Japanese cruiser Unebi
{{Short description|Japanese protected cruiser}}
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{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2019}}
{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image |Ship image=Japanese cruiser Unebi 1886.jpg |Ship caption= Unebi departing Le Havre, October 1886 }} {{Infobox ship class overview |Name= |Builders= |Operators={{navy|Empire of Japan}} |Class before={{sclass|Naniwa|cruiser|4}} |Class after={{sclass|Matsushima|cruiser|4}} |Cost= |Total ships planned=1 |Total ships completed= 1 |Total ships lost=1 }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header= |Ship country= |Ship flag= |Ship name=Unebi |Ship namesake=Mount Unebi |Ship ordered= |Ship builder=Forges et Chantiers de la Gironde, Le Havre, France |Ship laid down= 27 May 1884 |Ship launched= 6 April 1886 |Ship completed=18 October 1886 |Ship commissioned= |Ship decommissioned= |Ship in service= |Ship out of service= |Ship struck= 19 October 1887 |Ship fate= Lost at sea, December 1886 |Ship notes= }} {{Infobox ship characteristics |Hide header= |Header caption= |Ship type= Protected cruiser |Ship displacement={{convert|3615|LT|t|0|lk=on}} |Ship length={{convert|98|m|ftin|abbr=on}} w/l |Ship beam={{convert|13.1|m|ftin|abbr=on}} |Ship draught={{convert|5.72|m|ftin|abbr=on}} |Ship power=6 cylindrical boilers; {{cvt|5500|ihp|lk=on}} |Ship propulsion=2 shafts; 2 double-expansion steam engines |Ship speed={{convert|17.5 |
18.5|kn|lk=in}}
|Ship range= |Ship sail plan=Barque-rigged |Ship complement=400 |Ship armament=* 4 × single {{cvt|24|cm|in|1}} guns
|Ship armour=*Deck: {{convert|63|mm|in|abbr=on}}
|Ship notes= }} |
{{nihongo|Unebi|畝傍}} was a protected cruiser built in France for the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) by Forges et Chantiers de la Gironde during the 1880s as the Japanese were not yet able to build warships of her size in Japan. Completed in 1886, the ship disappeared somewhere between Singapore and Japan on her delivery voyage with the loss of all hands.
Background
In the early 1880s, Navy Minister Kawamura Sumiyoshi was struggling to reconcile his desire for expansion in the face of the growing Chinese Beiyang Fleet with Japan's limited financial resources. Two developments offered Kawamura a way to resolve his problems. First, the French development of the {{lang|fr|Jeune École}} naval doctrine which emphasized the use of cheap torpedo boats and heavily armed light ships to offset an opponent's superiority in expensive, heavily armed and armored battleships. Second, the design of heavily armed, lightly protected cruisers by George Rendel of Armstrong Whitworth, as exemplified by the Chilean cruiser Esmerelda, fit the {{lang|fr|Jeune École}} doctrine. Rendel believed that his ships could be battleship destroyers as their higher speed would allow them to dictate the range at which the battle was fought or they could disengage at need.Brooke, p. 45; Schenking, p. 36
After Chile rejected Kawamura's attempt to buy her in September 1883, he placed an order for two improved versions, the {{sclass|Naniwa|cruiser|4}}, with Armstrong Whitworth in March 1884 as Japan was not yet capable of building such ships itself. Desiring another ship to match the British-built ships, he sent a representative to France to order a comparable ship. Impressed by the reasonable price offered by Forges et Chantiers de la Gironde, a contract was signed on 22 May.Milanovich, p. 170
Description
