Japanese aircraft carrier Akagi
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| Image:AkagiDeckApril42.jpg | |
| Career | Image:Naval Ensign of Japan.svg |
|---|---|
| Ordered: | 1920 |
| Laid down: | 7 December 1920 |
| Launched: | 22 April 1925 |
| Commissioned: | 27 March 1927 |
| Fate: | Destroyed by US air attack at the battle of Midway on 4 June 1942; scuttled after evacuation. |
| Struck: | 25 September 1942 |
| General characteristics | |
| Displacement: | 33,800 tons (original); 42,000 tons (after reconstruction) |
| Length: | 260.68 m (855 ft 3 in) |
| Beam: | 31.32 m (102 ft 9 in) |
| Draught: | 8.71 m (28 ft 7 in) |
| Propulsion: | Steam turbines, 19 boilers, 4 shafts, 99.2 MW (133,000 hp) |
| Speed: | 57 km/h (31 knots) |
| Range: | 15200 km at 22 km/h 8,200 nmi at 12 knots |
| Complement: | 2000 |
| Armament: | 10 (later 6) × 203 mm (8 in) guns (5×2), 12 × 120 mm (4.7 in) guns (12×1), 28 × 25 mm anti-aircraft guns |
| Aircraft: | 61 (original) 91 (after reconstruction) |
The Akagi (Japanese: 赤城) was an aircraft carrier serving with the Imperial Japanese Navy during World War II.
The only ship in her class, Akagi played a major part in the Attack on Pearl Harbor, but was sunk along with three other large carriers by dive bombers from US carriers Enterprise and Yorktown in the Battle of Midway.[1]
Contents |
[edit] Description
Akagi was laid down as an Amagi class battlecruiser at Kure, Japan. Under the constraints of the Washington Naval Treaty, 1922, she and her sister Amagi were to be converted into aircraft carriers. However, Amagi was destroyed during an earthquake on 1 September 1923 and the remaining battlecruisers of the class, Atago and Takao, were in 1924, cancelled and scrapped in accordance with the terms of the Washington Treaty. Akagi, the only remaining member of her class, was launched on 22 April 1925 and completed at Yokosuka Navy Yard as one of Japan's first two large aircraft carriers in on 27 March 1927. Akagi was massively reconstructed in 1935–1938 to include a full length flight deck, and to increase her capacity from 61 to 91 aircraft. However, an increase in the size of the aircraft carried by the vessel reduced this capacity by the time of the ship's sinking. The reconstruction placed the island superstructure on the port side of the ship, which was an unusual arrangement; the only other carrier to share this feature was a contemporary, the Hiryū. The Akagi and the Hiryū were intended to work in a tactical formation with starboard-sided carriers, in order to improve the flight pattern around the formation, but the experiment was not continued beyond those two carriers. [1]
[edit] Name
Because she was initially conceived as a battlecruiser, the prevailing ship naming conventions dictated that she (like her sister ships) be named after a mountain. Akagi was named after Mount Akagi, a dormant volcano in the Kantō region (the name literally means "red castle"). After she was repurposed as an aircraft carrier her mountain name remained, in contrast to bespoke aircraft carriers like Sōryū, which were named after flying creatures. The name was previously given to the Maya class gunboard Akagi.
[edit] History
She was active off China during the next few years as the flagship of Carrier Division 1. In April 1942, the Imperial Navy combined the First Carrier Division (Akagi and IJN Kaga), the Second Carrier Division (Hiryu and Soryu), and Fifth Carrier Division (Shokaku and Zuikaku) into the First Air Fleet or KIDO BUTAI (Striking Force). Akagi, as flagship, took part in the attack on Pearl Harbor and the Indian Ocean raids. IJN Akagi was scuttled on 5 June 1942 after suffering irreparable damage on the action of the previous morning.
[edit] Pearl Harbor
In World War II, under the command of Captain Hasegawa Kiichi, she was Vice Admiral Chuichi Nagumo's flagship for the Striking Force for the attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941. She launched two waves of planes at Oahu. In the first wave 27 Kates targeted Maryland, Tennessee and West Virginia, Oklahoma, and California and 9 Zeros attacked the air base at Hickam Field. In the second wave, 18 Vals targeted Neosho, Shaw and Nevada.
