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Battle of Tassafaronga

The Battle of Tassafaronga, sometimes referred to as the Fourth Battle of Savo Island or, in Japanese sources, as the Battle of Lunga Point (ルンガ沖夜戦 - Lunga naval night battle), was a nighttime naval battle that took place on November 30, 1942, between United States Navy and Imperial Japanese Navy warships during the Guadalcanal Campaign. The battle took place in Ironbottom Sound near the Tassafaronga area on Guadalcanal.

Battle of Tassafaronga
Part of the Pacific Theater of World War II

USS Minneapolis at Tulagi with torpedo damage, December 1, 1942
DateNovember 30, 1942
Location
Result Japanese victory
Belligerents
 Japan  United States
Commanders and leaders
Raizō Tanaka
Sato Torajiro
Giichiro Nakahara
Carleton Wright
Mahlon S. Tisdale
William M. Cole
Laurence A. Abercrombie
Units involved

8th Fleet

  • Destroyer Squadron 2

Sixth Fleet

Strength
8 destroyers 4 heavy cruisers
1 light cruiser
6 destroyers
Casualties and losses
197-211 killed[1]
1 destroyer sunk
395 killed[2]
1 heavy cruiser sunk
3 heavy cruisers severely damaged

In the battle, a US force of five cruisers and four destroyers under the command of Rear Admiral Carleton H. Wright intercepted eight Japanese destroyers attempting to deliver food to their forces on Guadalcanal. The US destroyers waited four minutes after radar contact for permission to launch torpedoes and missed the optimal firing position; the torpedoes all missed and the destroyers retired. The US cruisers opened fire and sank one destroyer. The muzzle flash exposed the US cruisers' positions. Under the command of Rear Admiral Raizō Tanaka, Japanese destroyers quickly launched Type 93 "Long Lance" torpedoes, sinking one US cruiser and heavily damaging three others. The rest of Tanaka's force escaped undamaged but failed to complete the intended supply mission.

Rear Admiral Samuel J. Cox, director of the Naval History and Heritage Command, considers this battle and the Battle of Savo Island to be two of the worst defeats in U.S. naval history, behind only Pearl Harbor.[3][4][5]

Background

Guadalcanal Campaign

On August 7, 1942, Allied forces landed on Guadalcanal, Tulagi, and the Florida Islands in the Solomon Islands. The landings were meant to deny the Japanese access to bases that they could use to threaten supply routes between the US and Australia, and to secure the islands as starting points for a campaign with the eventual goal of neutralizing the major Japanese base at Rabaul while also supporting the Allied New Guinea campaign. The landings began the six-month Guadalcanal campaign.[6]

The nearly 2,000 to 3,000 Japanese personnel on the islands were taken by complete surprise, and by nightfall on August 8, the 11,000 Allied troops, under the command of Lieutenant General Alexander Vandegrift, secured Tulagi and nearby small islands as well as the Japanese airfield under construction at Lunga Point on Guadalcanal, later renamed "Henderson Field" by the Allies. Allied aircraft operating from Henderson were called the "Cactus Air Force" (CAF) after the Allied code name for Guadalcanal. To protect the airfield, the US Marines established a perimeter defense around Lunga Point. Reinforcements over the next two months increased the number of US troops at Lunga Point on Guadalcanal to more than 20,000.[7]

In response to the Allied landings on Guadalcanal, the Japanese Imperial General Headquarters assigned the Imperial Japanese Army's 17th Army, a corps-sized command based at Rabaul and under the command of Lieutenant General Harukichi Hyakutake, the task of retaking the island. The first units of the 17th Army began to arrive there on August 19.[8]

 
The Solomon Islands. "The Slot" (New Georgia Sound) runs down the center of the islands, from Bougainville and the Shortlands (center) to Guadalcanal (lower right).

