- Japanese cruiser Kitakami
nihongo|"IJN Kitakami"|北上 軽巡洋艦|Kitakami keijunyōkan was a "Kuma"-class
light cruiser in theImperial Japanese Navy , named after the Kitakami River inIwate prefecture ,Japan .Background
"Kitakami" was the third of five vessels completed in the "Kuma"-class of light cruisers. As with its
sister ship s, it was intended for use both as a long-range, high speed scout ship and also as a command vessel fordestroyer orsubmarine flotillas.ervice career
Early career
"Kitakami" was completed on
3 July 1920 atSasebo Navy Yard , Nagasaki. Soon after commissioning, it was based at Mako,Pescadores Islands , and assigned to cover the landings of Japanese forces in centralChina as theSecond Sino-Japanese War continued to escalate.On
25 August 1941 , "Kitakami" returned to Sasebo for conversion to a "torpedo cruiser" with ten Type 92 quadruple torpedo tube mounts for the 61-cm long-range oxygen-propelled Type 93“Long Lance”torpedoes (a total of 40 tubes), in line with Imperial Japanese Navy plans to create a special “Night Battle Force” of torpedo-cruisers. Modification was complete by30 September 1941 , and "Kitakami" is assigned to the Japanese First Fleet, CruDiv 9, underRear Admiral Fukuji Kishi .Early stages of the Pacific War
At the time of the
attack on Pearl Harbor , "Kitakami" was escorting theCombined Fleet 'sbattleship s fromHashirajima to theBonin Islands and back to Japan.From January to May 1942, "Kitakami" was assigned largely to training duties in Japanese home waters. At the time of the
Battle of Midway on29 May 1942 , "Kitakami" and itssister ship "Ōi" were part of the Aleutian Screening Force, and return safely to Japan on17 June 1942 .As a fast troop transport
From August - September 1942, "Kitakami" and "Ōi" were converted into fast transports. Their ten quadruple torpedo launchers are reduced to six (a total of 24 tubes). They were equipped with two
Daihatsu landing craft (barges) and were fitted with two triple mount Type 96 25-mm AA guns.Depth charge launch rails were also installed. After conversion, "Kitakami" and "Ōi" embarked the No. 4 Maizuiru Special Naval Landing Force, which they transported toTruk in theCaroline Islands andShortland Island in theSolomon Islands by6 October 1942 .CruDiv 9 was disbanded on
21 November 1942 , and the "Kitakami" was assigned directly to the Combined Fleet. In November, the "Kitakami" transported troops fromManila toRabaul ,New Britain , and returned to Sasebo by the end of the year.In January 1943, "Kitakami" was assigned to the reinforcement of Japanese forces in
New Guinea , and escorted a convoy with the IJA 20th Infantry Division fromPusan toWewak , New Guinea viaPalau . In February, "Kitakami" escorted a convoy with the IJA 41st Infantry Division fromTsingtao to Wewak, again via Palau.On
15 March 1943 , "Kitakami" was re-assigned to CruDiv 16 of the Southwest Area Fleet under Admiral Takasu, as a guard ship based out ofSurabaya . It escorted three troop convoys from Surabaya toKaimana , New Guinea during April and May.On
23 June 1943 , while at Makassar, the "Kitakami", "Ōi", "Kinu" and Kuma were bombed by ConsolidatedB-24 Liberator s of the5th Air Force 's 319th Bomb Squadron. None of the cruisers were hit, but some sustained slight damage from near-misses.After refit at Seletar Naval Base,
Singapore in August, "Kitakami" escorted a troop convoy from Singapore to theNicobar Islands in early September. Two more convoys were escorted toPort Blair ,Andaman Islands in late October.In late January 1944, "Kitakami" escorted another convoy to Port Blair. On its return voyage while transiting
Malacca Strait , southwest ofPenang , Malaya, on27 January 1944, the "Kitakami" was hit aft by two torpedoes fired by the "HMS Templar (P316) ." The "Kinu" took "Kitakami" in tow toAngsa Bay , Malaya for emergency repairs, followed by extensive repairs at the No. 101 Repair Facility at Seletar Naval Base, Singapore in February. Repairs were not completed until21 June 1944 . However, after departing Singapore to escort the tanker "Kyokuto maru", "Kitakami" began to take on water and had to put intoCavite Navy Yard in thePhilippines from12 July 1944 to26 July 1944 . Despite the additional repairs, "Kitakami" still took on water on its return voyage to Sasebo.As a "Kaiten" carrier
From
14 August 1944 "Kitakami" was repaired and modified at Sasebo into a "Kaiten " human torpedo carrier with a capacity for eight "Kaitens". A 20-ton crane, formerly from theseaplane carrier Chitose, was fitted to raise and lower the "Kaiten" into the water. The stern was remodeled into an overhanging ramp configuration and the aft turbines were removed as well, and the space used to hold spare parts & repair equipment. The removal of these turbines reduced "Kitakami's" top speed from 36 to 23 knots. All of "Kitakami's" armaments were removedand replaced by two Type 89 127-mm AA guns and 67 Type 96 25-mm (12x3 and 31x1) AA barrels, two Type 13 air-search and one Type 22 surface-searchradar s. Twodepth charge launching rails were installed at the stern and two depth charge throwers were also installed. The refit was completed on20 January 1945 , and "Kitakami" was assigned directly to the Combined Fleet.On
19 March 1945 , AmericanTask Force 58 aircraft carriers "USS Essex" (CV-9), "USS Intrepid" (CV-11), "USS Hornet" (CV-12), "USS Wasp" (CV-18), " USS Hancock" (CV-19), "USS Bennington" (CV-20) and the "USS Belleau Wood" (CVL-24) made the first carrier attack of the war onKure Arsenal . More than 240 aircraft (SB2C Helldiver s,F4U Corsair s andF6F Hellcat s) attacked the battleships "Hyuga", "Ise", "Yamato", "Haruna", aircraft carriers "Amagi", "Katsuragi", "Ryuho", "Kaiyo" and other ships. "Kitakami" sustained no damage.In July 1945, an additional twenty seven single mount Type 96 25-mm AA guns were fitted to "Kitakami". However, on
