The musings of a politically incorrect dinosaur from a forgotten age where civility was the rule rather than the exception.
Webster
The Constitution was made to guard the people against the dangers of good intentions." --American Statesman Daniel Webster (1782-1852)
Tuesday, January 15, 2019
The largest battleships ever built.
I atill think that it is funny that me being an Army guy pays attention to Naval history and I have Blogged several times about "Yamato class Battleships". From the historical stuff to the Anime series "Star Blazers" that is known as "Space Cruiser Yamato" and its fight to save Earth.
The largest battleships ever built were Yamato and Musashi of
the Imperial Japanese Navy. These behemoths were triple the tonnage of
some other battleships of their day and each one had three turrets, with
three huge 18.1″ guns per turret. They also mounted numerous smaller
guns to annihilate secondary targets.
They could outrange and
outlast any ship of the line in World War II. Each ship was eventually
sunk by aircraft carrier-based planes, proving that the aircraft carrier
was now the true image of might in any navy during WWII and beyond.
In 1906 the British Royal Navy launched the 18,000 ton HMS Dreadnought. Its revolutionary design heralded the new age of the truly all-powerful “Battleship.
This new breed of battleships had an all steel design with very large
caliber guns in rotating turrets. Despite being heavily armored, their
powerful steam turbines enabled them to be incredibly fast, too.
The concept was quickly adopted by every major nation that could afford it. HMS Dreadnought had
cost the equivalent of what in 2018 would be roughly 151 million
pounds, sparking a huge and expensive arms race, especially between the
British and the Germans.
This
resulted in these two countries entering World War I in 1914 with large
numbers of these cutting edge battleships, and continuing to build more
of them in ever increasing numbers throughout the war.
This resulted in even more refined versions, like the Imperial German Battleship SMS Baden, built in 1917, that weighed in at just over 32,000 tons.
There was a third ship, but as soon as WWII started, realization
dawned that aircraft carriers were what was going to win the Pacific
war. Therefore the Japanese decided they would convert the third
battleship before it was finished. It would become the Shinano, the largest aircraft carrier in the world at that time.
Another reason for going ahead initially with the Yamato
class of battleships was Japan’s ingrained respect for such ships. They
recalled with pride the Battle of Tsushima in 1905, which became
legendary after the Japanese fleet had crushed the Imperial Russian
fleet.
Admiral
Tōgō on the bridge of Mikasa, at the beginning of the Battle of
Tsushima in 1905. The signal flag being hoisted is the letter Z, which
was a special instruction to the Fleet.At the
center of that historic victory was the concept of using battleships
that were heavily armored and fast, and that had large caliber main
batteries.
Battle of Tsushima (1905)
Major Casualties/Losses
Imperial Russia
Japanese Empire
Battleships
7 lost, 4 surrendered
–
Cruisers
4 lost
–
Destroyers
6 lost
–
Total Tonnage Sunk
126,792 tons
*450 tons
Killed
Between 4,000 to 6,000
Around 110
Captured
Nearly 6,000
–
*3 torpedo boats sunk
It is easy to see why such a decisive victory might influence thinking in the Japanese Navy for decades to come.
Although
the big battleship concept was an important influence on Japanese Navy
planning in the inter-war years, nevertheless the Japanese Navy was also
forward-thinking, and started to build aircraft carriers as far back as
1921.
During the 1920’s Japan built Hosho, Kaga, and Akagi, and during the 1930’s they built seven more aircraft carriers.
Aerial view of Hōshō as completed in December 1922The
British raid on the Italian fleet at Taranto in 1940 was said to have
influenced Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor. The latter attack sank or
damaged many U.S. warships including four battleships, as well as
destroying large numbers of aircraft.
As if Pearl Harbor was not
enough to vindicate the belief in the air-power that aircraft carriers
could provide, just three days later Japanese aircraft attacked the
British Z Force, sinking a battleship and a battlecruiser with very few
casualties of their own.
Early Carrier Air Power Victories
Attacker/Target
Date
Attacker’s Aircraft losses
Target’s losses
Battle of Taranto
Great Britain/Italy
Nov 12th 1940
2
3 Battleships damaged
Pearl Harbour
Japan/USA
Dec 7th 1941
29
4 Battleships sunk 4 Battleships damaged
Attack on Force Z
Japan/Great Britain
Dec 10th 1941
6
1 Battleship Sunk 1 Battlecruiser
For
the rest of the war, the Japanese concentrated on building as many
aircraft carriers as it could, as well as converting a number of
existing or near completed ships into aircraft carriers. The fact of the
matter is after the two Yamato-class battleships were completed, Japan never built another battleship ever again.
