In 1905, Sichuan Province established the
Sichuan-Hankou Railway Company. However, the company management was beset by corruption and mismanagement and construction effort made little progress. During August 1910, Sichuan Advisory Department started to run official newspaper "
Shu Gazette" with the propaganda "Overseeing Administration and Promoting Institutionalism". Meng Caicheng was one of the sponsors of "
Shu Gazette", which published articles about important political events and also disclosed the corruption and degeneration of the official class. The newspaper was forced to stop publication in July 1911. On April 26, 1911,
Wang Renwen, the Deputy Governor of Sichuan, presented a memorial to the Bureau of Civil Affairs. In the Memo, Wang reported that "the Sichuan-Hankou Railway Company representative stakeholder Meng Caicheng and others ever advised the Department to notify all the official business to government organs and the public. So they were running
Sichuan Railway Monthly to publish all important issues about Sichuan Railway such as finance, accounting, construction and operation." On May 9, 1911, the
Qing authorities ordered the nationalization of all locally controlled railway signed a local agreement with
Great Britain,
Germany,
France and the
United States. The nationalization order drew strong opposition across Southern China, especially Sichuan. Pu Dianjun, Meng Caicheng and other influential members of the
Sichuan Provincial Assembly organized the Railway Protection League on June 17, and made public speeches against the plan. On August 2,
Zhao Erfeng arrived Chengdu and took the post of the
Viceroy of Sichuan. On September 7, Zhao Erfeng had Pu Dianjun, Luo Lun, Yan Kai and other leaders arrested and closed the company. Afterwards, Meng Caicheng asked the Governor Zhao Erfeng to have him arrested as well. As an appointed official by imperial government, Meng Caicheng was imprisoned alone at the police department. Enraged protestors marched on the Viceroy's office. Zhao Erfeng ordered troops to open fire and dozens of protestors were killed. Bloodshed further inflamed the protestors. Led by the
Tongmenghui, an armed revolution broke out all over Sichuan Province. On October 5, Zhao Erfeng released Meng Caicheng, Hu Rong and other leaders. The Qing Court ordered
Duanfang, the
Viceroy of Huguang (
Hubei and
Hunan), to reinforce Sichuan with troops from Hubei, which weakened defenses in Wuhan. On October 10, 1911, revolutionaries in the
New Army units that remained in Wuhan launched the
Wuchang Uprising. On November 14, Zhao Erfeng released Pu Dianjun from prison and negotiated established Great Han Military Government of Sichuan. On November 27, Sichuan declared independence from the Qing dynasty. On December 9, 1911,
Yin Changheng reorganized the Military Government of Sichuan and took up the post of governor. Yin appointed Meng Caicheng as Magistrate of Ba-An Prefecture to prevent
Xizang from declaring independence. After Meng arrived Ba-An, he established policies to promote peace between ethnically Han and
Zang residents. There was little conflict between Zang and Han during his administration. ==Late years==