Chinese gunboat Fuxing

Fuxing was a wooden gunboat built for the Imperial Chinese Navy. She was built in 1870 at the Foochow Arsenal, the second such Meiyun-class gunboat gunboat constructed, alongside her sister ship CHINESE GUNBOAT Meiyun. Fuxing was based throughout her life at the Foochow Arsenal, and there became involved in the Battle of Fuzhou at the opening of the Sino-French War. She was quickly sunk during the battle by a spar torpedo.

Design
Fuxing was the third ship to be constructed at the Foochow Arsenal, after Meiyun and the transport Wannien Ching. All the ships of this period were constructed out of wood, mostly teak. She was 170 ft long overall. She had a beam of 19.7 ft and a draught of 9.8 ft. Fuxing displaced 515 LT.

She was fully sail rigged, in addition to her single steam engine powering a single shaft. The engine had an output of 400 ihp, enabling Fuxing to travel at 8 kn. She was armed with three Krupp guns; a single 16 cm and two 12 cm.

Service history
In July 1884, Fuxing was located at the Foochow Arsenal along with the corvette CHINESE CORVETTE Yangwu and two flat-iron gunboats. From the middle of the month, the French Navy started sending ships nearby as the governments of France and China held negotiations in order to prevent a war. The French forces became impatient, and bombarded Formosa (now Taiwan) in early August. Despite the presence of the French navy near Foochow, more reinforcements were not sent to bolster the Chinese squadron.

Negotiations ended on 21 August, and the French squadron began clearing for action each day. On 23 August, they gave notice that an attack was imminent, but the Chinese forces took no action. Just prior to 2pm, the French attack in the Battle of Fuzhou began, which marked the start of the active phase of the Sino-French War. The Chinese flagship Yangwu was destroyed 27 seconds later, as the French had already sent forward torpedo boats equipped with spar torpedoes. While boat No 46 had impacted the Yangwu, Fuxing was damaged by a spar torpedo from boat No 45. It was later sunk by another spar torpedo, this time from a pinnace launched from the French