Japanese cruiser Chikuma (1938)
Template:Short description Template:Other ships Template:More citations needed Template:Use dmy dates
Template:Infobox ship imageTemplate:Infobox ship careerTemplate:Infobox ship characteristicsTemplate:Nihongo was the second and last vessel in the Template:Sclass of heavy cruisers in the Imperial Japanese Navy. The ship was named after the Chikuma River in Nagano Prefecture. Entering service in 1939, Chikuma saw battle during World War II in the Pacific, hunting small allied ships in the Indian Ocean and serving in many escorting missions throughout many large-scale aircraft carrier battles between Japan and the United States. On 25 October 1944, she served in the Battle off Samar where she possibly sank the escort carrier Template:USS (though most modern sources attribute the carrier's sinking to the battleship Template:Ship) and damaged the destroyer Template:USS, before being crippled by gunfire from the destroyer escort Template:USS and sunk by air attacks.
Background
Chikuma was designed for long-range scouting missions and had a large seaplane capacity. She was extensively employed during World War II in conjunction with an aircraft carrier task force, or as part of a cruiser squadron with her sister ship, Template:Ship.
The Tone-class cruisers were originally envisaged as the fifth and sixth vessels in the Template:Sclass. However, by the time construction began, serious weaknesses in the Mogami-class hull design had become clear following the Fourth Fleet Incident in 1935. As Japan no longer was obligated to abide by the limitations of the London Naval Treaty, a new design was created and new means of construction were utilized. Though the external dimensions were close to the Mogami class, the design was quite different, with four twin 203 mm (8-inch) main battery turrets placed forward of the bridge, the second super firing over the first, reserving the entire stern area as a large sea plane hangar. Unlike the United States Navy, the Japanese did not have a dual role attack/scout aircraft. No reconnaissance units were assigned to the Japanese carriers, and little emphasis was placed on this aspect of carrier warfare. Instead the Japanese reserved all of their carrier aircraft for attack roles. Reconnaissance was left up to float planes carried by cruisers.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Chikuma was intended to provide the long range scout planes needed for their carrier Air Fleets.
Chikuma was equipped with the heaviest armor shipped on a Japanese cruiser. It consisted of a main belt 145 mm (5.7-inches) over the citadel, and 150 mm (5.9-inches) over the machinery. She also carried a deck 65 mm (2.55-inches) over the ammo, machinery, and steering spaces and 30 mm (1.2-inches) elsewhere.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> She was capable of Template:Convert, and could cruise for Template:Convert at Template:Convert
Service career
Early career
Chikuma was completed at Mitsubishi Nagasaki shipyards on 20 May 1939. After several months as a unit of the CruDiv6 (Sentai 6) of the Second Fleet, she was transferred to the CruDiv8 in November 1939. In addition to taking part in regular combat exercises in Japanese home waters, she operated off southern China on three occasions between March 1940 and March 1941.
Early stages of the Pacific War
At the end of 1941, Chikuma was assigned to CruDiv 8 with its sister ship, Tone, and was thus one of the key players in the attack on Pearl Harbor. On 7 December 1941, Tone and Chikuma each launched one Aichi E13A1 Type 0 "Jake" floatplane for a final weather reconnaissance over Oahu. At 0630, Tone and Chikuma each launched short range Nakajima E4N2 Type 90-2 Reconnaissance Seaplane to act as pickets and patrol south of the Striking Force. ChikumaTemplate:'s floatplane reported nine anchored American battleships. During the subsequent attack, the battleships Template:USS, Template:USS, Template:USS, and Template:USS were sunk and Template:USS, Template:USS, Template:USS, Template:USS and other smaller ships were damaged.
On 16 December, CruDiv 8 was ordered to assist in the second attempted invasion of Wake Island. Anti-aircraft fire damaged the scout plane from Chikuma, which was forced to ditch, but the crew was rescued. After the fall of Wake Island, CruDiv 8 returned to Kure.
On 14 January 1942, CruDiv 8 was based out of Truk in the Caroline Islands, and covered the landings of Japanese troops at Rabaul, New Britain and attacks on Lae and Salamaua, New Guinea. On 24 January ChikumaTemplate:'s floatplanes attacked the Admiralty Islands.
After the air raid on Kwajalein on 1 February by Vice Admiral William Halsey, Jr's aircraft carrier Template:USS, Chikuma departed Truk with the Carrier Striking Force in an unsuccessful pursuit. Chikuma and Tone later escorted carriers during the Raid on Port Darwin, Australia on 19 February, which sank 11 ships to air attacks. From 25 February 1942, Chikuma was involved in supporting the Japanese invasion of Java.