Compared with the preceding British-built {{sclass|Naniwa|cruiser}}s, Unebi was an old-fashioned design, fully rigged for auxiliary sail propulsion. The ship had a length between perpendiculars of {{convert|98|m|ftin|sp=us}} with a beam of {{convert|13.1|m|ftin|sp=us}} and had a mean draft of {{convert|5.72|m|ftin|sp=us}}. She displaced {{convert|3615|t|LT|0|sp=us|lk=on}} and had a crew of 400 officers and enlisted men. Unebi{{'}}s hull was fitted with a ram and it had a considerable amount of tumblehome amidships to increase the traverse of the main guns and reduce blast damage from them firing close to the hull. While her metacentric height was never measured before her loss, it is believed that it may have been very low which would rendered her stability precarious. Reports from the ship on her delivery voyage discussed her excessive rolling motions.Chesneau, p. 227; Milanovich, pp. 171–172, 175
Unebi had two horizontal double-expansion steam engines, each driving one shaft, using steam supplied by six cylindrical boilers. The engines were rated at {{convert|5500|ihp|kW|lk=on|0}} and gave the ship a speed of {{convert|17.5|-|18.5|kn}}. The ship carried enough coal to give her a range of {{convert|5600|nmi|lk=in}} at {{convert|10|kn}}.Jentschura, Jung & Mickel, p. 96 Unebi was fitted with a full barque rig with three masts and had a sail area of {{convert|1120|sqm|sp=us}}.Milanovich, pp. 171–172, 175
=Armament and protection=
The ship's main battery consisted of four Krupp 35-caliber {{cvt|24|cm|in|1}} guns, mounted on the upper deck in single mounts sponsoned out over the side of the hull. Most of her secondary armament of seven Krupp 35-caliber {{cvt|15|cm|in|1}} guns were mounted amidships on the upper deck, three on each broadside. The remaining gun was mounted as a bow-chaser underneath the short forecastle deck. Defense against torpedo boats was provided by a pair of quick-firing QF 6-pounder Nordenfelt, one mounted on the forecastle and the other on the stern. Short-range defensive weapons consisted of 10 quadruple-barreled 1-inch Nordenfelt gun and four 10-barreled Nordenfelt gun machine guns, distributed about the ship. Unebi was also fitted with four {{cvt|356|mm|in|0}} tubes for Schwartzkopff torpedoes. Her armor was limited to the {{cvt|63|mm|in|1}} lower deck that covered the full length of the ship and her conning tower was protected by {{cvt|22|mm|in|1}} of armor.Milanovich, pp. 172, 175
Construction and loss
File:Japanese cruiser Unebi.jpg
Unebi, named after Mount Unebi in Nara prefecture was laid down on 27 May 1884 at Forges et Chantiers de la Gironde's shipyard in Le Havre, the day before the contract was signed. The ship was launched on 6 April 1886, with Prince Fushimi in attendance and she was completed on 18 October 1886 at a cost of ¥1,812,673, far more than the ¥1,093,000 price in the original contract.Milanovich, pp. 170–172
With a mixed crew of Japanese sailors and shipyard employees aboard, Unebi attempted to depart Le Havre for Japan on the 18th, but had to turn back when she ran into a storm that caused her to roll so heavily that her safety was endangered. The ship set sail on the following day and encountered weaker storms in the Mediterranean and after passing through the Suez Canal. A stronger storm caused Unebi to return to Aden, Yemen, where she off-loaded two of her main guns in an effort to improve her stability. After arriving in Singapore, the ship departed on 3 December, bound for Tokyo Bay, where she was expected to arrive on 12 or 13 December.Milanovich, pp. 172–173 The crew of the Unebi consisted of eight Japanese men under Captain Iimure Toshikazu and 76 French men under Lieutenant Fouèvre. On December 3, the ship departed Singapore (scheduled to arrive at Yokohama Port between December 14 and 15). When it departed Singapore, the crew consisted of 79 French nationals, 9 Arab stokers, 7 Japanese porters, and 1 naval student. It then disappeared in the South China Sea. In late December, the ironclad Fuso and Kaimon conducted a surface search from the coast of Tosa to Hachijojima. Other ships in the search, including the Ministry of Communications Lighthouse Bureau's Meiji Maru and Nippon Yusen's Nagato Maru, also participated. Foreign ships also assisted in the search, but no clues were found.