In January, 1942 Akagi supported the invasion of Rabaul in the Bismarck Islands. On 19 February 1942 she launched air strikes against Darwin, Australia, sinking nine ships, including USS Peary. In March, 1942 Akagi covered the invasion of Java.
In early April, 1942, under the command of Captain Aoki Taijiro, Akagi took part in the Indian Ocean raid. On 5 April 1942 she launched air strikes against Colombo, Ceylon, helping sink the cruisers Cornwall and Dorsetshire. On 9 April she struck at Trincomalee and sank Hermes and her escorts.
On 19 April 1942 she took part in the unsuccessful pursuit of the American carriers Hornet and Enterprise after they launched the Doolittle Raid.
[edit] Midway
On 25 May 1942 the Akagi set out with the Striking Force for the attack on Midway Island. Her aircraft complement consisted of 21 Mitsubishi A6M "Zero" fighters, 21 Aichi D3A "Val" dive bombers, and 21 Nakajima B5N "Kate" torpedo bombers. [2] On 4 June she launched an air strike against the island and was attacked by American land- and carrier-based planes. At 10:26 she was attacked by dive-bombers from USS Enterprise and hit by one bomb. This hit set off explosions among the armed and fueled planes on her hangar deck that were being prepared for an air strike against the American carriers. The burning aviation fuel proved impossible to control. The same attack produced two near misses, one of which, by virtue of exploding in the water alongside the stern area, caused the rudder to jam off-center after an evasive maneuver 20 minutes later.
At 10:46 Admiral Nagumo transferred his flag to Nagara. Akagi stopped dead in the water at 13:50 and her crew, except for Captain Aoki and damage-control personnel, was evacuated. She burned through the night but did not sink. On 5 June Yamamoto ordered her scuttled by torpedoes from the destroyers Arashio, Hagikaze, Maikaze, and Nowaki. She sank at 05:20 with the loss of 263 men. Compared to the other Japanese fleet carriers lost in the battle, she was the luckiest, suffering the fewest casualties.[2]
[edit] Commanding Officers
- Capt. Ryutaro Kaizu - 25 March 1927 - 1 December 1927
- Capt. Seizaburo Kobayashi - 1 December 1927 - 10 December 1928
- Capt. Isoroku Yamamoto - 10 December 1928 - 1 November 1929
- Capt. Kiyoshi Kitagawa - 1 November 1929 - 26 October 1930
- Capt. Goro Hara - 26 October 1930 - 1 December 1930
- Capt. Hideho Wada - 1 December 1930 - 28 August 1931
- Capt. Jiro Onishi - 28 August 1931 - 1 December 1931
- Capt. Baron Masaki Shibayama - 1 December 1931 - 1 December 1932
- Capt. Eijiro Kondo - 1 December 1932 - 20 October 1933
- Capt. Nishizo Tsukahara - 20 October 1933 - 1 November 1934
- Capt. Rokuro Horie - 1 November 1934 - 15 November 1935
- Capt. Toshio Matsunaga - 15 November 1935 - 1 December 1936
- Capt. Kokichi Terada - 1 December 1936 - 27 August 1937
- Capt. Shinichi Moizumi - 27 August 1937 - 1 December 1937
- Capt. Junichi Mizuno - 1 December 1937 - 15 November 1938
- Capt. Kinpei Teraoka - 15 November 1938 - 15 November 1939
- Capt. Rynosuke Kusaka - 15 November 1939 - 15 October 1940
- Capt. Ko Ito - 15 October 1940 - 25 March 1941
- Capt. Kiichi Hasegawa - 25 March 1941 - 25 April 1942
- Capt. Taijiro Aoki - 25 April 1942 - 5 June 1942
[edit] Notes
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Tabular record of movement from combinedfleet.com
- United States Navy photos
- WW2DB: Akagide:Akagi (1927)
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