Submarines of the Imperial Japanese Navy
Imperial Japanese Navy submarines originated with the purchase of five Holland type submarines from the United States in 1904. Japanese submarine forces progressively built up strength and expertise, becoming by the beginning of World War II one of the world's most varied and powerful submarine fleets.
Origins
The Imperial Japanese Navy acquired its first submarines during the Russo-Japanese War on 12 December 1904 where they arrived in sections at the Yokohama dockyards. The vessels were purchased from the relatively new American company, Electric Boat, and were fully assembled and ready for combat operations by August 1905. However, hostilities with Russia were nearing its end by that date, and no submarines saw action during the war.The submarines that Electric Boat sold to Japan were based on the Holland designs, known as Holland Type VIIs similar to the American s. The five imported Hollands were originally built at Fore River Ship and Engine Company in Quincy, Massachusetts under Busch's direction for the Electric Boat Company back in August–October 1904. They were shipped by freighter from Seattle, Washington in Knock-down kit form to Japan, and then reassembled by Arthur Leopold Busch at the Yokosuka Naval Arsenal, which was then Japan's largest naval shipyard, to become Hulls No. 1 through 5 and were designated Type 1 submarines by the Japanese Navy.
Frank Cable, an electrician who was working for Isaac Rice's Electro-Dynamic and Storage Companies along with Rice's Electric Boat, arrived some six months after Busch, training the IJN in the operation of the newly introduced vessels.
In 1904 Kawasaki Dockyard Company purchased plans for a modified version directly from Holland, and built two boats, with the help of two American engineers, Chase and Herbert, who had been assistants to Holland. The Kawasaki-type submarines displaced 63 and 95 tons when submerged, and measured in overall length, respectively. both vessels measured at the beam. This contrasted with the original five imported Hollands-type submarines which had arrived that same year, at over 100 tons submerged, in overall length and beam. The Kawasaki Type #6 and #7 submarines had gained extra speed and reduced fuel consumption by. However both boats could launch only one torpedo, and each was manned by 14 sailors, whereas the imported Holland-type submarines could fire two torpedoes and could be operated by 13 sailors. This new type was designated the Type 6 submarine by the Imperial Japanese Navy, and was used primarily for test purposes.
The Kaigun Holland #6 was launched at Kobe on 28 September 1905 and was completed six months later at Kure as the first submarine built in Japan. It sank during a training dive in Hiroshima Bay on 15 April 1910. Although the water was only deep, there were no provisions at all for the crew to escape while submerged. The commanding officer, Lieutenant Tsutomu Sakuma, patiently wrote a description of his sailor's efforts to bring the boat back to the surface as their oxygen supply ran out. All of the sailors were later found dead at their duty stations when this submarine was raised the following day. The sailors were regarded as heroes for their calm performance of their duties until death, and this submarine was preserved as a memorial in Kure until the end of World War II.
Although the capabilities of these first submarines were never tested in combat during the Russo-Japanese War, the first submarine squadron was soon formed at Kure Naval District in the Inland Sea. Following the war, the Japanese government followed submarine developments by the Royal Navy with interest, and purchased two British C-class submarines directly from Vickers, with an additional three built from kits by the Kure Naval Arsenal. These became respectively the Japanese and submarines. An additional two vessels, forming the were later built by the Kure Naval Arsenal.
In 1909, the first submarine tender,, was commissioned.