Surface actions
On 1 March 1942, ChikumaTemplate:'s floatplane located the 8,806-ton Dutch freighter Modjokerto attempting to escape from Tjilatjap to Australia, enabling a flotilla of destroyers to track the freighter down, with Template:Ship, Template:Ship, Template:Ship, Template:Ship, Template:Ship, and Template:Ship shelling and sinking Modjokerto in three minutes. That afternoon, CruDiv 8's spotted the old destroyer Template:USS, Template:Convert south-southeast of Christmas Island. Chikuma opened fire with her 8-inch guns at the extremely long range of Template:Convert, and all shots missed. Chikuma was joined by battleships Template:Ship and Template:Ship, which also opened fire with their 14-inch main batteries, but Edsall not only managed to avoid 297 14-inch, 132 6-inch shells from the battleships and an additional 844 8-inch and 62 5-inch rounds from the cruisers, but the destroyer also closed to range and fired its 4-inch guns at Chikuma. Hits from Hiei, Tone and dive bombers from the aircraft carriers Template:Ship and Template:Ship finally stopped Edsall, which was then finished off by Chikuma. Chikuma rescued eight survivors of the sunken destroyer.<ref name=":3">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
On 4 March, Chikuma and the destroyer Template:Ship located and sank the 5,421-ton Dutch merchant Enggano (which had earlier been damaged by a floatplane from the cruiser Template:Ship). On 5 March, floatplanes from Tone and Chikuma took part on the strike against Tjilatjap. After the surrender of the Dutch East Indies, Chikuma was assigned to Indian Ocean operations.<ref name=":3" />
Indian Ocean raids
On 5 April 1942, Chikuma was part of a major task force which launched 315 aircraft against British-held Colombo, Ceylon. The destroyer Template:HMS, armed merchant cruiser Template:HMS and 27 aircraft were destroyed and over 500 killed in harbor, and the cruisers Template:HMS and Template:HMS were destroyed at sea. After searching for more remnants of the Royal Navy, the Indian Ocean Task Force launched 91 Aichi D3A1 "Val" dive-bombers and 41 Mitsubishi A6M2 "Zeke" fighters on 9 April against the British naval base at Trincomalee, Ceylon. They found the harbor empty, but wrecked the base's facilities and shot down nine planes, and later sank the carrier Template:HMS, destroyer Template:HMAS, and corvette Template:HMS, an oiler and a depot ship at sea Template:Convert from base.
The task force with Chikuma returned to Japan in mid-April 1942, where it was almost immediately assigned to the unsuccessful pursuit of Admiral Halsey's Task Force 16.2 with the aircraft carrier Template:USS after the Doolittle Raid.
Battle of Midway
At the crucial Battle of Midway, Chikuma and CruDiv 8 were in Vice Admiral Chuichi Nagumo's Carrier Striking Force. On 4 June, Tone and Chikuma each launched two Aichi E13A1 "Jake" long-range reconnaissance floatplanes to search out Template:Convert for American carriers. The floatplane from Tone discovered American ships, but did not recognize that the fleet was a carrier group, which proved to be a crucial mistake. ChikumaTemplate:'s floatplane found the aircraft carrier Template:USS, and shadowed the ship for the next three hours, guiding the bombers that attacked Yorktown that evening. Two other floatplanes from Chikuma continued to observe the heavily damaged Yorktown through the night, during which time one plane and crew were lost. Chikuma then directed the submarine Template:Jsub to find and sink the Yorktown the following morning.
Chikuma and Tone were then detached to support Vice Admiral Boshiro Hosogaya's Aleutian invasion force. However, the anticipated American counter-attack failed to materialize. CruDiv 8 cruised northern waters uneventfully. Chikuma returned to Ominato port on 24 June.
Rear Admiral Chuichi Hara assumed command of CruDiv 8 from 14 July 1942. With the US invasion of Guadalcanal, Chikuma and Tone were ordered south again on 16 August with the aircraft carriers Template:Ship, Template:Ship, Template:Ship, Template:Ship, Template:Ship and Template:Ship. They were joined by the battleships Hiei, Kirishima, seaplane tender Template:Ship, and cruisers Template:Ship, Template:Ship, Takao, Template:Ship.
Battle of the Eastern Solomons
On 24 August 1942, CruDiv 7's Template:Ship and Template:Ship arrived to join the reinforcement fleet for Guadalcanal. The following morning, a PBY Catalina seaplane spotted Ryūjō, which SBDs and TBFs from Enterprise unsuccessfully attacked. Seven floatplanes from Tone and Chikuma were launched to locate the American fleet. One of ChikumaTemplate:'s planes spotted the Americans, but was shot down before its report could be relayed. However, a second floatplane was more successful, and the Japanese launched an attack against Enterprise, hitting it with three bombs which set her wooden deck on fire. However, in the meantime, the Americans located the Japanese fleet, and Ryūjō was sunk by planes from the aircraft carrier Template:USS. Chikuma was undamaged in this engagement, and returned to Truk safely.
