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Brief Introduction of revolutionary martyrs who died for the War of Resistance Against Japan

Revolutionary martyrs are the eternal spiritual monuments of a nation and a country. Without the sacrifices of the revolutionary martyrs, there would be no happy life for us now. We must remember history, remember those ancestors who gave us blood and lives!

Huang Yuquan (1905~1932), mozhi, a native of Shibantan, Taishan, Guangdong. In the 17th year of the Republic of China, he successively served as the chief of the inspection unit of Guangdong Aviation School, the leader of the first team of Guangdong Airlines, and the leader of the sixth squadron of Central Aviation. On February 5, 1932 (lunar Chinese New Year's Eve), the Chinese Air Force entered the war against Japan for the first time. On February 6, Huang Yuquan was killed in a fierce battle to cover his comrades-in-arms, and was the first person to die for the Chinese Air Force to resist foreign insults.

Brief Introduction of revolutionary martyrs who died for the War of Resistance Against Japan

Han Jialin (1898-1932) was a major general in the Kuomintang Northeast Army, known as Shu Peng, a native of Lishu, Jilin Province. After the September 18 Incident, he participated in the Jiangqiao War of Resistance, fired the first shot of the anti-Japanese war, and in 1932, when he fought against the Japanese in Qing'an, Heilongjiang, he died heroically at the age of 34, when he was the general counselor of the Heilongjiang Anti-Japanese Volunteer Army.

Brief Introduction of revolutionary martyrs who died for the War of Resistance Against Japan

Wang Zhaolan was born in 1910 in Buckwheat Langzi, Panshi County, and was admitted to the normal class of Panshi Middle School in 1930, and was a like-minded classmate with Meng Jiemin, Chu Xiangchen and others, one of the six students of Panshi, and an active organizer of the activities of the Panshi Anti-Imperialist Alliance. In 1932, he participated in the organization of the "May Day" large-scale mass anti-Japanese parade, and served as the leader of the second brigade of the Panshi Workers' and Peasants' Anti-Japanese Volunteer Army, the deputy commander of the South Manchurian guerrillas, and participated in the command of the attack on the Panshi County Town and the He Family Compound. After the death of The Commander-in-Chief Meng Jiemin in 1933, Wang Zhaolan succeeded him as the Commander-in-Chief, and soon after, while presiding over the meeting of the cadres of the troops, he was surrounded by the enemy and died heroically in the breakthrough, at the age of 23.

Brief Introduction of revolutionary martyrs who died for the War of Resistance Against Japan

Wang Runbo (1905-1933), also known as Qida, was a native of Xijinba, Hanfeng Town, Kaixian County, Sichuan (present-day Hanfeng Subdistrict, Kaizhou District, Chongqing). Whampoa Military Academy 3rd cadet. Commander of the 149th Regiment of the 25th Division of the 17th Army of the National Revolutionary Army. On March 11, 1933, he died in the Battle of the Great Wall at Gubeikou in Beijing. He was 28 years old. The Nationalist government posthumously promoted Wang Runbo to major general of the army.

Brief Introduction of revolutionary martyrs who died for the War of Resistance Against Japan

Tian Lin, 1900-1933, a native of Jilin Province, commander of the Jilin People's Anti-Japanese Self-Defense Army. On July 29, 1933, in a fierce battle with the Japanese army in the area of Lanmuqiao in Qingyuan County, Tian Lin, who was then the commander of the Jilin People's Anti-Japanese Self-Defense Army, took the lead in the battle, heroic and tenacious, and was unfortunately shot and died heroically under the fierce artillery bombardment of the enemy.

Brief Introduction of revolutionary martyrs who died for the War of Resistance Against Japan

We live in a happy era, and I hope that you will not forget that tragic history and those ancestors who gave us blood and lives!

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