Yamato during sea trials off Japan near Bungo Strait, 20 October 1941.As for Yamato and Musashi,
the design for these ships had been finalized in 1937, after a
protracted and detailed examination of twenty-four very different and
modern design proposals. Yamato was laid down in November
1937 and was commissioned into service on December 16, 1941, just days
after Japanese carrier-based planes had successfully attacked both Pearl
Harbor and Z Force. Therefore Yamato arrived in service at a time when events were starting to raise questions about the usefulness of battleships.
Musashi leaving Brunei in October 1944 for the Battle of Leyte GulfYamato‘s sister ship Musashi
was laid down in March 1938 and was commissioned into service on August
5, 1942. Thus both ships entered service after each taking over four
years to build.
Yamato under attack off Kure on 19 March 1945To
show you how much naval air warfare had progressed in that short time,
in 1937 the British Navy was using 150 mph Blackburn Shark biplane
torpedo bombers that could carry an 18-inch torpedo or 1,600 lbs of
bombs.
By the time Musashi was commissioned in 1942, the
U.S. Navy was using the 275 mph Grumman TBF Avenger torpedo bomber that
could be armed with either a 22.5-inch torpedo or 2,000 lbs of bombs.
Musashi, August 1942, taken from the bowThis rapid aircraft development caught the Yamato-class battleships by surprise. Initially, Yamato had only 28 anti-aircraft guns when commissioned in 1941. The Musashi,
commissioned a year later, incorporated lessons learned from recent
events regarding air defenses, and came into service with 40 AA guns.
With aircraft carriers now dominating the Pacific theater, by 1945 the Yamato had no less than 166 AA guns!
Landmark Battleships
Nationality
Year
Tonnage
Main Gun
Length
Crew
Speed
HMS Dreadnought
British
1906
18,410
10 x 12 inch
527
750
24 mph
SMS Baden
German
1917
32,200
8 x 15 inch
590
1,271
24 mph
Bismarck
German
1941
41,700
8 x 15inch
823
2,065
34mph
Yamato
Japanese
1941
65,027
9 x 18 inch
862
2,650
31 mph
South Dakota
American
1942
35,600
9 x 16inch
680
2,364
31mph
*HMS Darling
British
2009
8,500
1 x 4.5 inch
500
191
35 mph
*For comparison The UK largest Major Surface Combat Ship in service today (2018)
The Yamato-class
ships were truly breathtaking in their scale and armament. When fully
loaded they each weighed an incredible 72,000 tonnes and were fitted
with the largest guns ever carried by a battleship. Each one had a main
armament of 18.1-inch guns capable of firing 3,220-lb shells over 26
miles. Their turrets had armor over 25 inches thick.
The ships had
been built in secret and amazingly, the Allies were totally unaware of
their existence until 1942. U.S. Intelligence was shocked that ships
like this could have been built without their knowledge.
Yamato and Musashi in the war
But
the Japanese quickly became afraid to deploy these new battleships,
even being reluctant to allow them out to do patrols. The Japanese High
Command was forever fearful of Allied submarines or aircraft carriers
attacking them. Also later on in the war, there was simply not enough
fuel available to run them regularly, so both ships spent most of the
war inactive, berthed at various “safe” naval bases.
This fear and hesitation was further reinforced when Yamato was badly damaged by the U.S. submarine Skate in December 1943. Then in March 1944 Musashi was damaged by the U.S. submarine Tunny. Yamato hit by a bomb during the Battle of the Sibuyan Sea on 24 October 1944; the hit did not produce serious damageBut by late 1944 the Japanese Navy was forced to deploy the battleships, both out of necessity and desperation. Thus Yamato and Musashi
participated in the Battle of the Philippines on June 19-20, 1944, but
this was primarily a carrier to carrier battle and neither battleship
saw any real action.
Then on October 23-26, 1944 Yamato took part in the Battle of Leyte Gulf and for the first time saw real combat. During the battle, Yamato managed to help sink the escort carrier USS Gambier Bay and the destroyer USS Johnston.
