Matsu
Country | Japan |
Ship Class | Matsu-class Destroyer |
Builder | Maizuru Naval Arsenal |
Laid Down | 8 Aug 1943 |
Launched | 3 Feb 1944 |
Commissioned | 28 Apr 1944 |
Sunk | 4 Aug 1944 |
Displacement | 1,282 tons standard; 1,530 tons full |
Length | 328 feet |
Beam | 30 feet |
Draft | 10 feet |
Machinery | Two Kampon water tube boilers, two Kampon impulse turbines, two shafts |
Power Output | 19,000 shaft horsepower |
Speed | 28 knots |
Range | 3,500nm at 18 knots |
Crew | 211 |
Contributor: C. Peter Chen
ww2dbaseMatsu was the lead ship of her class of destroyers. She was commissioned in 1944 with Lieutenant Commander Tsuneo Yonei in command as a member of Destroyer Squadron 11 of the Combined Fleet. After training missions, she was assigned to Lieutenant Commander Gen Yoshinaga on 1 Jun. On 15 Jul, she was assigned to the Destroyer Division 43 of Destroyer Squadron 11. On 29 Jul, she departed from Tateyama, Chiba, Japan as the flagship of Rear Admiral Ichimatsu Takahashi of the 2nd Convoy Escort Group, which contained all of Destroyer Squadron 11's ships. This group escorted Convoy No. 4804 to Chichi Jima, arriving on 1 Aug. On 4 Aug, she led the escorting warships back toward Japan. The group of warships was spotted by an American search plane of Task Group 58.1, and a carrier air strike soon followed. Matsu was struck by a torpedo launched from a TBF Avenger aircraft, slowing her down. American destroyers arrived on the scene shortly after, with USS Cogswell, USS Ingersoll, and USS Knapp firing on Matsu, outgunning Matsu 15 to 3. Furthermore, Matsu's weaponry, completely specialized for anti-aircraft purpose, were completely open, thus the gun crews were quickly cut down by the high explosive shells from the American ships, significantly decreasing her ability to fight back. She was eventually sunk about 81 kilometers northwest of Chichi Jima with only six survivors. Both Lieutenant Commander Yoshinaga and Rear Admiral Takahashi were killed.
ww2dbaseSources: Nihon Kaigun, Wikipedia.
Last Major Revision: Dec 2008
Matsu Operational Timeline
28 Apr 1944 | Matsu was commissioned into service. |
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5 Mar 2024 04:04:08 PM
The Matsu and Tachibana class destroyers were officially termed as second-rate destroyers, but the term only applies to destroyers under 1000 tons displacement. Therefore, they should be first-rate destroyers.