Tomb of Cantonese Sacrificed Soldiers is located at the north of lotus pond and covers an area of 208m2. In January 1912, Zhang Xun led his troops to march southward from Xuzhou in an attempt to overthrow the provisional government of the Republic of China. Sun Yat-sen dispatched Cantonese soldiers with Yao Yuping as the commander-in-chief to take north expeditions; the soldiers occupied Xuzhou, and thus consolidated the revolutionary achievements. In March of the same year, in order to commemorate Cantonese soldiers sacrificed in north expeditions, Yao Yuping took their bodies to Nanjing and buried them at Mochou Lake. During anti-Japanese war, the tombs of Cantonese sacrificed soldiers were destroyed. In December 1946, all Cantonese representatives attending "National Assembly" and the members of Association of Guangdong Fellows in Nanjing once came here to commemorate the sacrificed soldiers and organized the Tombs Reconstructing Preparatory Committee; nine persons including Yao Yuping and Zhou Lu were recommended to be the committee members. In 1948, the tombs of 61 soldiers were reconstructed, and combed into one tomb with the tomb of Zhou Da, the commander of bomb battalion. On the stone tablet in front of the tomb, it is inscribed with "建国成仁 (sacrifice for the founding of country)" at the front side, and with the epitaph written by Huang Xing at the back side. During "Cultural Renovation", the tomb was destroyed. In 1979, concerned by Deng Yingchao, the vice chairman of NPC, the tomb was reconstructed; in the following year, Song Qingling, the vice chairman of NPC, inscribed "辛亥革命烈士永垂不朽(the martyrs sacrificed for the Revolution of 1911 live forever in the hearts of people)". Now, it is the culture relic protection unit in Jiangsu Province.