World War I
Japan, along with the rest of the Allies, drew heavily upon Germany's Guerre de Course operations during the First World War, and their submarine successes reinforced Japan's willingness to develop this weapon, resulting in eighteen ocean-going submarines being included in its 1917 expansion program. At the end of World War I, Japan received nine German submarines as reparations, which allowed her and the other Allies to accelerate their technological developments during the interwar period.World War II
Imperial Japanese Navy submarines formed by far the most varied fleet of submarines of World War II, including manned torpedoes, midget submarines, medium-range submarines, purpose-built supply submarines, fleet submarines, submarines with the highest submerged speeds of the conflict, and submarines able to carry multiple bombers. They were also equipped with the most advanced torpedo of the conflict, the oxygen-fuelled Type 95.Overall, despite their advanced technical innovation, Japanese submarines were built in relatively small numbers, and had less effect on the war than those of the other major navies. The IJN pursued the doctrine of guerre d'escadre, and consequently submarines were often used in offensive roles against warships. Warships were more difficult to attack and sink than merchant ships, however, because naval vessels were faster, more maneuverable, and better defended.
The IJN submarine arm did have a number of notable successes against American warships, however. During the Battle of Midway, administered the final coup de grace that sank the fleet carrier, as well as sinking the destroyer. A few months later, on September 15, 1942, with a single salvo of torpedoes, Japanese submarine sank the fleet carrier and damaged both the battleship and the destroyer. On November 13, 1942, the submarine torpedoed and sank the anti-aircraft cruiser, and a year later on November 23, 1943 the submarine torpedoed and sank the escort carrier, both with heavy loss of life. The had the distinction of both severely damaging the heavy cruiser, knocking her out of the war for a year, on October 20, 1942, and of also sinking on November 16, 1943.
Twice in the first year of the war, Japanese submarines torpedoed the aircraft carrier, and, while not sinking her, put her in the repair yard at a time when the US Navy could ill afford to do without her. Saratoga was torpedoed by submarine on January 11, 1942, putting her out of action and unavailable to participate in the desperate carrier battles and raids of the next five months, and then hit again three months after her return on September 1, 1942 by, which put her out of action for another eleven weeks in the middle of the intensely engaged land-air-sea battles of the Guadalcanal Campaign.
A plane launched from one of the innovative aircraft-carrying submarines,, conducted what remains the only ever aerial bombing attack on the continental United States, when Warrant Flying Officer Nobuo Fujita piloting a Yokosuka E14Y scouting plane dropped four 168-pound bombs in an attempt to start forest fires outside the town of Brookings, Oregon, on September 9, 1942. Earlier in the year, in February 1942, the submarine fired a number of shells from her deck gun at the Elwood Oil Fields near Santa Barbara, California. None of the shells caused any serious damage.
However, as fuel oil diminished and air superiority was lost, Imperial submarines were no longer able to continue with such successes. Once the United States was able to increase its production of destroyers and destroyer escorts, as well as bringing over highly effective anti-submarine techniques learned during the Battle of the Atlantic, they continually took more and more of a toll on Imperial Japanese submarines, which also tended to be not as deeply diving as their Kriegsmarine counterparts.
Accordingly, the Japanese submarine arm had few notable successes against Allied warships during the final two years of the war. One victory was the knocking the anti-aircraft cruiser out for the rest of the war with a torpedo hit on November 3, 1944. A more famous incident was the torpedoing and sinking heavy cruiser, with heavy loss of life. The sinking occurred on July 30, 1945, just two weeks before the Japanese surrender, at a time when few in the United States Navy expected continued Japanese submarine attacks.
The Imperial Japanese Navy's doctrine of fleet warfare resulted in its submarines seldom posing a threat to allied merchant convoys and shipping lanes to the degree that the Kriegsmarine's U-boats did as they pursued commerce raiding against Allied and neutral merchant ships. During the war, IJN submarines did sink about 1 million tons of merchant shipping in the Pacific; by contrast U.S. Navy submarines sank 5.2 million tons in the same period, while U-boats of Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine, the IJN's Axis partner, sank 14.3 million tons in the Atlantic and other oceans. During the last two years of the War in the Pacific, many IJN submarines were also occupied serving to transport supplies to isolated island garrisons, ones that had been deliberately bypassed by the Americans and the Australians and which could not be reached by surface transports because of blockade by Allied warplanes and naval vessels.