24 July 1945 about 200 aircraftTask Force 38 's "USS Essex" (CV-9), "USS Ticonderoga" (CV-14), "USS Randolph" (CV-15), "USS Hancock" (CV-19), "USS Monterey" (CVL-26) and "USS Bataan" (CVL-29) again attacked the Kure area. "Kitakami" was damaged by strafing and thirty-two crewmen were killed.Post-war
After the
surrender of Japan on2 September 1945 , "Kitakami" was moved toKagoshima and assigned to the Repatriation Service. She was used as a repair tender for ships on repatriation duties."Kitakami" was removed from the Navy List on
30 November 1945 , and scrapped atNanao from10 August 1946 –31 March 1947 .List of Captains
Chief Equipping Officer - Capt. Teiji Sakamoto - 11 June 1920 - 15 April 1921
Capt. Teiji Sakamoto - 15 April 1921 - 15 March 1922
Capt. Masashi Yamazaki - 15 March 1922 - 1 December 1922
Capt. Ritsuto Takahashi - 1 December 1922 - 1 December 1923
Capt. Togo Kawano - 1 December 1923 - 1 November 1924
Capt. Makoto Yoshikawa - 1 November 1924 - 4 December 1928
Cmdr. / Capt. Shosuke Shimomura - 4 December 1928 - 5 October 1929 (Promoted to Captain on 10 December 1928.)
Capt. Naohiko Saito - 5 October 1929 - 5 December 1929
Capt. Baron Minoru Sonoda - 5 December 1929 - 1 December 1930
Capt. Rokuro Horie - 1 December 1930 - 14 November 1931
Capt. Jinichi Kusaka - 14 November 1931 - 1 December 1932
Capt. Baron Tomoshige Samejima - 1 December 1932 - 14 March 1934
Capt. Moriji Takeda - 14 March 1934 - 15 November 1934
Capt. Yasuo Inoue - 15 November 1934 - 10 October 1935
Capt. Mitsuharu Matsuyama - 10 October 1935 - 1 December 1937
Capt. Hajime Horiuchi - 1 December 1937 - 15 December 1938
Capt. Masao Ueno - 15 December 1938 - 19 October 1940
Capt. Shigeyasu Nishioka - 19 October 1940 - 1 November 1940
Capt. Shunsaku Nabeshima - 1 November 1940 - 1 September 1941
Capt. Tsutau Araki - 1 September 1941 - 28 November 1941
Capt. Saiji Norimitsu - 28 November 1941 - 5 September 1942
Capt. Nobumichi Tsuruoka - 5 September 1942 - 17 May 1943
Capt. Tomekichi Nomura - 17 May 1943 - 2 November 1943
Capt. Jo Tanaka - 2 November 1943 - 10 June 1944
Capt. Saburo Kase - 10 June 1944 - 29 August 1944
Capt. Masamoto Shimizu - 29 August 1944 - 1 December 1944
Capt. Kunizo Kanaoka - 1 December 1944 - 15 August 1945
References
Books
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last = Brown
first = David
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year = 1990
title = Warship Losses of World War Two
publisher = Naval Institute Press
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id = ISBN 1-55750-914-X
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last = D'Albas
first = Andrieu
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year = 1965
title = Death of a Navy: Japanese Naval Action in World War II
publisher = Devin-Adair Pub
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id = ISBN 0-8159-5302-X
*cite book
last = Dull
first = Paul S.
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year = 1978
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title = A Battle History of the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1941-1945
publisher = Naval Institute Press
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id = ISBN 0-87021-097-1
*cite book
last = Evans
first = David
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year = 1979
title = Kaigun : Strategy, Tactics, and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1887-1941
publisher = Naval Institute Press
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id = ISBN 0-87021-192-7
*cite book
last = Howarth
first = Stephen
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year = 1983
title = The Fighting Ships of the Rising Sun: The drama of the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1895-1945
publisher = Atheneum
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id = ISBN 0-68911-402-8
*cite book
last = Jentsura
first = Hansgeorg
authorlink =
coauthors =
year = 1976
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title = Warships of the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1869-1945
publisher = Naval Institute Press
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id = ISBN 0-87021-893-X
*cite book
last = Lacroix
first = Eric
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coauthors = Linton Wells
year = 1997
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title = Japanese Cruisers of the Pacific War
publisher = Naval Institute Press
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id = ISBN 0-87021-311-3
*cite book
last = Whitley
first = M.J.
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year = 1995
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title = Cruisers of World War Two: An International Encyclopedia
publisher = Naval Institute Press
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id = ISBN 1-55750-141-6External links
*cite web
last = Parshall
first = Jon
coauthors = Bob Hackett, Sander Kingsepp, & Allyn Nevitt
year =
url = http://www.combinedfleet.com/kuma_c.htm CombinedFleet.com: "Kuma" class
title = Imperial Japanese Navy Page (Combinedfleet.com)
work =
accessdate =
*Tabular record: [http://www.combinedfleet.com/kitakami_t.htm CombinedFleet.com: "Kitakami" history]Notes
ee also
*
List of World War II ships
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