Yoshida Masujirō Explained

Yoshida Masujirō
Native Name:吉田増次郎
Native Name Lang:jpn
Birth Date:29 July 1867
Birth Place:Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan
Serviceyears:1890–1923
Rank:30px Vice Admiral
Battles:First Sino-Japanese War
Boxer Rebellion
Russo-Japanese War
World War I

was a vice admiral in the Imperial Japanese Navy. [1]

Biography

Yoshida was born in Shizuoka Prefecture and was a graduate of the 17th class of the Imperial Japanese Naval Academy in 1890. His classmates included Saneyuki Akiyama. He served as a sub-lieutenant on the corvette and cruiser during the First Sino-Japanese War and was appointed a division commander on the ironclad gunboat at the end of the war. Promoted to lieutenant in April 1896, he was assigned to the cruiser .

However, the following year, he was assigned to the naval intelligence section of the Imperial Japanese Navy General Staff, and as an intelligence officer was sent the guise of a naval attaché to Manila in 1898 at the time of the Battle of Manila Bay and departing immediately before the land Battle of Manila during the Spanish–American War. He then was assigned to China from 1898 to 1900, during the middle of the Boxer Rebellion. [2]

Yoshida received his first command, that of the Chinpen, in June 1900. On October 1, 1901, he was promoted to lieutenant commander, and returned as an intelligence officer in China from 1902 to 1903. From 1903 through the end of the Russo-Japanese War he served as an intelligence officer in Seoul. [3]

In February 1906, Yoshida was assigned as executive officer on the battleship . He was promoted to commander in 1906, and assigned as executive officer to the cruiser, followed by in 1907. He was promoted to captain in January 1911. From January 1914 to February 1915, he served as an intelligence officer in China, which included the period of Japanese naval operations in China during the Siege of Tsingtao in World War I. From February to December 1916, he was captain of the cruiser .

Yoshida was promoted to rear admiral on December 1, 1916, and was assigned as Commander of the Interim Southern Islands Defense Unit. Afterwards, he served as chief of the 3rd Section (Intelligence) of the Imperial Japanese Navy General Staff. He was promoted to vice admiral on December 1, 1920. He went on the reserve list on March 23, 1923, and retired on June 28, 1932.[1] He died in 1942.

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Notes and References

  1. Book: Fukagawa . Hideki . 日本海軍将官辞典 . 2000 . 芙蓉書房出版 . 482950272X.
  2. Book: Hata . Ikuhiko . 日本陸海軍総合事典 . 2005 . 東京大学出版会 . 4130301357 . 2nd.
  3. Book: Kowner . Rotem . Rethinking the Russo-Japanese War, 1904-5: Volume 1: Centennial Perspectives . 2007 . University of Haifa . 9789004213432 . 89.
  4. 『官報』第1850号「叙任及辞令」October 2, 1918