Because of the threat by CAF aircraft based at Henderson Field, the Japanese were rarely able to use large, slow transport ships or barges to deliver troops and supplies to the island; instead, they used warships based at Rabaul and the Shortland Islands to carry their forces to Guadalcanal. The Japanese warships, mainly light cruisers and destroyers from the Eighth Fleet under the command of Vice Admiral Gunichi Mikawa, were usually able to make the round trip down "The Slot" to Guadalcanal and back in a single night, thereby minimizing their exposure to CAF air attack. Delivering the troops in this manner, however, prevented most of the soldiers' heavy equipment and supplies, such as heavy artillery, vehicles, and much food and ammunition, from being carried to Guadalcanal with them. These high speed warship runs to Guadalcanal occurred throughout the campaign and were later called the "Tokyo Express" by Allied forces and "Rat Transportation" by the Japanese.[9]

The Japanese attempted several times between August and November 1942 to recapture Henderson Field and drive Allied forces from Guadalcanal, to no avail. The last attempt by the Japanese to deliver significant additional forces to the island failed during the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal of November 12–15.[10]

On November 26, Japanese Lieutenant General Hitoshi Imamura took command of the new Eighth Area Army at Rabaul. The new command encompassed both Hyakutake's 17th Army in the Solomons and the 18th Army in New Guinea. One of Imamura's first priorities upon assuming command was the continuation of the attempts to retake Henderson Field and Guadalcanal. However, the Allied attempt to take Buna in New Guinea changed Imamura's priorities; it was considered a more severe threat to Rabaul, and Imamura postponed further major reinforcement efforts to Guadalcanal to concentrate on the situation in New Guinea.[11]

Supply crisis

 
Raizō Tanaka
 
Carleton H. Wright

Due to a combination of the threat from CAF aircraft, US Navy PT boats stationed at Tulagi, and a cycle of bright moonlight, the Japanese had switched to using submarines to deliver provisions to their forces on Guadalcanal. Beginning on November 16, 1942, and continuing for the next three weeks, 16 submarines made nocturnal deliveries of foodstuffs to the island, with one submarine making the trip each night. Each submarine could deliver 20 to 30 tons of supplies, about one day's worth of food, for the 17th Army, but the difficult task of transporting the supplies by hand through the jungle to the frontline units limited their value to sustain the Japanese troops on Guadalcanal. At the same time, the Japanese tried to establish a chain of three bases in the central Solomons to allow small boats to use them as staging sites for making supply deliveries to Guadalcanal, but damaging Allied airstrikes on the bases forced the abandonment of this plan.[12]

On November 26, the 17th Army notified Imamura that it faced a critical food crisis. Some front-line units had not been resupplied for six days and even the rear-area troops were on one-third rations. The situation forced the Japanese to return to using destroyers to deliver the necessary supplies.[13]

Eighth Fleet personnel devised a plan to help reduce the exposure of destroyers delivering supplies to Guadalcanal. Large oil or gas drums were cleaned and filled with medical supplies and food, with enough air space to provide buoyancy, and strung together with rope. When the destroyers arrived at Guadalcanal they would make a sharp turn, the drums would be cut loose, and a swimmer or boat from the shore could pick up the buoyed end of the rope and return it to the beach, where the soldiers could haul in the supplies.[14]

The Eighth Fleet's Guadalcanal Reinforcement Unit, based in the Shortland Islands and under the command of Rear Admiral Raizō Tanaka, was tasked by Mikawa with making the first of five scheduled runs using the drum method on the night of November 30. Tanaka's unit was centered on the eight ships of Destroyer Squadron (Desron) 2, with six destroyers assigned to carry from 200 to 240 drums of supplies apiece, to Tassafaronga at Guadalcanal. Tanaka's flagship Naganami along with Takanami acted as escorts. The six drum-carrying destroyers were Kuroshio, Oyashio, Kagerō, Suzukaze, Kawakaze, and Makinami. To save weight, the drum-carrying destroyers left their reloads of Type 93 torpedoes (Long Lances)[15] at the Shortlands, leaving each ship with eight torpedoes, one for each tube.[16]

After the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal, US Vice Admiral William Halsey, commander of Allied forces in the South Pacific, had reorganized US naval forces under his command, including, on November 24, the formation of Task Force 67 (TF67) at Espiritu Santo, comprising the heavy cruisers USS Minneapolis, New Orleans, Pensacola, and Northampton, the light cruiser Honolulu, and four destroyers (Fletcher, Drayton, Maury, and Perkins). US Rear Admiral Carleton H. Wright replaced Thomas Kinkaid as commander of TF67 on November 28.[17]

