Ning Hai was
laid down at
Harima Shipyards in
Aioi, Hyogo, Japan on 20 February 1931,
launched on 10 October 1931 and completed 30 July 1932. She was
commissioned on 1 September 1932 as the
flagship of the
Republic of China Navy (ROCN), serving in that capacity until the commissioning of
Ping Hai in April 1937. She returned to Japan in May 1933 for repairs, and again in June 1934 for the funeral of Japanese
Fleet Admiral Tōgō Heihachirō. She again underwent repairs before her return to China As one of the more powerful surface combatants within the small ROCN, following the start of the
Second Sino-Japanese War,
Ning Hai was a target of the
Imperial Japanese Navy since the
Battle of Shanghai, but it was not until 23 September, during the Japanese assault on Kiangyin Fortress (which guarded a segment of
Yangtze River near
Nanking), that
Ning Hai came under severe attack by Japanese bombers, sustaining four bomb hits while
Ping Hai was hit by eight bombs and sunk.
Ning Hai escaped but on 25 September when
Yokosuka B3Y1 torpedo bombers scored two direct hits, sinking her in shallow water. These airstrikes were launched from both the aircraft carrier and airfields around Japanese-occupied Shanghai. The Imperial Japanese Navy captured the wreck on 5 December 1937. An attempt to re-float
Ning Hai by the Japanese in April, 1938 was unsuccessful with two salvage divers killed. An attempt on 4 May 1938 was successful, and the hulk was towed to Shanghai for basic repairs. Originally the Japanese planned for the vessel to be the flagship of the collaborationist navy established by the
Nanjing Nationalist Government, but instead opted to have her towed to
Sasebo Naval District, where on 11 July the vessel was re-classified as the training vessel and coastal defense ship . However the ship was moored permanently at Sasebo as barracks hulk from July 1938 to December 1943. In December 1943, with Japanese maritime traffic under increasing pressure from
Allied submarine warfare,
Mikura was towed to the Harima Shipyards for reconstruction into a "
Kaibōkan" (escort ship). Reconstruction was completed on 1 June 1944 and she was recommissioned into the Imperial Japanese Navy as on 10 June and assigned to the
Yokosuka Naval District. After training in the
Seto Inland Sea, she escorted a convoy of transports to
Iwo Jima from 22–31 July, escaping a torpedo attack by an unknown submarine on 26 July. On 10 September,
Ioshima departed Yokosuka on a second escort mission, but was hit by three torpedoes fired by the
United States Navy submarine on 19 September 1944 south of
Cape Omaezaki, about from
Hachijojima. She sank at , and was removed from the
navy list on 10 November 1944 . ==Notes==