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During the Republic of China period, Yu Feipeng, director of the Rear Service Department of the Military Commission of the National Revolutionary Army, served as the secretary of the Tenth Army Group of the National Revolutionary Army, referring to the people engaged in clerical work in the old official office and the army.

author:Red collector Jiang Xiaoping
During the Republic of China period, Yu Feipeng, director of the Rear Service Department of the Military Commission of the National Revolutionary Army, served as the secretary of the Tenth Army Group of the National Revolutionary Army, referring to the people engaged in clerical work in the old official office and the army.
During the Republic of China period, Yu Feipeng, director of the Rear Service Department of the Military Commission of the National Revolutionary Army, served as the secretary of the Tenth Army Group of the National Revolutionary Army, referring to the people engaged in clerical work in the old official office and the army.
During the Republic of China period, Yu Feipeng, director of the Rear Service Department of the Military Commission of the National Revolutionary Army, served as the secretary of the Tenth Army Group of the National Revolutionary Army, referring to the people engaged in clerical work in the old official office and the army.
During the Republic of China period, Yu Feipeng, director of the Rear Service Department of the Military Commission of the National Revolutionary Army, served as the secretary of the Tenth Army Group of the National Revolutionary Army, referring to the people engaged in clerical work in the old official office and the army.

Yu Feipeng (1884-1966), zi qiao feng, Zhejiang Fenghua people, graduated from Ningbo Normal School in his early years, after the outbreak of the Xinhai Revolution, joined the Shanghai student army, served as a quartermaster in the Training Department of the Shanghai New Army. In 1913, on the recommendation of Chiang Kai-shek, he was sent to the Beijing Quartermaster School and systematically studied military transportation and logistics. In 1918, he went to Guangzhou, and in 1922 he successively served as the governor of Songxi and Pucheng County in Fujian Province, and in 1923 he was appointed as the chief of the audit department of the General Headquarters of the Guangdong Army. In 1924, he was appointed as a member of the preparatory committee of the Whampoa Military Academy, deputy director of the Quartermaster Department, and director of the Manager Department. In 1925, he accompanied the army on the Eastern Expedition, handled military supplies, and served as the chief of the financial department of the seven subordinates of Huichaomei in Guangdong. In 1926, he was appointed as the director of the general headquarters of the National Revolutionary Army, and after capturing Nanchang, he also served as a member of the Jiangxi Provincial Political Affairs Committee and the chairman of the Finance Committee. After 1927, he successively served as the superintendent of Shanghai Jiang Customs, the director of the Quartermaster Administration of the Ministry of Military Affairs, the minister of communications, the executive member of the Central Committee of the Chinese Kuomintang, the director of the Rear Service Department of the Military Commission, and the chairman of the Grain Supervision Committee. In 1928, he was appointed director of the National Revolutionary Army Station, and in the same year he was transferred to the Director of the Quartermaster Department of the Military Affairs Department of the Executive Yuan. In 1941, he also served as the chairman of the Yunnan-Burma Road Transport Project Supervision Committee and the director of the China-Myanmar General Transportation Bureau. In 1947, he was appointed General of the Army, and was appointed As a political commissar of the Executive Yuan and minister of the Ministry of Food. In the same year, he advocated the construction of Fenghua Zhongshan Park and Zhongzheng Library. In 1949, he went to Taiwan and successively served as chairman of the Board of Directors of the Taiwan Merchants Bureau, vice president of the Central Bank, advisor to the Presidential Office, and member of the Central Committee of the Chinese Kuomintang. He died in Taiwan in 1966.

During the Republic of China period, Yu Feipeng, director of the Rear Service Department of the Military Commission of the National Revolutionary Army, served as the secretary of the Tenth Army Group of the National Revolutionary Army, referring to the people engaged in clerical work in the old official office and the army.

<h1>Tenth Army of the National Revolutionary Army</h1>

Formed in late August 1937, the first commander-in-chief of the group army was Liu Jianxu, which was under the command and jurisdiction of the Third Theater of the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, which participated in the right wing of the Battle of Songhu and was later stationed on the front line in Zhejiang. From 1945 onwards, the group army commanded the 92nd Army of the National Revolutionary Army, which was in charge of the Sixty-sixth Army and Hou Jingru, and participated in the Battle of Western Hunan province.

In the summer of 1938, the 70th Army was transferred away, and the 10th Army had only the sixty-third division, the 192nd Division, the 194th Division, the 107th Division and the Pre-Tenth Division of the Twenty-eighth Army. In 1939, the 91st Army of the National Revolutionary Army joined the army group in the battle sequence.

After 1940, Wang Jingjiu served as the commander-in-chief of the Tenth Army Group, under the jurisdiction of Wang Tiehan's 49th Army of the National Revolutionary Army, He Shaozhou's 88th Army of the National Revolutionary Army, and Feng Shengfa's Ninth Army of the National Revolutionary Army.

In 1942, the group army participated in the Battle of Zhejiang.

After 1943, the number of the Tenth Army was transferred to the Sixth Theater of the War of Resistance Against Japan, and the commander-in-chief of the Group Army was still Wang Jingjiu, but its subordinate units were changed to chen Cheng's three corps of the "civil engineering system", namely the Eighteenth Army of the National Revolutionary Army, the Sixty-sixth Army of the National Revolutionary Army, and the 79th Army of the National Revolutionary Army, stationed in Hubei, and participated in the Battle of Western Hubei and the Battle of Changde.

From 1945 onwards, the group army commanded the 92nd Army of the National Revolutionary Army, which was in charge of the Sixty-sixth Army and Hou Jingru, and participated in the Battle of Western Hunan province.

<h1>Sishu refers to people who are engaged in clerical work in the official office and the military. </h1>

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