With the outbreak of the
First Sino-Japanese War,
Chiyoda was assigned to patrol duties off of the coasts of
Korea,
China,
Russia, and occasional patrols to
Hokkaidō. She was present at all of the significant battles of the war, including the crucial
Battle of Yalu River and the
Battle of Weihaiwei.
Chiyoda was also among the Japanese fleet units that participated in the
invasion of Taiwan in 1895 and saw action on 3 June 1895 at the
bombardment of Chinese coastal forts at
Keelung. After the war,
Chiyoda went into
dry dock at
Kure Naval Arsenal, where the locomotive boilers on her
triple expansion steam engines were replaced with more modern
Belleville boilers, and the
fighting tops on her three raked masts were removed to improve stability. Afterwards, based out of
Manila, she took part in
Allied patrols of the China coast against German
commerce raiders. On 14 April 1921,
Chiyoda was downgraded to a
destroyer tender and was used for various odd tasks, including a
submarine tender and as a school ship for naval cadets.
Chiyoda was officially decommissioned on 28 February 1927 and sunk as a target during
live fire exercises on 5 August 1927 in
Bungo Channel by the
heavy cruiser under review of
Emperor Hirohito. After its dismantling, the
bridge of
Chiyoda was preserved at the
Imperial Japanese Naval Academy at
Etajima, Hiroshima as a reviewing stand over the parade grounds. ==Gallery==