Wednesday, 11 February 2026

From PeterD: Imperial Japanese Navy 1894 (25 points)




Over the years, I have developed a taste for rather obscure naval campaigns.  Challenge veterans might remember my Chilean and Peruvian fleets from the War of the Pacific in 1879, as well as my more recent Spanish American War fleets.  David Manley of Long Face Games has just this week released a campaign book for another bucket list obscure naval war, the Sino Japanese war of 1894-5. I got an advanced copy and provided feedback, so was ahead of the game and had my fleets ordered back in January.  Here's the first set of ships for the campaign, all from the IJN and all 1:2400 scale from Tumbling Dice.  The IJN had no battleships, but had some good modern cruisers supplemented with older ships.



First we have two ships from the Flying Squadron, which was composed of four modern fast cruisers.  Naniwa was built at Elswick in the UK and was one of the earliest protected cruisers.  She as given two 10.2" guns in the hopes of giving her a ship killing role and some secondaries, but was over gunned for her size.   She played key roles in the Battle of the Pungdo and the Yalu River her shooting was very good.  She was also active in the Russo Japanese War by which time she was rearmed with 6" quick firers.  Yoshino was considered one of the best Elswick cruisers, being fast, sea worthy and armed with 6" and 4.7" QF guns.  She was still considered a first rate cruiser in the RJW, but was lost when she was run down in the fog by a larger Japanese cruiser.  She flies the flag of Rear Admiral Kozo.

I would like to confirm that the first two ships are facing and steaming the same direction, to the left.

Next we take a step further into the weeds.  The three Matsushima class cruisers were French designed and took ship killing up a notch.  Each had a single 12.6" gun plus 4.7" QFs, which actually formed her main armament given the slow reload time on the big gun.  On two of the ships the large gun was sensibly in the bow facing forward, but on Matsushima it was in the stern facing aft.  Matsushima was the flagship of Vice Admiral Ito and was the most heavily damaged Japanese ships at the Yalu River.  Chiyoda was built in Scotland, and was originally intended to have the same 12.6" guns.  However, the design was changed and she was given a more sensible armament of 4.7" QF instead.




Finally some supporting ships.  Fuso was an ironclad central battery ship and Hiei an ironclad corvette.  They were reasonably well protected but were slow and armed with older slower firing weapons.  However they served in the main fleet and were heavily engaged at Yalu River.  Katsuragi was a composite (wooden hulled but iron framed) corvette, useful but suitable to be in a major battle.   Saikyo Maru was a passenger ship requisitioned as an armed merchant cruiser and carried the flag of Rear Admiral Sukenori at Yalu River.  Akagi was a small gunboat, tasked with guarding Saikyo Maru.

That's 10 hulls in 1:2400 scale, for 20 points.  Next week I should have some opposition, in the form of the Beiyang fleet of the Imperial Chinese Navy.

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Sylvain: Ship design was indeed crazy in those early days of big guns. Your miniatures are superb and I like that you added the Japanese ideograms (called "kanji") to your ship bases. Your ships look clean and convey an aura of 19th century. I will add 5 points for the festival of flags. Génial!

 

 

 

3 comments:

  1. Great Work Peter I was just taking to someone about those rules.

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  2. Nice work Peter, seeing all these little ships you produce is a temptation

    ReplyDelete