But the Yamato herself was badly damaged by aircraft from the U.S. carriers Intrepid and Cabot, though she did manage to return to port. Musashi under attack by American carrier aircraft during the Battle of Leyte Gulf.Musashi was less fortunate and was attacked by several waves of aircraft from various aircraft carriers including the Intrepid, Cabot, Essex, Lexington, Enterprise, and Franklin. Finally, after multiple torpedo and bomb hits, the Musashi sank, taking nearly half of her crew of 2,399 men with her. In her short wartime career, Musashi did not sink or damage any Allied shipping.
As for Yamato,
it did not venture out again until April 1945, when Nazi Germany was on
the eve of surrender in Europe. Japan sent out a large fleet of
warships headed by Yamato to attack Allied shipping engaged in
the Battle of Okinawa. It was an act of desperation that was almost
suicidal since the task force had little to no air cover. Yamato steering to avoid bombs and aerial torpedoes during Operation Ten-GoThe Americans intercepted the Japanese force with hundreds of bombers
and torpedo bombers, launching wave after wave of aerial attacks. It was
an onslaught, and it took the Americans just over 100 minutes to sink Yamato. Ninety percent of Yamato’s crew was killed, including fleet commander Vice-Admiral Seiichi Itō.The explosion of Yamato’s magazinesAfter WWII battleships were quickly phased out. All 4 of the United States’ Iowa-class battleships lingered in service on and off until 1992, when the era of the battleship finally faded into history. There is talk about bringing the Iowa class ships back into service, if I recall 2 of the ships have to be kept in "deployable status". meaning that they can be brought back into service if needed.
I'm lucky that I can tell a cruiser from catamaran, so I find this kind of stuff fascinating. Thanks for the great info and please keep it coming..........
Hey Tam; Of course, I like history...but it will be spaced out with personal stuff, gun stuff, political stuff, and some military stuff. I blog to keep from getting sent to Zuckertraz, LOL
Adm. Yamamoto was overruled by the Army Generals. The Generals wanted a fleet to support their land forces. When Yamamoto asked for more carriers he got another but larger battleship. As it turned out, the Yamoto was barely anything more than a troop supply ship.
This post is timely, just today I watched a video about the naval actions at and near Leyte Gulf.
The Japanese would have done better if they didn't have the inter-service rivalry thing going on. I thought we had it bad back then, the Japanese were worse, they even beat the Germans on the "turf war". The Army was the ones that pushed the "incident at the Marco Polo Bridge" and the further excursions into China. The Navy was more reluctant to get involved.
Actually only Iowa is in the White Fleet. New Jersey is not, AFAIK. I have been aboard IJN Mikasa, they have restored it and it is available to tour in Yokosuka, JA. The open bridge picture you used IS correct!!! Absolutely amazing they would just stand out in the open like that!
My Bad, I thought it was 2 of them. It is on my bucket list to check out the U.S.S Olympia and the IJN Mikasa. As I understand it, Admiral Nimitz was instrumental in saving that ship after WWII. I also had another picture of the same kind of thing..I gotta find it, LOL
I'm lucky that I can tell a cruiser from catamaran, so I find this kind of stuff fascinating. Thanks for the great info and please keep it coming..........
ReplyDeleteHey Tam;
DeleteOf course, I like history...but it will be spaced out with personal stuff, gun stuff, political stuff, and some military stuff. I blog to keep from getting sent to Zuckertraz, LOL
Adm. Yamamoto was overruled by the Army Generals. The Generals wanted a fleet to support their land forces. When Yamamoto asked for more carriers he got another but larger battleship. As it turned out, the Yamoto was barely anything more than a troop supply ship.
ReplyDeleteThis post is timely, just today I watched a video about the naval actions at and near Leyte Gulf.
Rick
Hey Rick;
DeleteThe Japanese would have done better if they didn't have the inter-service rivalry thing going on. I thought we had it bad back then, the Japanese were worse, they even beat the Germans on the "turf war". The Army was the ones that pushed the "incident at the Marco Polo Bridge" and the further excursions into China. The Navy was more reluctant to get involved.
Actually only Iowa is in the White Fleet. New Jersey is not, AFAIK. I have been aboard IJN Mikasa, they have restored it and it is available to tour in Yokosuka, JA. The open bridge picture you used IS correct!!! Absolutely amazing they would just stand out in the open like that!
ReplyDeleteHey Old NFO;
DeleteMy Bad, I thought it was 2 of them. It is on my bucket list to check out the U.S.S Olympia and the IJN Mikasa. As I understand it, Admiral Nimitz was instrumental in saving that ship after WWII. I also had another picture of the same kind of thing..I gotta find it, LOL