Great Strike of February 7

Great Strike of February 7th
Peking-Hankow Railway Workers Great Strike
Part of the first labor movement upsurge in China
After the founding of New China, in July 1951, a public trial sentenced Zhao Jixian to death, who was considered a culprit behind the deaths of the workers. On the walls in the photo, portrayed are Ge Shugui, Wu Zhen, unknown, Shi Yang and Li Xiangqian, who died in the strike.
Date4–7 February 1923
Location
along the Peking–Hankow railway, mainly Changxindian Subdistrict, Zhengzhou and Hankou
Caused byAt the beginning of the 20th century, Chinese workers were treated poorly and were deeply exploited;
The establishment of trade unions was blocked.
Goals
  • Remove Zhao Jixian, director of the Railway Bureau, and Feng Jun, chief of the southern section; remove and investigate Huang Dianchen;
  • The Road Bureau compensated the loss of 6,000 yuan for the inaugural meeting;
  • Withdraw the garrison of the Zhengzhou branch trade union, return the plaque to the Federation of Trade Unions and apologize;
  • Set Sunday and one week off during the lunar new year as paid rest days.
MethodsStrikes, processions, collective agreements, solidarity actions and picketings
Resulted inFailed. 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
Chinese Communist Party
Kuomintang

Beijing-Hankou Railway Federation of Workers' Unions

Workers of Peking-Hankow railway
Zhili clique

Peking-Hankow Railway Bureau
Lead figures

Zhang Guotao
Xiang Ying
Chen Tanqiu
Luo Zhanglong
Lin Yunan

Lin Xiangqian
Yang Defu
Shi Yang

Wu Peifu
Cao Kun
Xiao Yaonan
Zhang Housheng

Zhao Jixian
Feng Yun
Drucker

Casualties and losses
52 dead
200 or more injured

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.

The strike has historical significance as it impacted the rise of communism in China.[2]

Significance

On 7 February 1923 a strike of unarmed workers on the Beijing-Hankou Railway was violently cracked down upon on orders of warlord Wu Peifu. Thirty-nine workers died in the violence, which was the first case of mass violence against the young Chinese Communist Party.[3]

The massacre of the striking railway workers in February 1923 caused the CCP leadership to realise that the party could not rely on the strength of the proletariat alone in its struggle against foreign imperialists and domestic warlord forces. The euphoria of the CCP for the growing power of organised labour was deflated by the defeat. It persuaded many of the doubting members that some form of cooperation with the nationalist movement of Sun Yat-sen would be necessary to overthrow the forces oppressing the people of China.[2]

— Tony Saich, Introductory Essay: Background to the 7 February Peking-Hankou Railway Workers' Strike

The communist party gave the killed workers a martyr status, and remembrance of the strike continues to hold strong significance in the party's propaganda.[3] At the location in Zhengzhou where the strike leaders were executed, the Erqi Memorial Tower was erected.[4]

Notes

  1. ^ 二七大罷工, Èr-Qī Dàbàgōng, "Erqi Strike"
  2. ^ 京汉铁路工人大罢工

See also

References

  1. ^ 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.
  2. ^ a b Saich, Tony (December 1992). "Introductory Essay: Background to the 7 February Peking-Hankou Railway Workers' Strike". Chinese Sociology & Anthropology. 25 (2): 1–14. doi:10.2753/CSA0009-462525021. ISSN 0009-4625.
  3. ^ a b Hall, Jared (2010). "China's First Red Martyrs: The February Seventh Massacre of 1923 and the Politics of Historical Memory". scholarspace.library.gwu.edu. Retrieved 2026-03-15.
  4. ^ "Revolutionary landmarks in Henan". en.moj.gov.cn. Retrieved 2026-03-15.