
Du Yuesheng
杜月笙
1888–1951
- Leader of the Green Gang (青帮)
- Key organiser of the April 12 Massacre (1927)
Biography
Rise in Shanghai's Underworld
Du Yuesheng was born on 22 August 1888 in Gaochang Miao, Pudong, Shanghai, into a poor family. Orphaned as a child, he drifted into Shanghai's criminal world as a teenager, beginning as a street vendor before coming under the patronage of Green Gang boss Huang Jinrong (黄金荣), then head of the French Concession detective squad. By the early 1920s, Du had risen to become the dominant figure in the Green Gang — the secret society network that controlled Shanghai's opium trade, gambling dens, and protection rackets across the city's sprawling underworld.
The Green Gang and Political Power
At its peak in the 1920s, Du's organisation controlled much of the opium flowing through Shanghai, ran casinos and prostitution networks, and had deeply penetrated the city's labour unions and police forces — particularly within the French Concession, whose authorities tolerated the Green Gang in exchange for order and intelligence. Du cultivated relationships with Shanghai's business elites, foreign community leaders, and KMT military officers, positioning himself as an essential intermediary between the underworld, commerce, and political power. He was a major donor to KMT causes and a leading figure in the Shanghai Bankers' Association, straddling legitimate and criminal worlds with conspicuous success.
April 12, 1927 and the Shanghai Massacre
Du Yuesheng's most consequential political role came in April 1927. In the weeks before the massacre, Chiang Kai-shek secretly coordinated with Du: Green Gang members would infiltrate the Communist-led General Labour Union and attack the picket lines, creating a pretext for KMT troops to move in under the guise of suppressing a "workers' armed conflict." Weapons were supplied to the Green Gang through KMT military channels. In the early hours of 12 April, armed Green Gang men moved against the labour unions with precision — within hours, the Communist-led labour movement that had seized Shanghai from the warlords three weeks earlier was broken. Du Yuesheng received substantial political rewards: formal recognition, legal protection, and an expanded role as a KMT-aligned power broker in Shanghai.
Later Career and Exile
After 1927, Du continued operating as Shanghai's preeminent power broker through the 1930s, maintaining close ties to the Nationalist government while controlling his criminal empire. He sat on philanthropic and banking boards, cultivated an image of civic respectability, and mediated between business, government, and criminal interests. During the Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945), he relocated to Hong Kong and Chongqing, cooperating with the Nationalist war effort. After Japan's surrender he briefly returned to Shanghai, but the Communist victory in 1949 made his position untenable. He fled to Hong Kong, where he died on 16 August 1951 at the age of 62. In PRC historiography, Du Yuesheng is the emblematic criminal collaborator of the counter-revolution; in Shanghai popular culture, he retains a complex legendary status as the city's most powerful gangster-statesman.