Early models of IJN submarines were relatively less maneuverable under water, could not dive very deeply, and lacked radar.. After the end of the conflict, several of Japan's most innovative and advanced submarines were sent to Hawaii for inspection in "Operation Road's End" before being scuttled by the U.S. Navy in 1946 when the Soviet Union demanded access to the IJN submarines.
Submarine aircraft carriers
The Japanese applied the concept of the "submarine aircraft carrier" extensively, starting with the J3 type of 1937–38. Altogether 41 submarines were built with the capability to carry seaplanes. Most IJN submarine aircraft carriers could carry only one aircraft, but I-14 had hangar space for two, and the giant, three.''Yanagi'' missions
were enabled under the Axis Powers' Tripartite Pact to provide for an exchange of strategic materials and manufactured goods between Germany, Italy and Japan. Initially, cargo ships made the exchanges, but when this was no longer possible, submarines were used.Only six submarines attempted this trans-oceanic voyage during World War II: , , , , and German submarines and . Of these, I-30 was partially successful but was later sunk by a mine, I-8 completed her mission, I-34 was sunk by British submarine, and I-29 by the United States submarine, . made the final attempt.
1st class submarines
This class includes the largest of Japanese submarines, characterized by great size and range.Type KD1 (''I-51'')
The Kaidai I type submarine was the prototype for the types that followed and was based on the German cruiser submarine and the British L-class submarine.Type KD2 (''I-152'')
The Kaidai II type submarine was based on U-139 and the British K-class submarine.- I-152 – scrapped 1948.
Type KD3a (4 units)
- I-53/I-153 – sank in the Bali Strait on February 27, 1942 and off Java on February 28, 1942. I-153 herself was scuttled off Iyo-nada in May 1946.
- I-54/I-154 – scuttled in the Iyo-nada in May 1946.
- I-55/I-155 – sank off Java on February 7, 1942 and in the Java Sea on February 13, 1942. I-155 herself surrendered in September 1945 and was scuttled in the Iyo-nada in May 1946.
- I-58/I-158 – sank in the Java Sea on January 3, 1942, off Bawean Island on January 9, 1942, and south of the Sunda Strait on February 25, 1942. I-158 herself surrendered on September 2, 1945 and was scuttled off the Goto Islands on April 1, 1946.
Type KD3b (3 units)
- I-56/I-156 – sank five merchant ships. I-156 surrendered on September 2, 1945 and was scuttled off the Goto Islands on April 1, 1946.
- I-57/I-157 – sank SS Djirak on 7 January 1942. I-157 surrendered on September 2, 1945 and was scuttled off the Goto Islands on April 1, 1946.
- I-59/I-159 – sank off Sumatra on March 1, 1942. I-159 surrendered on September 2, 1945 and was scuttled off the Goto Islands on April 1, 1946.
- I-60 – rammed I-63 off Mizunoko Light on February 2, 1939. I-60 herself was sunk off Kratakoa Island on January 17, 1942 by.
- I-63 – rammed by I-60 off Mizunoko Light on February 2, 1939.
Type KD4 (3 units)
- I-64/I-164 – sunk off Cape Ashizuri on May 17, 1942 by.
Type KD5 (3 units)
- I-65/I-165 – depth-charged off Saipan on June 27, 1945 by aircraft from VPB-142.
- I-66/I-166 – sunk off One Fathom Bank on July 17, 1944 by.
Type KD6a (6 units)
- I-70 – Sunk by a Douglas SBD Dauntless aircraft from VS-6 on December 10, 1941. This was the first enemy combatant ship sunk by U.S. forces.
Type KD6b (2 units)
- I-174 – sunk off Truk on April 12, 1944 by aircraft from VB-108.
- I-175 – sunk off Wotje Atoll on February 17, 1944 by.
Type KD7 (10 units)
- I-176 sank patrolling off Truk on November 16, 1943, the only known Japanese submarine success against a US submarine – was a probable second victim by Japanese submarines. I-176 was lost a year later.
