Hairong file photo [15797]

Hairong

CountryChina
Ship ClassHairong-class Protected Cruiser
BuilderAktien-Gesellschaft Vulcan Stettin, Germany
Launched15 Sep 1897
Sunk25 Aug 1937
Displacement2,680 tons standard; 2,950 tons full
Length328 feet
Beam41 feet
Draft19 feet
MachineryFour coal boilers, two turbines, two shafts
Bunkerage200-580 tons of coal
Power Output7,500 shaft horsepower
Speed19 knots
Crew244
Armament3x150mm Krupp QF guns, 8x105mm Krupp QF guns, 1x60mm Krupp gun, 6x37mm Hotchkiss guns, 6x8mm Maxim machine guns, 3x360mm torpedo tubes
Armor25-70mm deck, 51mm turret shields, 38mm conning tower

Contributor:

ww2dbaseHairong (romanized via the Postal Map System as Hai Yung) was the lead ship of her class of protected cruisers built in Germany for the Chinese Navy at the cost of £163,000. In 1906, she embarked on a six-month tour in Southeast Asia visiting Chinese communities. In 1911, she was initially used to bombard revolutionary forces at Wuhan, Hubei Province, China, but would switch sides in Nov. Although she went through modernization in 1930, which added an anti-aircraft gun, by the time of the Second Sino-Japanese War began in 1937 she was obsolete, thus when the need rose to block the Yangtze River from Japanese use, Hairong became one of the older ships scuttled in the middle of the river at Jiangyin, Jiangsu Province, China for this purpose.

ww2dbaseSource: Wikipedia

Last Major Revision: Aug 2012

Protected Cruiser Hairong Interactive Map

Photographs

Chinese protected cruiser Hairong, China, circa early 1900s; note all-black paintChinese protected cruiser Hairong and Japanese battleship Mikasa in Vladivostok, Russia, late 1917 or early 1918Protected cruiser Hairong and gunboat Chiangyuan, China, circa Nov 1920Chinese protected cruiser Hairong, China, circa 1920s
See all 7 photographs of Protected Cruiser Hairong

Hairong Operational Timeline

15 Sep 1897 Hairong was launched by AG Vulcan in Germany.
27 Jul 1898 Hairong arrived at Tianjin, China.
25 Aug 1937 Chinese light cruisers Haiqi, Hairong, Haichen, and Haichou were sunk at the mouth of the Yangtze River at Jiangyin, Jiangsu Province, China, adding more obstacles to prevent Japanese navigation.




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More on Hairong
Event(s) Participated:
» Second Battle of Shanghai

Protected Cruiser Hairong Photo Gallery
Chinese protected cruiser Hairong, China, circa early 1900s; note all-black paint
See all 7 photographs of Protected Cruiser Hairong


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