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Burma Road

The Burma Road (Chinese: 滇缅公路) was a road linking Burma (now known as Myanmar) with southwest China. Its terminals were Lashio, Burma, in the south and Kunming, China, the capital of Yunnan province in the north. It was built in 1937–1938 while Burma was a British colony to convey supplies to China during the Second Sino-Japanese War. Preventing the flow of supplies on the road helped motivate the occupation of Burma by the Empire of Japan in 1942 during World War II. Use of the road was restored to the Allies in 1945 after the completion of the Ledo Road. Some parts of the old road are still visible today.[1]

This article is about the Sino-Burmese road. For the 1948 Siege of Jerusalem, see Burma Road (Israel). For Japanese-built wartime railroad in Southeast Asia, see Burma Railway.

Burma Road

滇缅公路

YunnanBurma Highway

Diān Miǎn gōnglù

Diān Miǎn gōnglù

History[edit]

The road is 717 miles (1,154 km) long and runs through rough mountain country.[2] The sections from Kunming to the Burmese border were built by 200,000 Burmese and Chinese laborers during the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937 and completed by 1938 in order to circumvent the Japanese blockade of China.[3][4] The construction project was coordinated by Chih-Ping Chen.


During World War II, the Allies used the Burma Road to transport materiel to aid China's war effort, especially after China lost sea-access following the loss of Nanning in the Battle of South Guangxi. Supplies from San Francisco for example would land at Rangoon (now Yangon), moved by rail to Lashio where the road started in Burma, up steep gradients before crossing into China over the Wanding bridge. The Chinese stretch of the road continued for some five hundred miles through rural Yunnan terrain before ending up in Kunming.[3]


In July 1940, Britain yielded to Japanese diplomatic pressure and closed the Burma Road for three months.[5]: 299  The Japanese overran Burma in 1942, closing the Burma Road. The Allies thereafter supplied China by air, flying "over The Hump" from India, which initially proved fatally dangerous and woefully inadequate, leading U.S. army general Joseph Stilwell to obsessively pursue the goal of reopening the Burma Road.[3]


The Allies recaptured northern Burma in late 1944, which allowed the Ledo Road from Ledo, Assam to connect to the old Burma Road at Wanding, Yunnan province. The first trucks reached the Chinese frontier by this route on January 28, 1945.[6]


First convoy reached Kunming on February 2, 1945.

(1941)

Burma Convoy

(1942)

A Yank on the Burma Road

(1942)

Bombs over Burma

(1945)

Objective, Burma!

The construction of the road also features in The Battle of China (1944), the sixth film of Frank Capra's Why We Fight propaganda film series.[7]

C. T. Chang: Burma Road, Malaysia Publications, Singapore 1964.

Forbes, Andrew ; Henley, David (2011). China's Ancient Tea Horse Road. Chiang Mai: Cognoscenti Books.  B005DQV7Q2

ASIN

: Burma:The Forgotten War. John Murray, London 2004, ISBN 0-7195-6576-6.

Jon Latimer

Donovan Webster: The Burma Road: The Epic Story of the China-Burma-India Theater in World War II. Farrar Straus & Giroux, New York, 2003,  0-374-11740-3.

ISBN

Smith, Nicol (1940). Burma Road: The Story of the World's Most Romantic Highway. New York: The Bobbs-Merrill Company.

Tan, Pei-Ying. The Building of the Burma Road. Whittlesey house, 1945.  B000I1C4XW

ASIN

Ledo Road

ancient Silk Road segment over the same area

Tea Horse Road

the modern road along this route

Hangrui Expressway

Yunnan-Burma Railway

wartime makeshift named for the original Burma Road

Burma Road (Israel)

Merrill's Marauders: Protecting The Burma Road

Burma Road photos

World War II Burma Road video

WW2 - Campaigns in Burma

video 1

WWII - Why We Fight - The Battle of China 1943

video 2

WWII - Why We Fight - The Battle of China 1943

Universal Newsreel

Life-line to China Re-Opened, 1945/02/12 (1945)

Mark Jenkins, Outside (magazine), October 2003

The Ghost Road

Donovan Webster, National Geographic Magazine, November 2003

Blood, Sweat and Toil along the Burma Road

David Fullbrook, Asia Times, September 23, 2004

China to Europe via a new Burma road

The Sydney Morning Herald, August 16, 2008

On the way to Mandalay

"Burma's Stilwell Road: A backbreaking WWII project is revived", December 30, 2008.

Los Angeles Times

Archived 2014-06-03 at the Wayback Machine are available on the Hoover Institution Archives website, with the original diaries among the Joseph Warren Stilwell papers at the Hoover Institution Archives.

Transcribed copies of Joseph Warren Stilwell's World War II diaries

Stilwell's executive assistant in Burma (as of 1944) and son-in-law, are available on the Hoover Institution Archives website, with the original diaries among the Ernest Fred Easterbrook papers at the Hoover Institution Archives.

Transcribed copies of the World War II diaries of Ernest F. Easterbrook

For tours along the Burma Road.