Battle of Muddy Flat

Battle of Muddy Flat
Part of Taiping Rebellion

American and British attack during the Battle of Muddy Flat, Shanghai, China, 1854
DateApril 3–4, 1854
Location
Result

Anglo-American-Rebel Victory

Belligerents
 United States
 United Kingdom
Shanghai Volunteer Corps
Taiping Heavenly Kingdom (Small Swords Society)
Qing dynasty
(A-Pak Pirate Mercenary Fleet)
Commanders and leaders
Rutherford Alcock
Robert C. Murphy (colonel)
Captain John Kelly
Captain O'Callaghan
Liu Lichuan
Keih-ur-hanga
A-Pak
Strength

Land:
~200 British Marines and Sailors
~75 American Marines and Sailors
~75 Shanghai Volunteers
~30 American Merchant Sailors
~Unknown number of British Merchant Sailors
~Unknown number of American and British Police
~3 Artillery Pieces
~3,000–4,000 Small Sword Soldiers

Sea:
~2 British sloops of war
~1 American sloop of war

Total:
380–400 Foreign fighters, 3,000–4,000 Small Sword Soldiers, 3 artillery pieces, and 3 sloops of war

Land:
~10,000–30,000 Qing Soldiers

Sea:
~At least 8 Pirate Junks
Casualties and losses
American: 1 dead
British: 1 dead
S.V.C.: 2 dead
Combined Injured: 14

Qing: At least 30 killed and 2 captured inside the camp

Unknown Casualties inside the camps (Likely high)

Pirates: Unknown

The Battle of Muddy Flat, also called the Battle of Nicheng (泥城之戰) by the Chinese, was a small land/naval battle on the borders of the Shanghai Concession areas of what would later become the Shanghai International Settlement between a British, American, and Small Swords Society alliance and units of the Qing Imperial forces with a fleet of mercenary pirate allies on April 3–4, 1854. The battle took place during the Small Swords Society uprising, which was part of the Taiping Rebellion, but before the Second Opium War. Qing forces began harassing foreigners around the foreign concessions in part due to individual foreigners trading with Taiping forces, who had just taken over the Old City of Shanghai the previous year. Skirmishes began on April 3 and the defending Shanghai Volunteer Corps "S.V.C." called for more direct military aid. An amphibious landing by U.S. and British Marines and Sailors took place the next day, and the battle began soon after, resulting in a joint Anglo-American victory. The battle is significant in solidifying the military ability and determination of foreigners to maintain their power in their concessions in the eyes of both the Taping and the Qing.:544–550 The battle also marked the first time that American and British military forces worked together in a land battle, as opposed to their joint 1800 naval battle in Curaçao during the Quasi War and War of the Second Coalition.