Japanese gunboat Uji (1903)

For other uses, see Japanese gunboat Uji (1940).
Japanese gunboat Uji off Kure, 1901
Career (Japan)
Name: Uji
Ordered: 1901
Builder: Kure Naval Arsenal
Laid down: September 1903
Launched: 11 August 1903
Commissioned: 11 August 1904
Struck: 1 April 1936
Fate: scrapped 25 August 1936
General characteristics
Displacement:620 long tons (630 t)
Length:57.8 m (190 ft)
Beam:2.1 m (6 ft 11 in)
Draught:2.1 m (6 ft 11 in)
Propulsion:reciprocating steam engine
2 shafts, 4 boilers
1,000 hp (750 kW)
Speed:13.0 knots (15.0 mph; 24.1 km/h)
Range:156 tons coal
Complement:80
Armament:• 4 × 80 mm (3 in) QF guns
• 3 × machine guns

Uji (宇治) was an early steam gunboat, serving in the Imperial Japanese Navy. She was named after the city of Uji in Kyoto prefecture. She should not be confused with the later World War II period Hashidate-class with the Uji same name.

History

Following the First Sino-Japanese War, the Imperial Japanese Navy developed a requirement for a shallow-draft coastal patrol vessel for patrols off the coast of China in addition to the existing Ōshima. For her design, the Japanese turned to the Royal Navy’s Bramble-class gunboat, the lead ship of which (HMS Bramble) was launched in 1898.

Uji was a metal-hulled gunboat with a triple expansion reciprocating steam engine with two boilers driving two screws. She lacked the full sailing rig of Ōshima and previous Japanese gunboats. Uji was laid down at the Kure Naval Arsenal in September 1902 and launched on March 14, 1903. She was completed on August 11, 1904 and commissioned into the Imperial Japanese Navy as a second class gunboat.

Uji was completed after the start of the Russo-Japanese War, but her small size and firepower, and her lack of open ocean capability limited her operations to patrols of coastal areas of the Yellow Sea. However, she was assigned a role in the crucial final Battle of Tsushima against the Imperial Russian Navy. After the war, she was based at Shanghai and assigned to protection of Japanese citizens and commercial interests in the inland waters of China. However, her draught of 2 metres (6.6 ft) limited her area of operations to the lower reaches of the Yangtze River. Uji was removed from the active navy list on 1 April 1936 and was scrapped on August 25, 1936.

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