Russian coast defense ship General-Admiral Apraksin
{{Short description|Admiral Ushakov-class coastal defense ship}}
{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image |Ship image=RUS General-Admiral Apraksin in 1902.jpg |Ship caption= The Russian coastal battleship General-Admiral Apraksin, which later became the Japanese Okinoshima }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header= |Ship country=Russian Empire |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|Russian Empire|naval}} |Ship name=General-Admiral Apraksin |Ship namesake= |Ship ordered= |Ship builder= New Admiralty Works, Saint Petersburg, Russia |Ship laid down=24 October 1894 |Ship launched=12 May 1896 |Ship acquired= |Ship commissioned=1899 |Ship decommissioned= |Ship in service= |Ship out of service= |Ship struck= 28 May 1905 |Ship reinstated= |Ship honours= |Ship fate=Prize of war to Japan |Ship notes= }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header=title |Ship country=Japan |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|Japan|naval}} |Ship name=Okinoshima |Ship namesake= |Ship ordered= |Ship builder= |Ship laid down= |Ship launched= |Ship acquired=1905 |Ship commissioned=6 June 1905 |Ship decommissioned=1 April 1922 |Ship in service= |Ship out of service= |Ship struck=1924 |Ship reinstated= |Ship honours= |Ship fate= *Sold 1925, Memorial ship
|Ship notes= }} {{Infobox ship characteristics |Hide header= |Header caption= |Ship class={{sclass|Admiral Ushakov|coastal defense ship}} |Ship displacement=4,165 tons (normal); 4,270 tons (max) |Ship length={{convert|80.62|m|ft|1|abbr=on}} at waterline |Ship beam={{convert|15.85|m|ft|1|abbr=on}} |Ship draught={{convert|5.18|m|ft|1|abbr=on}} |Ship propulsion= Two Shaft VTE steam engine, {{convert|6000|shp|kW |
1|abbr=on}}; 4 boilers
|Ship speed={{convert|15|kn|km/h|0}} |Ship range=*313 tons coal;
|
3}} at {{convert|10|kn|km/h|0}}
|Ship complement=406 |Ship armament=As built: :3 × 254mm 45 caliber Pattern 1891 guns :4 × 120mm 45 caliber Pattern 1892 guns :10 × QF 3-pounder Hotchkiss guns :12 × {{convert|37|mm|in|abbr=on}} guns :4 × {{convert|450|mm|in|abbr=on}} torpedo tubes As Okinoshima: :3 × {{convert|254|mm|in|0|abbr=on}} guns :6 × QF 6 inch /40 naval gun#Japanese naval service guns :2 × {{convert|47|mm|in|abbr=on}} Hotchkiss guns |Ship armour=*Belt: {{convert|250|mm|in|abbr=on}} | |Ship notes= }} |
General-Admiral Apraksin ({{langx|ru|Генералъ-Адмиралъ Апраксинъ}}), sometimes transliterated as Apraxin, was a member of the {{sclass|Admiral Ushakov|coastal defense ship}}s of the Imperial Russian Navy. She was named after General Admiral Fyodor Matveyevich Apraksin, the first commander of Russian Baltic Fleet. She was one of eight Russian pre-dreadnought battleships captured by the Imperial Japanese Navy during the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905. She subsequently served in the Japanese Navy as {{nihongo|Okinoshima|沖ノ島}} until removed from service in 1922.
She had only three guns (a single gun turret aft, as shown in the photograph), instead of her sister ships, which were equipped with four guns.
Russian service
File:General Admiral Apraksin and Yermak in Gogland.jpg, with the icebreaker Yermak on site to assist]]
In November 1899, shortly after entering service with the Baltic Fleet, General-Admiral Apraksin ran aground on Hogland Island in the Gulf of Finland. It was hoped that the ship could be salvaged, as a similar incident in 1897 had cost the Russian Navy another battleship, {{ship|Russian coast defense ship|Gangut|1888|2}}. General-Admiral Apraksin{{'}}s crew were ordered to remain aboard to maintain the ship as best they could when the Gulf froze over for the winter.
On the recommendation of radio pioneer A.S. Popov the ship's crew established a radio station on the island to maintain communication with the fleet's headquarters at Kronstadt (via a station at Kymi) in January 1900, after several weeks' delay. Meanwhile, Rear-Admiral Zinovy Rozhestvensky was assigned to lead the salvage operations. The results of the grounding were such that attempting to tow General-Admiral Apraksin free would likely leave her irreparable and in danger of foundering, and instead Rozhestvensky employed a civilian mining corporation to remove the rocks holding General-Admiral Apraksin with small explosive charges. Assisting the salvage efforts was the icebreaker {{ship||Yermak|1898 icebreaker|2}}. Rozhestvensky initially had doubts as to the usefulness of Yermak, but she proved her value during the operation, which was successfully concluded in the first part of May. After General-Admiral Apraksin was freed she was towed back to Kronstadt for the necessary repairs.Constantine Pleshakov, The Tsar's Last Armada, pp. 50-51.
Later, General-Admiral Apraksin and her two sister ships, {{ship|Russian coast defense ship|Admiral Ushakov||2}} and the {{ship|Russian coast defense ship|Admiral Seniavin||2}} were reclassed as coastal defence ships.
