Nagata Maru

History
Japan
Name: MS Nagata Maru
Operator: Nippon Yusen Kaisha, Tokyo
In service: 1937
Fate: lost in war
General characteristics
Tonnage: 2,969
Notes: Steel construction

The Nagata Maru (長田丸 Nagata maru) was a Japanese ocean liner owned by Nippon Yusen Kaisha, Tokyo. The ship was entered into service in 1937.

The name Nagata Maru derives from Nagata jinja, a Shinto shrine in Nagata Ward, Kobe, Japan.[1]

History

Nagata maru was the name of a of several Japanese vessls. In 1900, Fujinagata Shipyards completed its first all-metal construction merchant vessel; the No.2 Nagata Maru.

List of ships named Nagata Maru

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Pacific War

In 1939, Nagata Maru was commandeered by the Imperial Japanese Navy for use as a troopship.

In transporting Allied prisoners, it was amongst those vessels which earned the epithet "hell ships."

In 1944, Nagata Maru was part of a Singapore-to-Saigon convoy anchored off Cape St. Jacques in French Indochina. The ship was bombed and sunk.

See also

Notes

  1. Richard, Ponsonby-Fane. (1964) Visiting Famous Shrines in Japan, pp. 324-328; from 1871 through 1946, the Nagata Shrine stood in the second tier of government supported shrines which were especially venerated by the imperial family.
  2. 1 2 Lloyd's. (1907). Lloyd's Register of Shipping, Vol. 2, p. 369., p. 369, at Google Books

References

External links


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