Travelling to Shanghai.
Once
foreign settlement was established in Shanghai, everyone wanted to go there.
The most efficient way was by water, via steamship, but rail connexions
appeared shortly thereafter. These had far more troubles than the ships, in the
face of a strong resistance from the Chinese Nationals, but by 1912 they were
fairly strongly established.
From
this point onwards, keeping tourists away from Shanghai was impossible;
everybody from Ulysses S. Grant to Teddy Roosevelt dropped in to see what was
happening. And the number of visitors only increased...
By
Ship:
The
Victorian era was the time of Isambard Kingdom Brunel and the time of steamship
travel. With the opening of both the Suez Channel and the Panama Canal,
steamship companies such as the White Star Line established frequent passages
between Southeast Asia, Britain and the USA. From the US the journey was fairly
straightforward, across the Pacific; from England, the journey was broken up by
stops at Malta, Calcutta, Goa, Rangoon, Singapore and/or Hong Kong, meaning
that a journey of a similar distance as that from New York took a much longer
duration.
From
New York: 10,855 nautical miles / 20,103 kilometres
30-45
days
1st
Class: US$110.00
2nd
Class: US$75.00
Steerage:
US$20.00
From
New Orleans: 10,254 nautical miles / 18,990 kilometres
29-42
days
1st
Class: US$105.00
2nd
Class: US$70.00
Steerage:
US$19.00
From
Panama Canal: 8,556 nautical miles / 15,846 kilometres
24-36
days
1st
Class: US$85.00
2nd
Class: US$58.00
Steerage:
US$15.00
From
San Francisco: 5,550 nautical miles / 10,279 kilometres
15-23
days
1st
Class: US$70.00
2nd
Class: US$50.00
Steerage:
US$13.00
From
London: 10,979 nautical miles / 20,333 kilometres
60-70
days
1st
Class: £15/15s/0d
2nd
Class: £10/10s/0d
Steerage:
£7/7s/0d
By
Rail:
At
this time there were no internal railway networks in mainland China and there
wouldn’t be until early next century. The Chinese believed that railway
construction disturbed the resting places of their ancestors and interrupted
the feng shui of the land and so they vehemently opposed such construction
throughout this period. On a more down-to-earth level, the ‘fire wagons’
eliminated the need for carters, coolies and barrowmen to carry produce and the
train system was thus seen as an economic threat to the peasant class. The
first attempts at railway building (instigated by the French, Germans and
Belgians outside of Shanghai) were fraught with difficulties and a final plan
to sell the works off to the Chinese Imperial Army saw the whole endeavour
largely torn up and dismantled.
This
being said, it is possible at this time to get close to China by rail if one is
willing to continue towards China from the Russo-Mongolian border by some other
means. The Trans-Siberian Express was begun in 1890 and completed after the
Revolution in 1916. From 1890 to 1912 it was possible to travel east from
Paris, thence to St. Petersburg and then to Irkutsk; the Irkutsk-Baikal part of
the line was the last to be completed. Such a trip would cost around £35, or
US$175. Alternatively, travellers could move west from Vladivostok to Harbin in
Manchuria: this costs £5, or US$25.
The
main issue with this plan of travel is that the White Russians, holed up in
Vladivostok, regularly patrol the rail line in search of their Red Russian
enemies, occasionally sabotaging the line and the carriages, and taking
captives. This situation was not resolved until after 1916 so the brave
traveller of the Russian railways should be well-prepared.
Intrepid
adventurers travelling from Bhamo in Burma in the period 1909-11, have the
option of travelling by train along the newly completed Yunnan-Szechuan Railway
from the western hinterlands to the Yangtze, from where riverboats can be
enlisted to continue on to Shanghai. Slow construction and general laxity of
service mean that this route is anything but reliable: costs and times are
highly variable.
Other
Means:
The
other option for getting to Shanghai is by overland routes. These can be
fraught with danger and are arduous, not for the faint-hearted. This being
said, they are also cheap. The most frequently chosen routes are from
British-occupied Rangoon (following Aleister Crowley, among others) through the
province of Yunnan, along the Yangtsze River to Nanking and thence to Shanghai;
alternatively, a route can be established through French-controlled Annam from
Indochina, to Canton and then north along the River Pei to Hankow and then
along the Yangtsze. In terms of cost, compare ‘Chinese’ Morrison’s expenditure
on his Rangoon-Shanghai trip in 1894 which took him 100 days at a total cost of
£18: this included payment for two servants and several horses.
Climate
Shanghai
has a seasonal climate and experiences all four seasons despite being on an
equivalent parallel to cities such as Cairo and New Orleans. Temperatures drop
below freezing in the winter months and reach a humid high averaging 32°C
(90°F), occasionally spiking into the low 40s, (104°F) during the hottest
months of July to August. June through to early August is also the rainy
period. Winters tend to be grey and cold, settling in by mid-December and not
letting up until early March. Snow is quite common.
Autumn
and Spring are generally considered the best times to be in Shanghai. Both
seasons are cool and crisp with rain decreasing in the Fall and building up
again in the Spring.
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