Chapter 11 of 14 · 1269 words · ~6 min read

CHAPTER XI

THE FIGHTING ALONG THE SHA-HO

The Japanese armies occupied Liao-Yang on September 4, and on September 8 the Russians announced that their entire forces had safely reached Mukden. For a fortnight or so the two vast armies paused for breath, while far to the southward the bombardment of Port Arthur continued, and thousands of miles to the westward Russia’s Baltic fleet sailed from Kronstadt for the Far East. During the latter part of September there was desultory fighting along a considerable battle front, and when General Gripenberg took command of the second Russian army in Manchuria, General Kuropatkin began, the first week in October, an offensive movement against his conquerors.

Whether this advance was his own idea or whether it was prematurely ordered from St. Petersburg was not positively known, but it began with an oratorical proclamation to the army that the time had come for Russia to take the initiative and force Japan to do her bidding. Kuropatkin’s force numbered nearly 300,000 men, his artillery was said to be superior to the Japanese, and it was plain that the fight was to be on as vast if not a vaster scale than that at Liao-Yang. For a time there were a few slight Russian successes, and after sharp fighting Kuropatkin succeeded in capturing Bentziaputze, about half-way between Liao-Yang and Mukden and on the Japanese right. The offensive movement was directed along the whole Japanese line, extending about thirty miles from Bentziaputze westward to the Sha-Ho. For nearly a fortnight fierce fighting continued, a test of endurance on both sides, until the Russians were finally obliged to retreat, leaving behind many guns and having lost, it was estimated, some sixty thousand men. The Japanese losses were about twenty thousand. Desultory engagements continued through October and November, in the midst of heavy rains, until the cold set in in earnest, and both armies went into winter quarters.

In zero weather the two armies faced each other, burrowing underground in their dugouts, in many places so close to each other that the sentries could almost call one to another. The time was spent in target practice, in chopping up wood to be used for building and for making charcoal, and in drilling the recruits who were sent up to refill the shattered regiments. The quarters in which the armies found shelter were dugouts roofed over with logs, kowliang, and earth. That same attention to detail which was characteristic of the Japanese army during the campaign was as noticeable now that they were idle. There were even hot baths for the soldiers. Earthenware jars were sunk in the ground much like the Russian soup kettles. Water was heated in these and baths could be taken as in so many vertical bathtubs. During the lull in the fighting there was a celebration in honor of the successes on the Sha-Ho at which there was a target-shoot between the military attaches. Meanwhile the Baltic fleet was pursuing its slow journey to the Orient, and the army of General Nogi was closing-in on Port Arthur.

[Illustration:

STAFF OF THE SECOND DIVISION AT THE BATTLE OF THE SHA-HO ]

[Illustration:

GENERAL SIR IAN HAMILTON, BRITISH ATTACHÉ, WITH GENERAL KUROKI ]

[Illustration:

GENERAL NISHIJIMA AND STAFF VIEWING THE FIGHT FROM A BOMB-PROOF ]

[Illustration:

RUSSIANS SHELLING VILLAGE OF CHONG-JU ON OCTOBER TENTH ]

SCENES DURING THE FIGHTING EARLY IN OCTOBER IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD OF THE SHA-HO

[Illustration:

ATTACHÉS WATCHING THE FIGHT FROM POSITION NEAR THE YENTAI COAL MINES ]

[Illustration:

RESERVES UNDER FIRE SHELTERED BY AN EMBANKMENT ]

[Illustration:

SHELLS SWEEPING A KOWLIANG FIELD—“NO TRESPASSING HERE!” ]

[Illustration:

EMPTY SHELL CASES LEFT AT A BATTERY POSITION AFTER THE ACTION ]

CLOSE TO THE FIRING LINE DURING THE ENGAGEMENT NEAR THE YENTAI COAL MINES

[Illustration:

RUSSIAN SHELLS BURSTING CLOSE TO JAPANESE BATTERY DURING THE SHA-HO FIGHT ]

[Illustration:

A REMARKABLE PHOTOGRAPH SHOWING SHRAPNEL SHELLS BURSTING AND SWEEPING ACROSS A FIELD ]

Of these two unusual close-range photographs the lower one shows how shrapnel looks when it bursts properly. The thick white smoke is one bursting shell, and the little puffs of smoke to the right are the 250 or so shrapnel bullets zipping along the ground. Those to the left are from another shell. The photographs were taken at great personal risk by Collier’s photographer, James H. Hare

[Illustration:

EXHAUSTED ENGINEERS SLEEPING UNDER FIRE DURING THE SHA-HO FIGHT ]

[Illustration:

JAPANESE BATTERY PEPPERING THE RUSSIANS ACROSS THE FIELDS ]

[Illustration:

JAPANESE BATTERY IN ACTION NEAR CHONG-JU ]

[Illustration:

IN THE KOWLIANG FIELDS WITH A JAPANESE BATTERY ]

WITH THE JAPANESE ON OCTOBER TENTH AT THE SHA-HO

[Illustration:

COLLIER’S PHOTOGRAPHER, JAMES H. HARE, RESUSCITATING WOUNDED RUSSIAN ]

[Illustration:

CORRESPONDENTS ASSISTING DISABLED RUSSIANS DURING THE SHA-HO FIGHT ]