Upon taking command, Wright briefed his ship commanders on his plan for engaging the Japanese in future; he expected night battles around Guadalcanal. The plan, which he had drafted with Kinkaid, stated that radar-equipped destroyers were to scout in front of the cruisers and deliver a surprise torpedo attack upon sighting Japanese warships, then vacate the area to give the cruisers a clear field of fire. The cruisers were then to engage with gunfire at a range of 10,000 to 12,000 yards (9,100 to 11,000 m). The cruisers' floatplanes would scout and drop flares during the battle.[18]

 
TF67 heads for Guadalcanal on November 30. Fletcher (foreground) is followed by Perkins, Maury, Drayton, and the cruisers (far distance).

On November 29, Allied intelligence personnel intercepted and decoded a Japanese message transmitted to the 17th Army on Guadalcanal alerting them to Tanaka's supply run. Informed of the message, Halsey ordered Wright to take TF67 to intercept Tanaka off Guadalcanal. TF67, with Wright flying his flag on Minneapolis, departed Espiritu Santo at 27 knots (31 mph; 50 km/h) just before midnight on November 29 for the 580 miles (930 km) run to Guadalcanal. En route, destroyers Lamson and Lardner, returning from a convoy escort assignment to Guadalcanal, were ordered to join up with TF67. Lacking the time to brief the commanding officers of the joining destroyers of his battle plan, Wright assigned them a position behind the cruisers. At 17:00 on November 30, Wright's cruisers launched one floatplane each for Tulagi to drop flares during the expected battle that night. At 20:00, Wright sent his crews to battle stations.[19]

Tanaka's force departed the Shortlands just after midnight on November 30 for the run to Guadalcanal. Tanaka attempted to evade Allied aerial reconnaissance aircraft by first heading northeast through Bougainville Strait before turning southeast and then south to pass through Indispensable Strait. Paul Mason, an Australian coastwatcher stationed in southern Bougainville, reported by radio the departure of Tanaka's ships from Shortland, and this message was passed to Wright. At the same time, a Japanese search aircraft spotted an Allied convoy near Guadalcanal and communicated the sighting to Tanaka who told his destroyer commanders to expect action that night and that, "In such an event, utmost efforts will be made to destroy the enemy without regard for the unloading of supplies."[20]

Battle

Order of battle

United States Task Force 67 Japan Destroyer Squadron 2 [ja]
TF/TG Vessel[a] Commander[b] TF Vessel Commander
Vanguard TG 67.4 Fletcher (DD)(g) Cdr. William M. Cole Des Div 31
Perkins (DD)(g) Lt. Cdr. Walter Chilcott Ford[23] Escort Force Naganami (DD) (FF) Rear Admiral Raizō Tanaka

Cdr. Kumabe Tsutau[24]

Maury (DD) Lt. Cdr. Gelzer Loyall Sims[25][26] Takanami (DD) Cdr. Ogura Masami [ja][27]
Drayton (DD)(g) Lt. Cdr. Jacob Elliott Cooper Transport Force 1 (to Tassafaronga Point) Makinami (DD) Cdr. Hitomi Toyoji [ja][28]
TF 67.2 Minneapolis (CA)(g) Rear Admiral Carleton H. Wright
Capt. Charles E. Rosendahl
Des Div 15
New Orleans (CA)(g) Capt. Clifford H. Roper Oyashio (DD) Capt. Sato Torajiro[29]
Lt. Cdr. Hideo Azuma
Pensacola (CA) Capt. Frank L. Lowe Kuroshio (DD) Cdr. Hajimi Takeuchi
TG 67.2.3 Honolulu (CL)(g) Rear Admiral Mahlon S. Tisdale

Capt. Robert W. Hayler

Kagero (DD) Cdr. Terumichi Arimoto
Northampton (CA)(x) Capt. Willard A. Kitts III Des Div 24
rearguard Lamson (DD) Cdr. Laurence A. Abercrombie
Lt. Cdr. Phillip Henry Fitzgerald
Transport Force 2 Kawakaze (DD) Cdr. Giichiro Nakahara [ja]
Lt. Cdr. Yoshio Yanase[30]
Lardner (DD) Lt. Cdr. Willard M. Sweeter Suzukaze (DD) Lt. Cdr. Kazuo Shibayama
  1. ^ (g): SG onboard; SG radar detects surface craft and is also useful for night navigation.
    (x): CXAM onboard; CXAM radar is a medium range radar to detect both ships and aircraft.[21][22]
  2. ^ Officer in tactical command is in bold

