Gengo Hyakutake

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Gengo Hyakutake

Japanese Admiral Gengo Hyakutake
Born January 28, 1882
Saga Prefecture, Japan
Died January 15, 1976(1976-01-15) (aged 93)[1]
Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan
Allegiance Empire of Japan
Service/branch  Imperial Japanese Navy
Years of service 1902-1942
Rank Admiral
Battles/wars Russo-Japanese War

Gengō Hyakutake (百武 源吾 Hyakutake Gengō, January 28, 1882 – January 15, 1976) was a career officer and admiral in the Imperial Japanese Navy.[2]

Biography

Born to a low-ranking samurai of Saga Domain, Hyakutake’s elder brother Saburō Hyakutake was an admiral in the Imperial Japanese Navy, and his younger brother Harukichi Hyakutake was a general in the Imperial Japanese Army. Initially destined for a career in agriculture, after his elder brother Kōji’s death due to illness, he decided to follow his brother’s desires for a naval career instead.

Hyakutake graduated from the 30th class of the Imperial Japanese Naval Academy in 1902 and was appointed an ensign the following year. He served on Itsukushima and Mikasa during the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905, and was on Mikasa during the Battle of the Yellow Sea. Afterwards, he transferred to the Karasaki, followed by the battleship Fuji, on which he participated in the Battle of Tsushima. He was promoted to sub-lieutenant in December 1905.

After the war, Hyakutake served on the cruiser Katori, on which he made a voyage to Great Britain. In September 1907, he was promoted to lieutenant. He graduated from Naval Artillery School the same year. After serving on Takachiho and Ikoma, he attended the Naval Staff College in 1910 and was promoted to lieutenant commander in December 1912. Hyakutake was subsequently sent to the United States from May 1915 through June 1917, and was promoted to the rank of commander in April 1917. On his return, he served as an instructor at the Naval Staff College through the end of 1921. In the period following the Russo-Japanese War, the Imperial Japanese Navy had increasingly looked towards the United States Navy as its “theoretical number one enemy” and had increasing promoted an anti-American stance in politics. Hyakutake spoke out strongly against this trend in his lectures at the Naval Staff College, emphasizing the importance of continued cooperation with the United States.

In December 1920, Hyakutake was promoted to captain, and in December 1921 was given command of the cruiser Tama. Tama was assigned as escort to HMS Renown (1916) during its visit with the Prince of Wales to Japan, and collided with a collier off Shimonoseki. Hyakutake transferred command to the cruiser Kasuga in March 1923, and joined the Imperial Japanese Navy General Staff in December of the same year.

In February 1925, Hyakutake was sent as a naval attache to France and in June of the same year was part of Japan’s delegation to the League of Nations. In December 1925, while in France, he was promoted to rear admiral, and returned to Japan in February 1926. On his return, he continued to teach at the Naval Staff College, continuing to promote the concepts of disarmament, external cooperation and negotiations and thus coming increasingly into conflict with the militaristic ultra-nationalism of General Sadao Araki and members of the Imperial Japanese Army’s Imperial Way Faction. His relations with General Shigeru Honjō were so strained that Honjō refused to speak or meet with him. Hyakutake was promoted to vice admiral on December 1, 1930 and became Commandant of the Naval Staff College in 1932. In September 1933, he was transferred to become commander of the Maizuru Naval District and in November 1934 was commander-in-chief of the IJN 3rd Fleet. He became commander of the Sasebo Naval District in December 1935 and commander of the Yokosuka Naval District from December 1936. Promoted to full admiral on April 1, 1937, Hyakutake then became a Naval Councillor on April 26, 1938. He remained stubbornly steadfast in his opposition to war with the United States, and was forced into early retirement in July 1942. In March 1945, he briefly was president of Kyushu Imperial University.

After the war, Hyakutake moved to Inasa District, Shizuoka, where he took up farming. He died in 1976 at the age of 93.

References

  • Dupuy, Trevor N. (1992). Encyclopedia of Military Biography. I B Tauris & Co Ltd. ISBN 1-85043-569-3. 

External links

Notes

  1. Nishida, Imperial Japanese Navy.
  2. Dupuy, Encyclopedia of Military Biography
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