- Shanghai International Settlement
The Shanghai Municipal Council (工部局, literally "Works Department", from the standard English local government title of 'Board of works') was the governing body which administered the combined British and American foreign concessions in
Shanghai , known as the Shanghai International Settlement (上海公共租界). It was established in 1854 to reorganise the existing concessions. Wholly foreign-controlled, the council was staffed by individuals of all nationalities, including Britons, Americans,New Zealand ers,Australian s, Danes andJapan ese. Chinese members were not permitted to join the council until 1928.Representing a wide spectrum of nations, the Shanghai Municipal Council (SMC) along with the foreign residents of the International Settlement recreated the
architecture and institutions of their homelands in Shanghai. It maintained its ownpolice force , theShanghai Municipal Police and even possessed its ownmilitary reserve in theShanghai Volunteer Corps (萬國商團). The immense presence of the council and the settlement's foreign residents can still be seen throughout present day Shanghai, most notably the architecture ofThe Bund .Amongst the many members who served on the council, its American chairman during the 1920's,
Stirling Fessenden , is the most notable. In addition to serving as the settlement's main administrator during Shanghai's most turbulent era, he was also remembered for being more "British" than the council's British members. The International Settlement was not a British possession, unlike its neighbor, the French Concession, which was formally part of the French colonial empire, under the direction initially of the Governor-General of Indo-China. Thus the SMC exercised a considerable degree of political autonomy, not always wisely. Actions in the 1920s in particular, such as theMay 30 1925 shooting of Chinese demonstrators by members of theShanghai Municipal Police , embarrassed and threatened the British Empire's position in China.Over the years a large number of Chinese took up residency at the International Settlement, either to escape civil conflict, or to seek better economic opportunities. In 1932 there were already 1,040,780 Chinese living within the International Settlement, with another 400,000 fleeing into the area after the
Second Sino-Japanese War broke out in 1937. Moreover, Shanghai was for a time the only place in the world that unconditionally offered refuge forJew s who were escaping from the NazisVerify source|date=May 2008, although they often lived in squalid conditions in an area known as theShanghai ghetto .The Council was formally abolished twice. In July 1943 it was retroceded to the City Government of Shanghai, then in the hands of the pro-Japanese
Wang Jingwei Government , by its then Japanese leaders on the Council. Anglo-American influence had effectively ended after8 December 1941 , when theImperial Japanese Army entered and occupied the city. Although senior Allied personnel and councillors were removed from their posts, most Allied nationals working for the administration remained in their jobs until they were interned after February 1943. The Settlement was also returned to Chinese control in theSino-British Friendship Treaty of February 1943 between Britain and theNationalist Government of theRepublic of China underChiang Kai-shek . After the war a Liquidation Commission fitfully met to discuss the remaining details of the handover. The Council's headquarters building still stands in downtown Shanghai.After 1949, city government was re-instated under the Mayor of Shanghai.
List of Chairmen of the Shanghai Municipal Council
*
Arnold Foster
* William J (Tony) Keswick
*J. S. Fearon
* Henry Keswick - British QuarterConsul General of France (Shanghai)
The French Concession was governed by a separate municipal council, under the direction of the Consul General. The French Concession was not part of the International Settlement.
ee also
*
China Marines
*List of historic buildings in Shanghai
*The Bund
*The Blue Lotus
* [http://fotw.net/flags/cn-sha.html Flag of the SIS]
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