[Illustration:

JAPANESE SOLDIERS ASSISTING WOUNDED RUSSIANS AFTER THE ENGAGEMENT ]

[Illustration:

SAPPERS REVERSING RUSSIAN TRENCH AFTER JAPANESE HAD TAKEN IT ]

ON THE SHA-HO BATTLEFIELD WITH THE JAPANESE

[Illustration:

RUSSIAN SOLDIER KILLED WITH HIS HAND ON THE TRIGGER ]

[Illustration:

DAMAGE WROUGHT TO THE “TEMPLE OF EVERLASTING PEACE” AT THE SHA-HO ]

[Illustration:

GATHERING UP DÉBRIS FROM THE FIELD OF BATTLE ]

[Illustration:

FIELD TELEPHONES AT THE SHA-HO, SHELTERED BEHIND CHINESE HOUSE ]

VICTORS AND VANQUISHED IN THE FIGHTING IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD OF THE SHA-HO

[Illustration:

RICE FOR THE JAPANESE ARMY STORED AT YENTAI ]

[Illustration:

JAPANESE QUARTERMASTER’S STORES PILED UP AT YENTAI ]

[Illustration:

THE YENTAI COAL MINES AFTER THE RUSSIANS HAD BEEN REPULSED ]

[Illustration:

RUSSIAN AND JAPANESE WOUNDED BUYING FROM CHINESE PEDLERS AT YENTAI ]

THE AFTERMATH OF BATTLE IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD OF YENTAI

[Illustration:

JAPANESE WOODSMAN SMOKING HIS LITTLE JAPANESE PIPE WHILE AT WORK ]

[Illustration:

CUTTING UP TIMBER TO BE BURNED FOR CHARCOAL ]

[Illustration:

JAPANESE BURNING WOOD TO MAKE CHARCOAL FOR THE ARMY ]

PREPARING CHARCOAL FOR THE ARMY WHILE IT WAS ENCAMPED ON THE SHA-HO

[Illustration:

SALUTING THE CAPTAIN AS HE EMERGES FROM HIS DUGOUT ]

[Illustration:

JAPANESE CUTTING TIMBER FOR FUEL WITH PORTABLE SAW ]

[Illustration:

IN AN OUTPOST TRENCH ALONG THE SHA-HO ]

IN WINTER QUARTERS WITH THE JAPANESE ARMY ON THE SHA-HO

[Illustration:

HEADQUARTERS OF THE REGIMENTAL COMMANDER ]

[Illustration:

JAPANESE BUILDING A BATH-HOUSE ON THE SHA-HO ]

[Illustration:

SENTRY ON DUTY AT OFFICER’S DOOR ]

[Illustration:

TAKING A HOT BATH—THERMOMETER TWELVE BELOW ]

[Illustration:

SOLDIERS’ DUGOUTS IN THE SHA-HO WINTER QUARTERS ]

WITH THE JAPANESE ARMY IN DECEMBER IN CAMP ON THE SHA-HO

[Illustration:

JAPANESE REINFORCEMENTS MARCHING THROUGH SHI-LI-HO TOWARD THE FRONT ]

[Illustration:

WOUNDED RUSSIANS AND JAPANESE AT PALANSANSU ]

[Illustration:

TRYING TO KEEP WARM AT SHI-LI-HO WITH THE THERMOMETER FIFTEEN BELOW ]

[Illustration:

JAPANESE WOUNDED GOING FROM YENTAI TO LIAO-YANG BY TRAIN ]

BETWEEN BATTLES WITH THE JAPANESE IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD OF THE SHA-HO

[Illustration:

DRILLING THE NEWLY ARRIVED RECRUITS IN THE MILITARY STEP ]

[Illustration:

DRAWING WATER FROM THE WELL IN FREEZING WEATHER ]

[Illustration:

RECRUITS DRILLING AT THE SHA-HO WITH CAPTURED RUSSIAN RIFLES ]

[Illustration:

COOLIES DRAWING WATER FROM THE SPRING FOR THE JAPANESE ]

WITH THE JAPANESE IN WINTER QUARTERS AT THE SHA-HO

[Illustration:

CHILDREN PLAYING DUCK-ON-THE-ROCK WITH PIECES OF BROKEN SHELLS ]

[Illustration:

OFFERING UP THE HOG’S HEAD TO PROPITIATE THE JOSS ]

[Illustration:

PEASANTS STACKING UP KOWLIANG FOR WINTER USE ]

[Illustration:

MANCHURIAN WOMEN PREPARING VEGETABLES FOR PICKLING ]

TYPICAL VIEWS OF MANCHURIAN PEASANTS AFTER THE ARRIVAL OF THE JAPANESE

[Illustration:

MAJOR YOKURA, FIRST JAPANESE ADMINISTRATOR ]

[Illustration:

JAPANESE CROSSING THE LIAO AT NEWCHWANG BEFORE IT FROZE OVER ]

[Illustration:

CHINESE CROSSING THE FROZEN LIAO RIVER ON SLEDS ]

SCENES AT NEWCHWANG SHORTLY AFTER THE FALL OF PORT ARTHUR

[Illustration:

JOSSES OF AN ANCIENT CHINESE TEMPLE LOOKING DOWN ON THE WOUNDED INVADERS ]

##