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PORT ARTHUR
By the time the war between Russia and Japan broke out, an anchorage for battleships had at great cost been provided in the western harbour, and the hills surrounding the harbour had been so strongly fortified that Port Arthur had come to be regarded as an impregnable fortress. It was on the night of February 8th, 1904, that the Japanese squadron under Admiral Togo made its first attack on Port Arthur and succeeded in inflicting substantial injuries to the Russian ships. But the strength of the land defences and the dangers of a mine-strewn channel prevented the Japanese admiral from following up his success. He resolved, as the next best thing, to block the entrance to the harbour, and in this endeavour several old merchant ships and a few score of heroic lives were sacrificed, but none of the attempts proved entirely successful. It was not until May, 1904, that Port Arthur was be seiged by the Japanese land forces under General Nogi, and from then onwards down to the capitulation of the fortress on January 1st, 1995, there were repeated conflicts of a most sanguinary character. When in November, 1904, the Japanese army, after many unavailing attempts, succeeded at last in capturing 203-Meter Hill they obtained the key to the position. From this point of vantage they bombarded the Russian ships in the harbour, and sank or disabled every one of them early in the month of December. Thereafter Erlungshan Fort, Signal Hill and other minor forts were captured, but not without great loss of life on both sides, and General Stoessel, recognising the hopeless- ness of his position, proposed surrender, as before stated, on New Year's Day, 1905. The terms of capitulation allowed officers to bear side-arms and to return home on parole. The prisoners delivered to General Nogi were 878 officers and 23,491 men; about half the number being sick or wounded. General Stoessel decided to give parole and return home, but other prominent generals and one admiral preferred to be sent to Japan as prisoners. The booty delivered included the occupation of 59 permanent forts, 546 guns, including 54 large calibre, 149 medium and 343 small calibre, 82,670 cannon balls, 30,000 kilos of ammunition, 35,252 rifles, 1,920 horses, four battleships, not including the Sevastopol, which was entirely sunk, two cruisers, 14 gunboats, and destroyers; 10 steamers, etc., besides 35 small vessels.
Port Arthur is now the headquarters of Japanese civil and military administra- tion in the province of Kwantung.
KWANTUNG GOVERNMENT
Governor-General and Commander-in-chief-General VISCOUNT Y. OSHIMA Private Secretary-K. Sugiura; Adjutant Captain-T. Nakashima,
CIVIL DEPARTMENT
Z. Nakamura, civil governor
I. Sato, chief of general affairs M. Kubota, chief of police affairs
C. Royama, chief of financial affairs K. Yamaji, chief of public works S. Irisawa, counsellor
Y. Matsuoka, secretary in charge of
foreign affairs
ARMY DEPARTMENT
Major-General K. Hoshino, chief of
the staff
Major-General A. Saiho, commander
of the fortress
RIOJUN NAVAL STATION
Rear-Admiral T. Takikawa, chief of
the staff
HIGH COURT (Koto Hoin) U. Hiraishi, president
DISTRICT COURT (Chiho Hoin)
T. Nishi, chief judge
LOCAL GOVERNMENT (Minseisho)
T. Aiga, chief
RIOJUN PUBLIC HOSPITAL Dr. S. Matsumoto, director
Vice-Admiral Baron M. Hashimoto, | YOKOHAMA SPECIE BANK
commander in chief
M. Okuda, manager
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