of Liu Mingchuan location at
228 Peace Memorial Park,
Taipei. By a decision of the Qing court,
Taiwan Province was declared an independent
province in 1887. Having never gotten full support from the mainland's Imperial court and the navy presence he wanted, Liu is instead remembered for his efforts to lay the foundation of modern infrastructure in Taiwan as its first provincial governor. He continued and enlarged
Shen Baozhen's ideals for managing Taiwan, and started a massive modernization programme that included setting up defenses, developing transportation, taxation, farming, public security, commercial enterprises, financial affairs, and education. Construction works including telegram, railway, army machinery, telegram schools, Western schools, and modern forts, in addition to purchasing modern artillery and rifles. Liu promoted a series of Western-style architectural developments, including the headquarters of Taiwan's Telegraphy (辦理臺灣水路電報總局, 1892), Taipei Machinery Car Repair Factory (), an iron bridge, Western Supervising Dormitory (), and Western School (西學堂, 1890). In 1886, under the support of German military engineer Max E. Hecht, he built nine modern Western-style forts, including Keelung Sheliao Fort (),
Uhrshawan Battery,
Hobe Fort, Daping Mountain Fort (旗後大平山炮台, destroyed), Penghu West Castle Fort (), Penghu West-Islet Fort (), Penghu Mazu Fort (
金龜頭砲臺), and
Anping Fort. Under Liu's auspices, a 28.6 km railroad connecting the cities of Keelung and Taipei (see
Taiwan Railways Administration) became the earliest railroad system of China when it came into operation with nine
Europe-made steam locomotives in 1891. An undersea telegraph line between
Tamsui and
Fuzhou was laid during his tenure. He sponsored the exploitation of coal using new technologies in northern Taiwan and the creation of a modern postal service. Liu's governance saw China's earliest nighttime electrical illumination when the walled prefecture city of Taipei was lightened up with street lamps in 1887. However, those lights would be turned off after the initial trial period due to a lack of operating funds. Despite that these projects were limited in scope and scale, they were carried out against strong opposition and plagued with financial difficulties. Unassisted by the Qing court, the governor resorted to a series of radical means of funding his projects. These included forcefully seizing control of some areas traditional inhabited by
aboriginal tribes in the northern part of the island province and imposing a land census on the island's landowning class to expand
camphor and tea production and increase tax revenues. Some of the repercussions of these measures would work to suffocate Liu's plans for Taiwan and his political career. On 6 October 1888 a mob of land-owning farmers and militia revolted (
施九緞事件) in
Changhua County, attacking Qing officials led by Li Jiatang (), a county magistrate who had threatened to use capital punishment when carrying out the land census. A longtime animosity between the Xiang and the Huai Armies is believed to be another factor in Liu's eventual political frustration. Liu Ao (), a Xiang Army veteran officer and Superintendent of Military Affairs in Taiwan (), was Liu Mingchuan's arch opponent when he took office. Although Liu Mingchuan succeeded in purging Liu Ao from his jurisdiction by accusing the latter of various misdeeds, which led to the latter's exile as a guarded prisoner to
Heilongjiang in 1885, the governor himself was never free from targeted attacks as a representative figure of the Huai faction in the government and as an important associate of Li Hongzhang. ==Resignation and death==