Japanese destroyer Akatsuki

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Akatsuki in the Yangtse River, China, in August 1937.
Career Japanese Navy Ensign
Ordered:
Laid down:
Launched:
Entered service: 1932
Fate: Sunk in action,
13 November 1942
Struck:
General characteristics
Displacement: 1,980 tons
Length: 371 ft 8 in (113.3 meters)
Beam: 34 ft (10.4 m)
Draft: 10 ft 9 in (3.3 m)
Speed: 38 knots (65 km/h)
Complement: 197
Armament: 6 × 12.7 cm (5")/50 cal 3rd Year Type DP guns[1][2],
up to 28 × Type 96 25 mm AT/AA Gun[3][4],
up to 10 × 13 mm (0.52")/76 cal. Type 93 AA guns[5][6],
9 × 24 in torpedo tubes[7],
36 depth charges

Akatsuki (暁 (? "dawn")) was the lead ship of her class of "special type" destroyers in the Imperial Japanese Navy.

Contents

[edit] History

Akatsuki was built at Sasebo, Japan. She entered service at the end of November 1932 and served for the rest of the decade in Japanese and Chinese waters, taking part in combat operations during the Sino-Japanese War that began in August 1937. Like others of her type, she was modified during the middle 1930s, both to correct design deficiencies and to enhance combat capabilities.

During the great Pacific War with the United States and its allies that began in December 1941, Akatsuki participated in operations against the Netherlands East Indies, including the invasion of western Java in late February 1942. In early June she took part in the capture of Kiska Island, in the Aleutians. A few months later, she became involved in the Solomon Islands campaign and on 25 October 1942 participated in a daring daylight surface strike into "Ironbottom Sound", the hotly-contested body of water between Guadalcanal and Tulagi. She and her consorts sank the U.S. Navy fleet tug Seminole (AT-65) and the patrol craft YP-284 and damaged the fast minesweeper Zane (DMS-14). In return, Akatsuki was damaged by coastal artillery.

Three weeks later, Akatsuki returned to Ironbottom Sound as part of a powerful bombardment force built around the battleships Hiei and Kirishima. On the night of 1213 November 1942, in the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal, this unit encountered a task force of U.S. Navy destroyers and cruisers. Operating on the right flank of the Japanese battleships, Akatsuki was heavily hit by American gunfire and sank early in the action, with the loss of all but a few of her crewmen. Only eight crewmen (out of a total complement of 197)[31] survived the sinking of Akatsuki and were later captured by U.S. forces.

[edit] Commanding officers

Chief Equipping Officer: Lt. Cmdr. Ichimatsu Takahashi: 16 May 193230 November 1932

Lt. Cmdr. / Cmdr. Ichimatsu Takahashi: 30 November 193215 November 1934 (Promoted to Commander on 1 December 1932.)

Lt. Cmdr. Masao Tachibana: 15 November 193415 November 1935

Cmdr. Tamekiyo Oda: 15 November 19351 December 1936

Cmdr. Yasuo Sato: 1 December 19366 July 1937

Cmdr. Katsukiyo Shinoda: 6 July 19378 October 1937

Cmdr. Kiichiro Shoji: 8 October 193716 May 1938

Cmdr. Takeo Koyama: 16 May 19381 August 1938

Lt. Cmdr. / Cmdr. Yoshio Kawashima: 1 August 193815 November 1940 (Promoted to Commander on 15 November 1939).

Lt. Cmdr. Kyuji Aoki: 15 November 194013 April 1942

Lt. Cmdr. / Cmdr. Osamu Takasuka: 13 April 194213 November 1942 (KIA) (Promoted to Commander on 1 November 1942.)

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ 5"/50 caliber, CombinedFleet.com.
  2. ^ 12.7 cm/50 3rd Year Type, NavWeaps.com.
  3. ^ 25mm/60 caliber, CombinedFleet.com.
  4. ^ 25 mm/60 AA MG Type 96, NavWeaps.com.
  5. ^ 13mm/76 caliber, CombinedFleet.com.
  6. ^ 13 mm/76 AA MG Type 93, NavWeaps.com.
  7. ^ Japanese Torpedoes, CombinedFleet.com.

[edit] References

This article includes information collected from the Naval Historical Center, which, as a U.S. government publication, is in the public domain.

[edit] External links


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