Prelude

 
US Navy chart of the Battle of Tassafaronga based on accounts by both Japanese and US participants

At 21:40 on November 30, Tanaka's ships sighted Savo Island from Indispensable Strait. The Japanese ships were in line ahead formation, interval 600 metres (660 yd), in the order of Takanami, Oyashio, Kuroshio, Kagerō, Makinami, Naganami, Kawakaze, and Suzukaze. At this same time, TF67 entered Lengo Channel en route to Ironbottom Sound. Wright's ships were in column in the order Fletcher, Perkins, Maury, Drayton, Minneapolis, New Orleans, Pensacola, Honolulu, Northampton, Lamson, and Lardner. The four van destroyers led the cruisers by 4,000 yards (3,700 m) and the cruisers steamed 1,000 yards (910 m) apart.[31]

At 22:40, Tanaka's ships passed south of Savo about 3 miles (5 km) offshore from Guadalcanal and slowed to 12 knots (14 mph; 22 km/h) as they approached the unloading area. Takanami took station about 1 mile (2 km) seaward to screen the column. At the same time, TF67 exited Lengo Channel into the sound and headed at 20 knots (23 mph; 37 km/h) towards Savo Island. Wright's van destroyers moved to a position slightly inshore of the cruisers. The night sky was moonless (the third-quarter moon would rise after midnight,[32] after the fight was over) with between 2 miles (3 km) and 7 miles (11 km) of visibility. Because of extremely calm seas, which created a suction effect on their pontoons, Wright's cruiser floatplanes were delayed in lifting off from Tulagi harbor, and would not be a factor in the battle.[33]

At 23:06, Wright's force began to detect Tanaka's ships on radar near Cape Esperance on Guadalcanal about 23,000 yards (21,000 m) away. Wright's destroyers rejoined the column as it continued to head towards Savo. At the same time, Tanaka's ships, which were not equipped with radar, split into two groups and prepared to shove the drums overboard. Naganami, Kawakaze, and Suzukaze headed for their drop-off point near Doma Reef while Makinami, Kagerō, Oyashio, and Kuroshio aimed for nearby Tassafaronga. At 23:12, Takanami's crew visually sighted Wright's column, quickly confirmed by lookouts on Tanaka's other ships. At 23:16, Tanaka ordered unloading preparations halted and "All ships attack."[34]

Action

 
USS Minneapolis

At 23:14, operators on Fletcher established firm radar contact with Takanami and the lead group of four drum-carrying destroyers. At 23:15, with the range 7,000 yards (6,400 m), Commander William M. Cole, commander of Wright's destroyer group and captain of Fletcher, radioed Wright for permission to fire torpedoes. Wright waited two minutes and then responded with, "Range on bogies [Tanaka's ships on radar] excessive at present."[35] Cole responded that the range was fine. Another two minutes passed before Wright responded with permission to fire. In the meantime, the US destroyers' targets escaped from an optimum firing setup ahead to a marginal position passing abeam, giving the American torpedoes a long overtaking run near the limit of their range. At 23:20, Fletcher, Perkins, and Drayton fired a total of 20 Mark 15 torpedoes towards Tanaka's ships. Maury, lacking SG radar and thus having no contacts, withheld fire.[36]

At the same time, Wright ordered his force to open fire. At 23:21, Minneapolis complied with her first salvo, quickly followed by the other American cruisers. Cole's four destroyers fired star shells to illuminate the targets as previously directed then increased speed to clear the area for the cruisers to operate.[37]

Because of her closer proximity to Wright's column, Takanami was the target of most of the Americans' initial gunfire. Takanami returned fire and launched her full load of eight torpedoes, but was quickly hit by American gunfire and, within four minutes, was set afire and incapacitated. As Takanami was destroyed, the rest of Tanaka's ships, almost unnoticed by the Americans, were increasing speed, maneuvering, and preparing to respond to the American attack. All of the American torpedoes missed.[38] Historian Russell S. Crenshaw Jr. postulates that had the twenty-four Mark 15 torpedoes fired by US Navy destroyers during the battle not been fatally flawed, the outcome of the battle might have been different.[39]

