thing worth while.
Cheers,
Archduke Piccolo