Type J1 (''I-1'', ''I-2'', ''I-3'', ''I-4'')
- I-1 – sank off Western Australia on March 3, 1942. I-1 herself was attacked by and ran aground on Fish Reef January 29, 1943; valuable codes and code books from the wreck are salvaged by Allied forces.
- I-2 – sank HMS Nam Yong off Christmas Island on February 28, 1942 and in the Indian Ocean on March 1, 1942. I-2 herself was sunk in the Bismarck Sea on April 7, 1944 by.
- I-3 – sunk December 9, 1942 near Kamimbo Bay by PT-59.
- I-4 – sank off Oahu December 14, 1941, off Bali February 28, 1942 and USS Washingtonian off Eight Degree Channel April 6, 1942. I-4 herself was sunk in St. George's Channel on December 21, 1942 by.
Type J1 Mod. (''I-5'')
- – possibly sunk July 19, 1944 off Guam by.
Type J2 (''I-6'')
- I-6 – sank Clan Ross in the Arabian Sea on April 2, 1942 and Bahadur in the Arabian Sea on April 7, 1942. I-6 herself was accidentally rammed and sunk June 16, 1944 off Hachijō-jima by Toyokawa Maru.
Type J3 (''I-7'', ''I-8'')
- I-7 – sank Merkus off Cocos Island on March 4, 1942, Glenshiel in the Indian Ocean on April 3, 1942 and USS Arcata off Unalaska on July 14, 1942. I-7 herself was damaged by gunfire off Kiska June 22, 1943 from and ran aground on the Twin Rocks. I-7 was scuttled on June 23.
- – sunk off Okinawa on March 31, 1945 by.
Type A1 (''I-9'', ''I-10'', ''I-11'')
- – sunk June 14, 1943 off Kiska by.
- – sunk July 4, 1944 off Saipan by and.
- – sunk February 17, 1944 by.
Type AM1/A2 (''I-12'')
- – sunk November 13, 1944 by and.
Type AM2/AM (''I-13'', ''I-14'')
The range and speed of these submarines was remarkable, at, but their underwater performance was compromised, making them easy targets. was sunk on 16 July 1945 by the destroyer escort and aircraft action from escort carrier about east of Yokosuka. surrendered at sea at the end of the war, and was later scrapped off the coast of Oahu at a depth of perhaps to prevent Russia from obtaining the technology. The wreck was recently found.
Type B1 (20 units)
The Type B or Junsen B type submarines were the most numerous type of submarines of the Imperial Japanese Navy during World War II. In total 20 were made, starting with I-15, the class ship. These were fast, very long ranged, and carried a single Yokosuka E14Y seaplane, located in a hangar in front of the conning tower, launched by a catapult.The series was rather successful, especially at the beginning of the war., in 1942, crippled the aircraft carrier., on 15 September 1942, fired six torpedoes at aircraft carrier, two of which hit the carrier and sank her, the remainder damaging the battleship and the destroyer ; conducted the only aerial bombing to occur on the continental United States during World War II. On 9 September 1942, I-25 launched its reconnaissance plane, a Yokosuka E14Y code named Glen which proceeded to drop four 168 pound bombs in a forest near present-day Brookings, Oregon. Several of these ships also undertook "Yanagi" missions to Europe.
Type B2 (6 units)
The Type B Modified 1 or Junsen B Modified 1 type submarines were externally similar to the Type B1, but with a high-tensile strength steel hull and diesel engines of a simpler design.Type B3 (''I-54'', ''I-56'', ''I-58'')
Eighteen of the twenty-one Type B Modified 2 or Junsen B Modified 2 type submarines were cancelled in 1943 in favor of the Type E submarine, leaving the I-54, I-56, and I-58.- I-54 – sank October 28, 1944 by.
- I-56 – possibly sank sometime after April 8, 1945. I-56 was herself later sunk April 18, 1945 by.
