During the Agrarian Revolution, the CCP generally managed the logistics of its organs through the military supply department, and did not set up a special organ logistics agency. In 1931, the Central Workers' and Peasants' Democratic Government established a General Affairs Office to manage logistics affairs, and also stipulated that general affairs departments should be established in the workers' and peasants' democratic governments at the provincial, county and district levels. During the Yan'an period, the logistics departments of the CCP Central Committee and the organs directly under the Central Military Commission (including the guard forces) were not strictly distinguished at first. In the early days of the Anti-Japanese War, the CCP Central Committee had a Central Administration Bureau, and the Central Military Commission had a Military Commission Logistics Supply Department. In 1942, they were merged into the Central Administration Bureau, and in 1945 they were renamed the Military Commission Supply Department. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, in 1949, the department responsible for the financial supply and administrative affairs of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party was renamed the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party Directly Affiliated Organs Supply Department (abbreviated as the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party Supply Department). Before the
Cultural Revolution, the General Office of the CCP Central Committee had the following organizational structure: Confidential Office, Secretary's Office, Directly Affiliated Groups, Special Accounting Office, Security Bureau, Confidential Bureau, Confidential Transportation Bureau, Personnel Department, State Archives Administration, Central Direct Administrative Bureau, and Central Archives. During the Cultural Revolution, after May 1969, the Secretariat, Security Bureau, Confidential Bureau, and Confidential Transportation Bureau were changed to Secretariat, Security Department, Confidential Department, and Confidential Transportation Department respectively; the Letters and Visits Office of the Secretariat was changed to the Letters and Visits Office of the General Office of the CCP Central Committee; the Central Direct Administrative Bureau was changed to the Management Department of the General Office of the CCP Central Committee; the business of the Special Accounting Office of the General Office of the CCP Central Committee was transferred to the Financial Group of the Management Department of the General Office of the CCP Central Committee; and the Ming and Qing Archives Department of the Central Archives of the CCP Central Committee was transferred to the Palace Museum. In October 1976, the General Office of the CCP Central Committee had 12 departments (departments, libraries, and schools). Later, the General Office of the CCP Central Committee was re-established as the General Office of the CCP Central Committee. In 1988, the General Office of the CCP Central Committee underwent an organizational restructuring. After the restructuring, it had 12 bureau-level agencies, including the Research Office, the Secretariat, the Security Bureau, the Confidential Bureau, the Confidential Transportation Bureau, the Central Administration Bureau, the Central Archives, the
Chairman Mao Memorial Hall Administration, the Special Accounting Office, the Veteran Cadre Bureau, the Personnel Bureau, and the General Office of the CCP Central Committee. == Organizational structure ==