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Crossing of the Luding Bridge
Luding Bridge
Next was the crossing of the Luding Bridge, about a 1,000 li to the north. A li
is an interesting distance measurement. An uphill li is shorter than a downhill
li. So, it measures how long the journey will take not how far. They had to
beat Chiang to the river, and they did. Next was the race to the Luding bridge.
It was an ancient structure built in 1701. This bridge is situated to the west
of Luding County. The bridge measures about 100 meters long and 2.8 meters
wide.
Thirteen chains supported the side supports as well as those for the
bridge floor. Irregular planking lay on the flooring. The bridge is still there
today. They had 100 miles to get to the river in two days and then take the
bridge. Abandoning their equipment except rifles and bullets, they raced to the
bridge. On the other side of the river, a KMT unit was also racing to the
bridge. The KMT unit stopped for the night and the Red Army beat them to the
bridge.
On May 29, 1935, the Red Army arrived here. Despite of the heavy
gunfire from the enemy troops stationed at the bridge and the fact that the KMT
had removed the planking, the Red Army assault team of 22 crawled forward,
exterminated the enemy force and took the bridge with a loss of only 7 men.
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