File:Unebi &Chishima in the Aoyama Cemetery.JPG {{ship|Japanese cruiser|Chishima||2}} in Aoyama Cemetery, Tokyo]]
A single reliable clue emerged unexpectedly around ten years after the ship disappeared: In July 1897, reports in the US newspapers New York Tribune and Morning Times revealed that years earlier, villagers had found the wreckage of a Japanese ship washed up on the Pescadores Islands (which had been under Japanese sovereignty since 1895). Subsequent investigations by the Japanese Navy and police units on the islands revealed that fishermen had indeed found ship wreckage on the beaches around a decade earlier and used it to build wooden huts. During subsequent examinations of the huts, investigators found, among other things, decorated wooden strips and two cabin doors bearing the weathered lettering Unebi.[https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/service/ndnp/dlc/batch_dlc_dutch_ver02/data/sn85054468/0021110210A/1897070901/0080.pdf The Morning Times July 9.1897] This was the only trace of the ship ever found. However, it remains unknown to this day where and when the cruiser sank and what caused the Unebi's downfall. The ship is believed to have been caught in the aftermath of a typhoon in the northeastern South China Sea in mid-December 1886, capsized in the storm due to the top-heavy nature of the ship and sank within a very short time with the entire crew of 174 men. To this day, it remains one of the worst disasters to have occurred in the Japanese Navy in peacetime.; the most popular theory is that the design was top-heavy due to its excessive armament and was unstable in rough weather. Unebi was officially declared lost with all hands and stricken from the navy list on 19 October 1887.Evans, p. 545; Milanovich, p. 173 A memorial monument to the missing crew of Unebi is located at Aoyama Cemetery in Tokyo.
The insurance settlement of ¥1,245,309 was applied to the construction of the cruiser {{ship|Japanese cruiser|Chiyoda||2}}. However, the Imperial Japanese Navy was reluctant to continue working with French shipyards after the Unebi disaster, and placed its order for the French-designed Chiyoda with John Brown & Company in Scotland.Chesneau, p. 223; Milanovich, p. 173
Citations
{{reflist}}
References
{{Commons category|Unebi (ship, 1886)}}
- {{cite book|last= Brooke |first= Peter|title=Warships for Export: Armstrong Warships 1867–1927 |publisher= World Ship Society |location= Gravesend, UK |year=1999|isbn=0-905617-89-4}}
- {{cite book|last1=Evans|first1=David C.|last2=Peattie|first2=Mark R.|authorlink2=Mark Peattie|title=Kaigun: Strategy, Tactics, and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1887–1941 |publisher=Naval Institute Press|year=1997|isbn=0-87021-192-7|name-list-style=amp|location=Annapolis, Maryland}}
- {{cite book |last= Chesneau |first= Roger |title= Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905. |publisher= Mayflower Books |location= New York |year= 1979 |isbn= 0-8317-0302-4 |url-access= registration |url= https://archive.org/details/conwaysallworlds0000unse_l2e2 }}
- {{cite book| last = Jentschura| first = Hansgeorg| first2 = Dieter |last2=Jung|first3=Peter |last3=Mickel| year = 1977| title = Warships of the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1869–1945| publisher = United States Naval Institute| location = Annapolis, Maryland| isbn = 0-87021-893-X|name-list-style=amp}}
- {{cite book|editor1-last=Jordan|editor1-first=John|publisher=Conway|location=London|year=2010 |title=Warship 2010|isbn=978-1-84486-110-1|last=Milanovich|first=Kathrin|chapter=Two Ill-Fated French-Built Japanese Warships|pages=170–175}}
- {{cite book|last= Roksund |first= Arne |title=The Jeune École: The Strategy of the Weak|publisher= Brill |location= Leiden |year=2007|isbn=978-90-04-15723-1}}
- {{cite book|last=Schencking|first=J. Charles|title=Making Waves: Politics, Propaganda, And The Emergence Of The Imperial Japanese Navy, 1868-1922|publisher=Stanford University Press|year=2005|isbn=0-8047-4977-9}}
{{1886 shipwrecks}}
{{coord missing|Pacific Ocean}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Unebi}}
Category:Cruisers of the Imperial Japanese Navy
Category:Ships built in France
Category:France–Japan relations
Category:Maritime incidents in December 1886