- – sank on July 30, 1945. I-58 surrendered on September 2, 1945, and scuttled off the Goto Islands on April 1, 1946. The wreckage of I-58 was found in 2017.
Type C1 (5 units)
Type C2 (''I-46'', ''I-47'', ''I-48'')
The Type C or Junsen C type latter batch submarines were nearly identical to the Type C1 with the exception that the Type C2 lacked the capability to carry the midget submarines.- I-46 – possibly sunk by and on October 28, 1944. Also reported sunk by a multi-destroyer gun action involving,,, and around November 28, 1944.
- I-47 – sank on November 20, 1944. I-47 surrendered on September 2, 1945 and was scuttled off the Goto Islands on April 1, 1946.
- I-48 – sunk January 23, 1945 by.
Type C3 (''I-52'', ''I-53'', ''I-55'')
The Japanese constructed only three of these during World War II, although twenty were planned. They were among the largest submarines ever built to date, and were known as the most advanced submarines of the period. One of them,, was selected for a Yanagi mission to Germany. She was sunk on 24 June 1944 by aircraft from southwest of the Azores. Her cargo consisted of rubber, gold, quinine, and Japanese engineers to Germany.
Type D1 (11 units)
The Type D or Sen'yu type and Sen'yu Modified type submarines were based on the U-155. This type was designed as transport submarines with torpedoes for self-defense.Type D2 (''I-373'')
The Type D Modified submarine was designed as a tanker submarine based on the Type D1 but with no torpedoes.- I-373 – sunk August 14, 1945 by. I-373 was the last Japanese submarine sunk in World War II.
''Kiraisen'' Type (''I-121'', ''I-122'', ''I-123'', ''I-124'')
- I-121 – surrendered in September 1945 and scuttled in Wakasa Bay on April 30, 1946.
- I-122 – sunk in the Sea of Japan June 10, 1945 by.
- I-123 – sunk off Savo Island August 29, 1942 by.
- ) – sunk off Darwin January 20, 1942 by. I-124 was the first IJN warship sunk by the Royal Australian Navy.
''Sen-Ho'' Type (''I-351'')
- – sunk July 14, 1945 in the South China Sea by.
''Sentoku'' Type (''I-400'', ''I-401'', ''I-402'')
Three of the Sentoku were built. Each had four engines and range at.
The submarines were also able to carry three Aichi M6A Sei ran aircraft, each carrying an bomb at. To fit the aircraft in the hangar the wings of the aircraft were folded back, the horizontal stabilizers folded down, and the top of the vertical stabilizer folded over so the overall profile of the aircraft was within the diameter of its propeller. A crew of four could prepare and get all three airborne in 45 minutes launching them with a 120-foot catapult on the fore deck of the giant submarine.
- I-400 – sunk as a target off Pearl Harbor on June 4, 1946 by.
- I-401 – sunk as a target off Pearl Harbor on May 31, 1946 by. The wreck of I-401 was found in 2005.
- I-402 – scuttled with Ha-201 off Kinai Island on April 1, 1946.
''Sentaka'' Type (3 units)
They displaced 1,070 tonnes, had a test depth of, and were armed with four torpedo tubes and Type 96 guns in retractable mounts to maintain streamlining. These submarines were designed for mass production. They were high-performance boats, with streamlined all-welded hulls and a high battery capacity supplying two motors, which had nearly double the horsepower of the German-designed MAN diesels. The submerged speed was, more than double that achieved by contemporary American designs. They were equipped with a snorkel, allowing for underwater diesel operation while recharging batteries.
- I-201 – sunk as a target off Pearl Harbor pm May 23, 1946 by. The wreck of I-201 was found in 2009 along with I-14.
- I-202 – scuttled off Kongo Point on April 5, 1946.
- I-203 – sunk as a target off Hawaii on May 21, 1946 by.
