Tameichi Hara

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Tameichi Hara
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Tameichi Hara

Tameichi Hara (原 為一 Hara Tameichi 1900—?) was an Imperial Japanese naval commander during the Pacific War and the author of the IJN manual on torpedo attack techniques, famous for his high skill (particularly in torpedo warfare and night fighting). A Samurai descendant, Hara graduated from the Imperial Japanese Naval Academy at Etajima in 1921. In 1932 Hara was assigned as a surface warfare instructor and in the middle of the same year his naval doctrine was accepted. At the beginning of the war he was a captain of destroyer Amatsukaze, but for most of the war he was a destroyer squadron commander, aboard Shigure. Hara's conception was first used in the battle of Guadalcanal.

On 13 November 1942, Hara’s destroyer, Amatsukaze sank the USS Barton during the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal. Hara, as commander of the Amatsukaze, participated also in the Battle of the Java Sea, the sinking of the submarine USS Perch and the occupation of Christmas Island. While serving with the Shigure, Hara was involved in several of the naval engagements during the latter part of the Solomon Islands Campaign. Hara's last sortie was as captain of the Yahagi, the light cruiser which accompanied Yamato's fateful last mission as part of Operation Ten-Go, which he survived. His memoirs were later translated into English and became an important reference for the Japanese perspective for historians writing about the Pacific Campaign of World War II.

[edit] Memoirs

  • Japanese Destroyer Captain.

[edit] External links