The Russo-Japanese War
The three Ushakovs were rejected for inclusion in the Second Pacific Squadron assembled by Admiral Rozhestvensky to reinforce the existing Russian squadron based at Port Arthur after the outbreak of the Russo-Japanese War as Rozhestvensky felt they were unsuitable for such an extreme blue-water operation.Captain Peter Hore, Battleships, p. 115. Nevertheless, all three were selected to form part of Admiral Nebogatov's Third Pacific Squadron which was subsequently sent out to reinforce Rozhestvensky on his journey to the Far East after political agitation following his departure. The two Russian squadrons finally met and united at Cam Ranh Bay after a cruise that became known as the "Voyage of the Damned", and from there Rozhestvensky set course through the South China Sea towards the Korea Strait, where they were discovered by the Japanese.
At the resulting Battle of Tsushima (27–28 May 1905), the three ships survived the first phase of the engagement on the evening of 27 May largely due to the Japanese concentrating their efforts on Rozhestvensky's modern battleships (concentrated in the First and Second Divisions of the Russian squadron) and their subsequent almost-total destruction left the Russian fleet in tatters. Nebogatov's Third Division was largely able to keep itself together during the night, although Apraksin{{'}}s sister ship Admiral Ushakov strayed from formation and was sunk by Japanese torpedoes. The morning of 28 May found the Russian survivors surrounded by an apparently undamaged Japanese force, and Nebogatov surrendered. Thus Apraksin and Admiral Seniavin were captured as prizes of war.Eric Grove, Big Fleet Actions, pp. 29-45.
Japanese service
{{other ships|Japanese ship Okinoshima}}
Admiral Senyavin became Mishima and General-Admiral Apraksin was commissioned into the Imperial Japanese Navy as the 2nd class coastal defense vessel Okinoshima. Okinoshima was named for the small island of Munakata, Fukuoka Prefecture, which is the site of a famous Shinto shrine, and which is also geographically close to the location of the Battle of Tsushima. Okinoshima retained her original three 10-inch 45 caliber guns, six 6-inch 40 caliber Armstrong Z guns and two 47mm guns.{{Cite book|title=Warships of the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1869-1945|url=https://archive.org/details/warshipsimperial00jent|url-access=limited|last=Jentschura|first=Hansgeorg|date=1977|publisher=Naval Institute Press|others=Jung, Dieter,, Mickel, Peter|isbn=9780870218934|location=Annapolis, Md.|pages=[https://archive.org/details/warshipsimperial00jent/page/n8 13]–14|oclc=3273325}}
Okinoshima was part of the Japanese Second Fleet at the outbreak of the First World War, participating in the Battle of Tsingtao against the small number of German ships left behind by Admiral von Spee's East Asia Squadron.
On 1 April 1921, Okinoshima was re-classified as a submarine tender. Okinoshima was decommissioned on 1 April 1922, used as a training ship for Sasebo Marine Corp, stricken on 1924, and was sold as monument in 1925 to "Battle of the Sea of Japan War Relic Preservation Committee", which planned on transforming her into a memorial ship located at Tsuyazaki, Fukuoka, commemorating the Japanese victory at the Battle of Tsushima. The ship floated aground and was severely damaged in a storm, and was scrapped in 1939.
The battleship Okinoshima should not be confused with the Pacific War era minelayer of the same name.
See also
Notes
{{reflist}}
References
- {{cite book|last=Burt|first=R.A.|title=Japanese Battleships, 1897–1945}}
- {{cite book|last=Gibbons|first=Tony|title=The Complete Encyclopedia of Battleships and Battlecruisers}}
- {{cite book|last=Grove|first=Eric|year=1998|title=Big Fleet Actions|publisher=Brockhampton Press|location=London}}
- {{cite book|last=Hore|first=Peter|title=Battleships|year=2005|publisher=Anness Publishing Ltd|isbn=0-7548-1407-6|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/battleships0000hore}}
- {{cite book|last = Jentsura | first = Hansgeorg | year = 1976 | title = Warships of the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1869-1945 | publisher = Naval Institute Press
| isbn = 0-87021-893-X }}
- {{cite book | last = Pleshakov | first = Constantine | year = 2002| title = The Tsar's Last Armada: The Epic Voyage to the Battle of Tsushima | url = https://archive.org/details/tsarslastarmadae00ples | url-access = registration | publisher = Basic Books
| location = New York | isbn = 0-465-05792-6}}
- {{cite book | last = Schencking | first = J. Charles | year = 2005 | title = Making Waves: Politics, Propaganda, And The Emergence Of The Imperial Japanese Navy, 1868-1922
| publisher = Stanford University Press | isbn = 0-8047-4977-9}}
External links
- {{commons category-inline|General-Admiral Apraksin (ship, 1899)}}
- {{cite web | url= http://admiral31.world.coocan.jp/e/stc0113.htm| title= Armoured ships prize of Russo-Japanese War | last= Nishidah | first= Hiroshi | year= 2002 | work= Materials of the Imperial Japanese Navy }}
{{Admiral Ushakov class coastal defense ship}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:General-Admiral Apraksin}}
Category:Battleships of the Imperial Russian Navy
Category:Ships built at Admiralty Shipyard
Category:Russo-Japanese War battleships of Russia
Category:Naval ships captured by Japan during the Russo-Japanese War