Through October, Chikuma and Tone patrolled north of the Solomon Islands, waiting word of recapture of Henderson Field by the Japanese.
Battle of Santa Cruz
On 26 October 1942, Template:Convert northeast of Guadalcanal, Rear Admiral Hiroaki Abe's task force launched seven floatplanes to scout south of Guadalcanal. They located the American fleet, and Abe followed with an attack which sank Hornet and damaged the battleship Template:USS and cruiser Template:USS. However, Chikuma was attacked by a Douglas SBD Dauntless dive-bomber from Hornet, and quick thinking crewmen jettisoned her torpedoes seconds before a Template:Convert bomb hit her starboard forward torpedo room. She was also hit by two other bombs, destroying one floatplane on the aircraft catapult. Chikuma suffered 190 killed and 154 wounded including Captain Komura.
Chikuma (escorted by the destroyers Template:Ship and Template:Ship) returned to Truk for emergency repairs and was then sent back to Kure with the damaged carrier Zuihō. During refit and repairs, two additional twin Type 96 25 mm AA guns and a Type 21 air-search radar were added. Repairs were completed by 27 February 1943.
On 15 March 1943 Rear Admiral Kishi Fukuji assumed command of CruDiv 8, and Chikuma was ordered back to Truk. However, on 17 May, Chikuma and Tone were tasked to accompany the battleship Template:Ship back to Tokyo for the state funeral of Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto. Chikuma was back in Truk by 15 July, having avoided numerous submarine attacks along the route.
From July to November, Chikuma was engaged in making troop transport runs to Rabaul, and to patrols of the Marshall Islands in unsuccessful pursuit of the American fleet. While refueling at Rabaul on 5 November 1943, Chikuma and its task force were attacked by 97 planes from the carriers Saratoga, and Template:USS. Cruisers Atago, Takao, Maya, Template:Ship, Template:Ship and Template:Ship were damaged. Chikuma, attacked by a single SBD, suffered only near-misses with minor damage.
Back at Kure on 12 December, Chikuma gained additional 25-mm AA guns, bringing its total to 20. CruDiv 8 was disbanded on 1 January 1944, and both Tone and Chikuma were reassigned to CruDiv 7 (with Suzuya and Kumano) under Rear Admiral Shoji Nishimura. Refit completed by 1 February, Chikuma returned to Singapore on 13 February and Batavia on 15 March after a month of raiding commerce in the Indian Ocean. On 20 March 1944, Rear Admiral Kazutaka Shiraishi assumed command of CruDiv 7, and Chikuma was made flagship.
Battle of the Philippine Sea
On 13 June 1944, Admiral Soemu Toyoda activated "Operation A-GO" for the defense of the Mariana Islands. Chikuma was assigned to Force "C" Vice Admiral Jisaburo Ozawa's Mobile Fleet, which proceeded through the Visayan Sea to the Philippine Sea headed towards Saipan. On 20 June, after the battleships Template:Ship, Template:Ship and carrier Template:Ship were attacked by aircraft from the American carriers Template:USS, Template:USS and Template:USS and the bulk of the Japanese air cover was destroyed in the "Great Marianas Turkey Shoot", Chikuma retired with the Mobile Fleet to Okinawa.
After ferrying army troops to Okinawa, Chikuma was reassigned back to Singapore in July, serving as flagship for CruDiv 4 while Atago was under repairs.
Battle of Leyte Gulf
On 23 October 1944, Chikuma (with Kumano, Suzuya and Tone) sortied from Brunei towards the Philippines with Vice Admiral Takeo Kurita's First Mobile Striking Force. In the Battle of the Palawan Passage, Atago and Maya were sunk by submarines, and Takao damaged. In the Battle of the Sibuyan Sea the following day Musashi was sunk, the cruiser Template:Ship was crippled and had to be towed to safety, while the battleships Template:Ship and Haruna received damage.
