How Chinese bandits’ kidnapping of a blond British bride and her pet dogs became a global news story
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How Chinese bandits’ kidnapping of a blond British bride and her pet dogs became a global news story
Muriel “Tinko” Pawley. Picture: Public Opinion
Paul French
Jan, 2019
The abduction of Muriel ‘Tinko’ Pawley became headline news around the world, but the men captured with her barely rated a mention
However, in the 1920s and ’30s, foreigners were being kidnapped with disturbing regularity in northern China – missionary families, salesmen roaming the interior in motor cars, hoping to make a deal or two, whole carriages of train passengers, entire steamships. It was an epidemic, ears sliced off and sent to families slow in paying, and it often ended in tragedy.
The bandit gang, consisting of about 100 outlaws, was led by a man named Pei Pa-tien and his younger brother. They sent a letter demanding forthwith and without delay the following: a staggering (for the time) 32,500 Chinese dollars – equivalent to about US$1.15 million today; a chest of opium (for personal consumption); 240 rifles, four carbines, six machine guns and 38,000 rounds of ammunition; five bales of black silk; 100 good-quality gold rings; 60 gold watches; and a supply of winter uniforms.
Failure to comply would result in Tinko’s ears being cut off and, to much outrage back in England, her dogs being killed. Her ears and the dogs would be chopped up and sent to, respectively, Pawley’s father, her husband and Asiatic Petroleum. If the ransom was then not delivered post-haste, the captives would be tortured and executed. In Manchuria, in the winter of 1932, there was no reason to suspect Pei and his gang were anything but deadly serious.
While preparing for the rescue mission, Wang’s 16-year-old-son checked his revolver by looking down the barrel to ensure there were no obstructions. There were not; he shot himself in the head, dying instantly.
full https://www.scmp.com/magazines/post-mag ... nd-british
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Re: How Chinese bandits’ kidnapping of a blond British bride and her pet dogs became a global news story
that was certainly a good read, thank you.
Still here, in country...
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Re: How Chinese bandits’ kidnapping of a blond British bride and her pet dogs became a global news story
Pretty interesting, I went and looked into it more it's funny when they talk to Charles Cockran he seems to have taken it a lot better than Tinko however she gives a different and much more detailed account, probably in part as she knew the language and he did not. I will post the articles bellow.
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Re: How Chinese bandits’ kidnapping of a blond British bride and her pet dogs became a global news story
I like how she threatens to turn his ancestor's spirits into turtles It was worth editing the article to make it more legible.
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- Expatriate
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Re: How Chinese bandits’ kidnapping of a blond British bride and her pet dogs became a global news story
Heres her accounting a rather thorough report though no mention of Turtle ancestors...
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