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Baishidu village used to be quiet and secluded during the Chinese lunar new year.
The village gained fame from a visit by four leaders who founded the New China in 1949.
The change, in part, is the result of "red tourism", a name given to the industry that has sprung up around sites associated with the Chinese Communist Revolution. Baishidu residents have recently recognized that such tourism presents a new means of reviving their hometown and protecting their old courtyards and beautiful views of mountain scenery.
Along the way of the famous Long March undertaken by the Red Army in 1934, Chairman Mao Zedong and premier Zhou Enlai arrived at the village and stayed for three days, before moving on to break through the blockades of the Kuomintangarmy.
And Zhu De and Chen Yi, two military leaders of the Communist Party of China who led a large uprising in 1928, also had a brief stay in the village.
"My mom used to tell me the stories of how the Red Army soldiers limped to the villagers' houses and were offered food and accommodations," Kuang Chaode, a 54-year-old local resident, said with a sense of pride.
"They chose our house because there are many doors," he said. "If the enemy arrived, the Red Army soldiers could evacuate through all of those doors."
In the hopes of bringing in more revenue from tourism, villagers chipped in to make improvements, repairing houses that had once lodged top Party leaders, building roads and erecting signs to guide visitors.
Yet, even with such a rich history, the village has not escaped the forces of modernization. As is often the case in rural places, many young residents of Baishidu village have migrated to big cities to seek jobs.
As a result, some of the old houses where they had lived now stand abandoned while others have been replaced by modern concrete buildings.
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