Jiang Wen. Jiang Wen (1914-2010), formerly known as Chen Huikan, alias Jiang Tengfang, was born in Liuyang County, Hunan Province.
In his early years, he joined the Chinese Communist Youth League in 1928, was incorporated into the Chinese Workers' and Peasants' Red Army in 1930, and became a member of the Chinese Communist Party in 1931.
During the Agrarian Revolutionary War, he served as the secretary of the Liuyang County Township Soviet, the secretary of the county Soviet, the student of the Red Army radio training class, the chief of the secretarial section of the Secretariat of the General Political Department of the Red Army (Secretary General Song Yuhe and Xiao Xiangrong), the political commissar of the Red 6th Army Corps and the radio squadron of the Hunan and Jiangxi Military Region, the political commissar of the Communication Brigade of the Red Second Front Army (the captain Yan Kanzhai, lost organizational contact in 1937), and the student of Yan'an Anti-Japanese Military and Political University; He participated in the anti-"encirclement and suppression" in the Soviet area and the revolutionary base areas in Hunan, Jiangxi, Hunan, Hubei, Sichuan, and Guizhou, as well as the Long March of the Red Army.
Lieutenant General Xiao Xiangrong.
During the National War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, he successively served as the political commissar (section chief Liao Shuyun) and radio brigade political commissar of the 3rd Section of the 120th Division Headquarters of the Eighth Route Army, and the deputy chief of the Communication Section of the Jinchaji Military Region Headquarters of the Eighth Route Army (section chief Liu Bin) and section chief (chief of staff Tang Yanjie).
After the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, he successively served as chief of staff of the 2nd Army Subdivision of the Hebei-Jin Military Region under the jurisdiction of the Shanxi-Chahar-Hebei Military Region (commanders Luo Wenfang and Wang Yaonan, political commissars Ding Laifu and Wu Guang), chief of staff of the 1st Brigade of the 1st Column of the North China Military Region (brigade commander Zeng Mei, political commissar Ding Laifu), director and political commissar of the Northeast Democratic Alliance Army Jichareliao Military Region Office in the Northeast, and director of the Communications Division of the Northeast Military Region Headquarters (Chief of Staff Wu Xiuquan).
Lieutenant General Tang Yanjie.
After the founding of the People's Republic of China, he successively served as Director of the Communications Division of the Chinese People's Volunteer Army Command (Chief of Staff Xie Fang), Deputy Director of the Communications Department of the General Staff of the People's Liberation Army, Deputy Director and Chief of Staff of the Signal Corps Department of the PLA (1956), Director of the Signal Corps Department (1959-1967), Deputy Commander of the Lanzhou Military Region (1968-1970), Deputy Commander of the Wuhan Military Region (1970-1975), Director of the Communications Department of the General Staff (1975-1981), and Adviser to the General Staff.
In 1955, he was awarded the rank of Major General of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, and was awarded the Order of August 1 of the Second Class, the Order of Independence and Freedom of the Second Degree, the Order of Liberation of the First Class, and the Order of Merit of the Red Star of the First Class.
He is a representative of the 11th National Congress of the Communist Party of China.
He was elected first. 3. Deputy to the Fifth National People's Congress.
Member of the 6th and 7th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference.
Mrs. Li Sen, birth and death are unknown.
Major General Xie Fang. Brief introduction of some of the characters involved in the article:
Song Yuhe (1902-1970), a native of Rucheng County, Hunan Province, served as deputy director of the General Logistics Department.
Liao Shuyun (1915-1994), a native of Shishou County, Hubei Province, was the founding major general of the People's Republic of China.
Liu Bin (1912-1989), a native of Shanghang County, Fujian Province, was the founding major general of the People's Republic of China.
Wu Guang (1912-2015), a native of Shenze County, Hebei Province, was the deputy director of the Beijing Municipal People's Congress.
Wu Xiuquan (1908-1997), a native of Daye County, Hubei Province, served as deputy chief of general staff of the People's Liberation Army.