Russo-Japanese War Niitaka was commissioned just in time for the
Russo-Japanese War and saw combat at the
Battle of Chemulpo Bay on 2 February 1904 against the Russian cruiser . She subsequently participated in the
shore bombardment of Russian positions during the
Battle of Port Arthur on 9 March 1904. From April,
Niitaka was assigned to patrols of the
Korea Strait and the
Sea of Japan, but was not in position to participate in
Battle off Ulsan on 14 August 1904. She did, however, assist in the rescue of Russian sailors off the sinking cruiser after the battle. At the
Battle of the Yellow Sea,
Niitaka was part of the 4th Detachment of
Japanese 2nd Fleet against the Russian cruiser .She was subsequently one of the ships stationed at
Makung in the
Pescadores Islands to watch for the arrival of the
Russian Baltic Fleet. At the crucial final
Battle of Tsushima on 27 May 1905,
Niitaka was part of the Japanese squadron attacking the Russian cruisers , and as well as the already heavily damaged battleship .
Niitaka took one hit during the engagement, which killed one crewman and wounded three others. On 28 May 1905,
Niitaka and intercepted and sank the cruiser which had been heavily damaged the day before and which was attempting to escape towards Korea together with a destroyer. While at Singapore, 158 marines from the cruisers and
Niitaka helped suppress the February
1915 Singapore Mutiny by Indian
Sepoy troops against the British. From mid-1915 to 1918,
Tsushima and
Niitaka were permanently based at
Cape Town, assisting the
Royal Navy in patrolling the
sea lanes in the
Indian Ocean, linking
Europe to the east against German commerce raiders and
U-boats. A salvage team sent in 1923 determined the wreck to be unsalvageable, and destroyed the remains with explosives. A concrete obelisk was also erected with a portion of the ship's mast on a hill slightly north of the wreck site.
Niitaka was formally written off the
navy list on 1 April 1924. ==Notes==