Their houses of the Fui Chew Hakka were destroyed completely. Their provisions seized. Their tin taken to the Balai and most of the ore taken to Chung Keng Quee's smelting house. So Ah Chiang, leader of the Ghee Hin was captured by
Ngah Ibrahim at Teluk Kertang (Port Weld) and executed. It was at this stage that Chin Ah Yam made his appearances with a gallant gesture. He approach Mantri and interceded for the prisoners, disclosing about a decade later that he was even prepared to offer his life in exchange for So Ah Chiang's (Cheong). As the Mantri was adamant, Ah Chiang and two men were executed the next day at Telok Kertang (the second stockade). When Chin Ah Yam heard that Ah Chiang's wife and child and other women (wife of Chew Sui Pow who was executed) were to be sent out of Larut, he again showed chivalry by warning the Mantri that if the women were removed, all the Chinese in the district would revolt. The battle continued back and forth and spread to Province Wellesley and the island of Penang and other secret societies joined the fray. Both sides, exhausted, finally came to terms. An official inquiry took place and both the Hai San and Ghee Hin societies were fined $5,000 each for violating the peace of Penang and their leaders, banished. By around 1870 there were a combined total of about 40,000
Hakka and
Cantonese mine workers in the Larut district and the mining areas between the two groups were near to each other. It is this proximity that might explain how the next battle began. == Notes ==