On 25 October, during the Battle off Samar, Chikuma engaged U.S. escort carriers, destroyers, and destroyer escorts of Taffy 3. At 7:22, four torpedo bombers attacked Chikuma and Tone, forcing them to evade, then at 7:30 turned to engage the escort carriers. At 8:00, Chikuma took the escort carriers under fire, but a separate opponent stood its ground. The destroyer escort USS Samuel B. Roberts had closed to point blank range and fired her sole functioning 5-inch (127 mm) gun at 8:10, while the destroyer Template:USS unloaded her main battery on the cruiser at a longer distance. Over the course of a half hour, Samuel B. Roberts ran out of high explosive shells and switched to armor pierce shells, then to training rounds, and finally depleting her star shells. Combined with gunfire from Heermann, Chikuma took around 200 5-inch (127 mm) shell hits, setting her ablaze. At 8:45, she managed a few hits on Heermann and assisted in crippling the destroyer and forcing her back, while Samuel B Roberts completely ran out of ammo and retired, later to be sunk by gunfire from the battleship Kongō.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Lundgren (2014) p 180-200</ref>
Debate on what role Chikuma played in USS Gambier BayTemplate:'s loss
Going off of older sources of the Battle off Samar, Gambier BayTemplate:'s sinking is often credited to Japanese heavy cruisers, particularly Chikuma. The story goes that Chikuma recognized Gambier Bay as an escort carrier, and the cruisers switched to high explosive 8-inch (203 mm) rounds and closed to point blank range, sinking Gambier Bay between 8:10 to 9:11. However, Chikuma was engage in a gunnery duel with Heermann and Samuel B. Roberts by the time Gambier Bay took her first hit and never fired on the escort carriers again. As for the other cruisers, Tone and Template:Ship focused their fire on the escort carriers Template:USS and Template:USS, while Template:Ship probably engaged Template:USS and Template:USS. The surviving records from the Japanese cruisers also never correctly identified their targets, reporting either "Ranger class aircraft carriers" or "Independence class light carriers", and all damage inflicted to Kalinin Bay and Fanshaw Bay were by armor piercing 8-inch (203 mm) shells. Most of this came from earlier accounts of the battle off Samar being based on US accounts without taking Japanese records into perspective.<ref name=":0">Lundgren (2023) p 130-150</ref>
More recent studies, notably by naval historian Robert Lundgren, prove it was the battleship Yamato which was primarily responsible for sinking Gambier Bay. She scored the hit which flooded the carrier's engine room, immediately cutting her speed to Template:Convert, and scored some 15 or more hits between 8:10 to 8:45. She fired high explosive rounds from her 6.1-inch (155 mm) secondary battery, while her armor piercing 18.1-inch (46 cm) shells over penetrated the unarmored hull without exploding. Photographic evidence verifies many hits on Gambier Bay, including many fatal ones, as 18.1-inch (46 cm) shells from Yamato. General consensus among naval historians has landed on the claim Gambier BayTemplate:'s sinking should be credited to Yamato, largely ridding Chikuma of her former glory.<ref>Template:Citation</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":0" />
Final moments and sinking
Heavily crippled, Chikuma disengaged, but was soon attacked by four TBM Avenger torpedo-bombers. One of the aircraft succeeded in hitting her stern port quarter with a Mark 13 torpedo that severed her stern and disabled her port screw and rudder. ChikumaTemplate:'s speed dropped to Template:Convert, then to Template:Convert, but more seriously, she became unsteerable. At 1105, Chikuma was attacked by five TBMs from Template:USS. She was hit portside amidships by two torpedoes and her engine rooms flooded. At 1400, three TBMs from a composite squadron of ships from Template:USS and Template:USS led by Lt. Joseph Cady dropped more torpedoes which hit Chikuma portside. Cady was later awarded the Navy Cross for his action. The destroyer Template:Ship was called to assist Chikuma, but she was ordered back as the destroyer Nowaki replaced her. It is generally thought Nowaki took off survivors from Chikuma, and then scuttled her at Template:Coord in the late morning of on 25 October 1944, but a more recent study suggests Chikuma sank from the effect of the air attack, and Nowaki only arrived in time to pick up survivors from the water.<ref name="Anthony P. Tully 2000, pp. 248">Template:Cite journal; especially p. 251.</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=":1">Template:Cite web</ref>
On 26 October 1944, Nowaki was crippled by gunfire from the light cruisers Template:USS, Template:USS and Template:USS and finished off by a torpedo from DesDiv 103's destroyer Template:USS. The ship sank Template:Convert south-southeast of Legaspi, Philippines with about 1,400 men, including all Chikuma survivors. The sole survivor from Chikuma was a crew member who was not picked up by Nowaki and drifted ashore on his own, later to be captured by the US Navy.<ref name=":1" /><ref>IJN Nowaki: Tabular Record of Movement</ref>
Chikuma was removed from the navy list on 20 April 1945.
References
Citations
Bibliography
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External links
- Template:Cite web
- Tabular record: CombinedFleet.com: Chikuma history (Retrieved 26 January 2007.)
- Gallery: US Navy Historical CenterTemplate:Dead linkTemplate:Cbignore
Template:Tone class cruiser Template:October 1944 shipwrecks
- Pages with broken file links
- Tone-class cruisers
- Ships built by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
- 1938 ships
- Second Sino-Japanese War cruisers of Japan
- World War II cruisers of Japan
- Attack on Pearl Harbor
- Ships of the Battle of Midway
- Cruisers sunk by aircraft
- Ships sunk by US aircraft
- Ships sunk by aircraft during the Battle of Leyte Gulf
- World War II shipwrecks in the Philippine Sea
- World War II shipwrecks in the Pacific Ocean
- Maritime incidents in October 1944