In reality, the portion of the Chinese Red Army engaged in the Field Army included the majority of the Communist force, which was making a general retreat from the city. However, the bulk of this force was only a fraction of what used to be more than 140,000 men army at its peak. With most of its equipment lost, many of the surviving members of the Chinese Red Army were forced to arm themselves with outdated weaponry. According to the
Statistical Chart of the Field Army Personnel, Weaponry, Ammunition, and Supply (Currently kept at the ''People's Liberation Army'
s Archives'') completed by the Chinese Red Army on October 8, 1934, two days before the Long March began, the Communist Long March force consisted of the following:
Order of battle The escaping communists included a total of 72,313 combatants and additional noncombatants, and they were organized into 7 formations, 5 armies (called legions by the communists) and 2
divisions (called columns by the communists), and these included: • (Communist) Central Military Committee Column (1st Column) • Committee chairman / Commander-in-Chief:
Zhu De • Deputy committee chairmen:
Zhou Enlai and
Wang Jiaxiang • Chief-of-general-staff:
Liu Bocheng • Director of the General Political Directorate:
Li Fuchun • (Communist) Central (Committee) Column (2nd Column) • Commander:
Zhou Enlai • Political commissar:
Li Weihan (using alias Luo Mai 罗迈参 at the time) • Chief-of-staff:
Zhang Yunyi • Security Bureau chief:
Deng Fa • Senior Cadres Regiment consisted of Chinese Red Army University cadets: • Commander:
Xiao Jinguang • Cadres Regiment consisted of Chinese Red Army (Junior) Academy cadets: • Commander:
Chen Geng • Political Commissar:
Song Renqiong • Chief-of-staff: , aka Yang Lin (杨林, a Korean communist) • Director of the Political Directorate: • National Garrison Regiment • Commander:
Yao Zhe • Political commissar: • The 1st Legion (The largest of the five armies, with 19,880 combatants) • Commander:
Lin Biao • Political commissar:
Nie Rongzhen • Chief-of-staff:
Zuo Quan • (Communist) Central (Committee) Local Work Regiment commander: • Security Bureau special appointee:
Luo Ruiqing • Secretariat political secretary: Fang Qiang (方强) • The 3rd Legion • Commander:
Peng Dehuai • Political commissar:
Yang Shangkun • Chief-of-staff: • Director of the Political Directorate:
Yuan Guoping • (Communist) Central (Committee) Local Work Regiment commander: Guo Qian (郭潜), later defected to the Nationalist side and changed his name to Guo Qianhui (郭乾辉) • Security Bureau special appointee: Zhang Chunqing (张纯清) • The 5th Legion • Commander: • Political commissar: • Chief-of-staff:
Chen Bojun • Director of the Political Directorate:
Li Zhuoran • (Communist) Central (Committee) Local Work Regiment commander: Zheng Zhenxun (郑询振) • The 8th Legion (The newest and smallest of the five, with 10,922 combatants) • Commander: • Political commissar:
Kai Feng • Chief-of-staff: Zhong Weijian (钟伟剑) • Director of the Political Directorate:
Liu Shaoqi • (Communist) Central (Committee) Local Work Regiment commander:
Liu Xiao • The 9th Legion • Commander: • Political commissar:
He Changgong • Chief-of-staff:
Zhang Zongxun • Director of the Political Directorate:
Wang Shoudao • (Communist) Central (Committee) Local Work Regiment commander:
Feng Xuefeng The 5 armies and the 2 columns had a total of 86,859 combatants when they first left their abandoned base in Jiangxi.
Weaponry The
Statistical Chart of Field Army Personnel, Weaponry, Ammunition, and Supply also provided the weaponry and provisions prepared for the Long March, and the weapons deployed included: •
Artillery: 39 total •
Mortars: 38 •
Mountain guns: 1 (originally not included, but was added later on) •
Breechloading Firearms: 33,244 total (with 1,858,156 rounds of munition), and of these, a total of 29,016 were distributed to the 5 corps, including: •
Rifles: 25,317 •
Machine guns: 618 •
Submachine guns: 28 •
Handguns: 2,804 Other weapons included: •
Lances: 6,101 •
Chinese sabres: 882 Various weapons were also deployed but their numbers were not counted, and these included: • Muzzle-loading rifles and smoothbore muskets •
Flintlock and
Snaphance guns •
Matchlock and
Wheellock guns •
Spears and
rakes (although later during the
Long March,
spears were most useful as canes) •
Axes and
polearms (although later during the
Long March, poles were most useful as building material such as that for stretchers) •
Daggers and
knives Other material included: • Provisions • Winter clothing: 83,100 sets •
Horses: 338 • Herbal medicine: 35,700
kg •
Salt: 17,413 kg == Economics ==