Early career Completed too late for combat operations in the
First Sino-Japanese War, the first overseas deployment of
Suma was to
Manila in the
Philippines during the
Spanish–American War, where she helped safeguard the interests and citizens of Japan during that conflict. From June to July 1900,
Suma was under the command of Commander
Shimamura Hayao, and supported Japanese
naval landing forces which occupied the port city of
Tianjin in northern China during the
Boxer Rebellion, as part of the Japanese contribution to the
Eight-Nation Alliance.
Russo-Japanese War At the start of the
Russo-Japanese War of 1904–05,
Suma was based out of the
Takeshiki Guard District on the island of
Tsushima from which the ship made patrols of the
Korea Strait preventing any linkage between the Russian cruiser squadron based in
Vladivostok and the main Russian Pacific Fleet based at
Port Arthur. On 18 February 1904, under the orders of Admiral
Itō Sukeyuki,
Suma arrived in
Shanghai with the cruiser to compel the disarmament of the Russian gunboat , or the ship's destruction under the international norms for
neutrality, accomplishing her mission by 31 March. In early May,
Suma covered landings by the
Japanese Second Army in
Manchuria, following which (on 15 May), she assisted in the rescue of survivors from the crew of the ill-fated
battleships and after those ships struck
naval mines off the coast of Port Arthur. She then joined the list of Japanese ships blockading the Russian naval base in the
Battle of Port Arthur. On 7 June,
Suma, together with the
gunboats , cruiser
Akashi and a detachment of destroyers entered the
Gulf of Bohai to support the landings of elements of the Japanese Second Army, and later bombarded Russian shore installations and a railway line along the coast of Manchuria. During the start of the
Battle of the Yellow Sea,
Suma had a mechanical failure, and was ordered to withdraw to join the 5th Division (consisting of the obsolete , and , located to the north of the
line of battle. However, when the Russian squadron unexpected turned back towards Port Arthur,
Suma was cut off, but by coincidence was in the path of the fleeing cruisers and . Although exchanging some gunfire,
Suma was unable to prevent the escape of the Russian ships. After the battle,
Suma returned to the Japanese repair station in the Elliott Islands, and then rejoined the blockade of Port Arthur. In February 1905,
Suma provided escort to transports in the
Sea of Japan, especially for the delivery of vitally needed artillery and reinforcements for the
Imperial Japanese Army (IJA). During the
Battle of Tsushima on 27 May 1905,
Suma was flagship of the 6th Division under Rear Admiral
Tōgō Masamichi. Together with , she was ordered to shadow the Russian fleet on its approach to the
Tsushima Strait. During the first day of the battle,
Suma and
Chiyoda attacked on the left flank (southern portion) of the Russian formation, capturing transports and the
hospital ships
Orel and
Kostroma. Later that day,
Suma and
Chiyoda attacked the cruisers , , and and sinking the already damaged battleship and repair ship
Kamchatka. During the battle,
Suma took only small damage with three crewmen injured. The following day, 28 May,
Suma reported the surrender of the remaining ships under the command of Rear Admiral
Nikolai Nebogatov, and unsuccessfully pursued the cruiser , which managed to escape the battle. Afterwards,
Suma was assigned to the Japanese force, which
seized Sakhalin from Russia, covering landings by the
IJA 13th Division at several locations, and securing
lighthouses and port facilities. In August, her reconnaissance parameters were expanded to include the southern coast of the
Kamchatka Peninsula and the
Commander Islands, and was dispatched to
Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky to rescue retired Lieutenant
Shigetada Gunji, who had been arrested by Russian authorities for his unauthorized private invasion of Kamchatka. While in the area,
Suma also captured the United States-flagged steamer
Australia, which was found to be transporting war contraband.
Later career Suma arrived in
Yokohama to participate in a
naval review celebrating the Japanese victory on 23 October 1905. She underwent overhaul in 1908, when her cylindrical boilers were replaced with Miyabara water-tube boilers. On 28 August 1912,
Suma was downgraded to a 2nd class cruiser. In 1916, during
World War I,
Suma was initially based at Manila, and assigned to patrol the sea lanes in the
South China Sea and
Sulu Sea from
Borneo to the
Malacca Straits against German
commerce raiders and
U-boats. She was later based in
Singapore together with , and and a flotilla of
destroyers, and reassigned to provide coastal defense to
Australia and
New Zealand, as part of Japan's contribution to the
Allied war effort under the
Anglo-Japanese Alliance. After the war,
Suma was re-designated as a 2nd-class
coastal defense vessel from 1 September 1921 .
Suma was demilitarized per the
Washington Naval Treaty and re-designated a utility vessel on 4 April 1923 and was removed from the active
navy list. She continued to be used as a
guard ship at
Sasebo Naval District until being broken up for scrap in 1928. ==Notes==