2nd class submarines
''Kaichū'' Type (20 units)
The Kaichū type submarines were double-hulled medium sized submarines. They were derived from the Kaichū type submarine#Kaichū V . Several variants existed. From 1934 to 1944, the Kaichū type submarine#Kaichū VI and the Kaichū type submarine#Kaichū VII were built. The K6 type was equipped with a 3.25 inch gun and Type 95 Long Lance torpedoes. Twenty units were built:,, Ro-35, Ro-36, Ro-37, Ro-38, Ro-39, Ro-40, Ro-41, Ro-42, Ro-43, Ro-44,, Ro-46, Ro-47, Ro-48, Ro-49, Ro-50, Ro-55, Ro-56.Type L1 (''Ro-51'', ''Ro-52'')
The Type L1 submarines were British L-class submarines built under license by Mitsubishi.Type L2 (''Ro-53'', ''Ro-54'', ''Ro-55'', ''Ro-56'')
The Type L2 submarines were similar to the Type L1 but with no torpedo tubes and a change in the battery groups.Type L3 (''Ro-57'', ''Ro-58'', ''Ro-59'')
The Type L3 submarines were copies of the British submarine.Type L4 (9 units)
The Type L4 submarines were copies of the British submarine.Ko Type (18 units)
The Ko or Sen-Shō type were medium sized submarines for use as point-defense submarines. Eighteen units were built: Ro-100, Ro-101,, Ro-103, Ro-104, Ro-105,, Ro-107, Ro-108, Ro-109,, Ro-111, Ro-112, Ro-113, Ro-114, Ro-115, Ro-116, Ro-117.Sen'yu-Ko Type (12 units)
The Sen'yu-Ko or Sen'yu-Shō type were transport submarines. Several of this type were converted to tankers or to mother ships for the midget submarines.Sentaka-Ko Type (10 units)
The Sentaka-Ko or Sentaka-Shō type were small-size speed submarines commissioned for Operation Downfall. Of the 79 boats planned, only 9 were completed.3rd class submarines
This class does not already exist at the time of World War II.Midget submarines
This class includes the smallest of the Japanese submarines, from midget submarines to manned torpedoes often used for suicide attacks.''Ko-Hyoteki'' Type (50 units)
The Kō-hyōteki class of Japanese midget submarines had hull numbers but no names. For simplicity, they are most often referred to by the hull number of the mother submarine. Thus, the midget carried by was known as the I-16 midget. The midget submarine hull numbers beginning with the character "HA", which can only be seen on a builder's plate inside the hull.Fifty Ko-hyoteki were built. The "A Target" name was assigned as a ruse – if their design was prematurely discovered by Japan's foes, the Japanese Navy could insist that the vessels were battle practice targets. They were also called "tubes" and other slang names.
''Kairyū'' Type (250 units)
The Kairyū was a class of midget submarines designed in 1943–1944, and produced from the beginning of 1945. These submarines were meant to meet the invading American Naval forces upon their anticipated approach of Tokyo.Over 760 of these submarines were planned, and by August 1945, 250 had been manufactured, most of them at the Yokosuka shipyard.
These submarines had a two-man crew and were fitted with an internal warhead for suicide missions.
''Kaiten'' Type (400 units)
The Kaiten was a torpedo modified as a suicide weapon, and used by the Imperial Japanese Navy in the final stages of the Second World War. Kaiten means "return to the sky"; however, it is commonly translated as "turn toward heaven".Early designs allowed for the pilot to escape after the final acceleration towards the target, although whether this could have been done successfully is doubtful. There is no record of any pilot attempting to escape or intending to do so, and this provision was dropped from later production kaitens.
Six models were designed, the types 1, 2, 4, 5 and 6 were based on the Long Lance type 93 torpedo, and the Type 10, based on the Type 92 torpedo. Types 2, 4, 5, 6 and 10 were only manufactured as prototypes and never used in combat.