 
Japanese destroyer Kawakaze

Tanaka's flagship, Naganami, reversed course to starboard, opened fire and began laying a smoke screen. The next two ships astern, Kawakaze and Suzukaze, reversed course to port. At 23:23, Suzukaze fired eight torpedoes in the direction of the gunflashes from Wright's cruisers, followed by Naganami and Kawakaze which fired their full loads of eight torpedoes at 23:32 and 23:33 respectively.[40]

Meanwhile, the four destroyers at the head of the Japanese column maintained their heading down the Guadalcanal coast, allowing Wright's cruisers to pass on the opposite course. Once clear of Takanami at 23:28, Kuroshio fired four and Oyashio fired eight torpedoes in the direction of Wright's column and then reversed course and increased speed. Wright's cruisers maintained the same course and speed as the 44 Japanese torpedoes headed in their direction.[41]

At 23:27, as Minneapolis fired her ninth salvo and Wright prepared to order a course change for his column, two torpedoes, from either Suzukaze or Takanami, struck her forward half. One warhead exploded the aviation fuel storage tanks forward of turret one and the other knocked out three of the ship's four firerooms. The bow forward of turret one folded down at a 70-degree angle and the ship lost power and steering control. Thirty-seven men were killed.[42]

 
New Orleans near Tulagi the morning after the battle, showing everything missing forward of turret two

Less than a minute later a torpedo hit New Orleans abreast of turret one and exploded the ship's forward ammunition magazines and aviation gasoline storage. The blast severed the ship's entire bow forward of turret two. The bow twisted to port, damaging the ship's hull as it was wrenched free by the ship's momentum, and sank immediately off the aft port quarter. Everyone in turrets one and two perished. New Orleans was forced into a reverse course to starboard and lost steering and communications. A total of 183 men were killed.[43] Herbert Brown, a seaman in the ship's plotting room, described the scene after the torpedo hit:

I had to see. I walked alongside the silent turret two and was stopped by a lifeline stretched from the outboard port lifeline to the side of the turret. Thank God it was there, for one more step and I would have pitched head first into the dark water thirty feet below. The bow was gone. One hundred and twenty five feet of ship and number one main battery turret with three 8 inch guns were gone. Eighteen hundred tons of ship were gone. Oh my God, all those guys I went through boot camp with – all gone.[44]

Pensacola followed next astern in the cruiser column. Observing Minneapolis and New Orleans taking hits and slowing, Pensacola steered to pass them on the port side and then, once past, returned to the same base course. At 23:39, Pensacola took a torpedo abreast the mainmast. The explosion spread flaming oil throughout the interior and across the main deck of the ship, killing 125 of the ship's crew. The hit ripped away the port outer driveshaft and the ship took a 13-degree list and lost power, communications, and steering.[45]

Astern of Pensacola, Honolulu's captain chose to pass Minneapolis and New Orleans on the starboard side. At the same time, the ship increased speed to 30 knots (35 mph; 56 km/h), maneuvered radically, and successfully transited the battle area without taking any damage while maintaining main battery fire at the rapidly disappearing Japanese destroyers.[46]

The last cruiser in the American column, Northampton, followed Honolulu to pass the damaged cruisers ahead to starboard. Unlike Honolulu, Northampton did not increase speed or attempt any radical maneuvers. At 23:48, after returning to the base course, Northampton was hit by two of Kawakaze's torpedoes. One hit 10 feet (3 m) below the waterline abreast the after engine room, and four seconds later, the second hit 40 feet (12 m) further aft. The after engine room flooded, three of four shafts ceased turning, and the ship listed 10 degrees to port and caught fire. Fifty men were killed.[47]

The last ships in Wright's column, Lamson and Lardner, failed to locate any targets and exited the battle area to the east after being mistakenly fired on by machine guns from New Orleans. Cole's four destroyers circled completely around Savo Island at maximum speed and reentered the battle area, but the engagement had already ended.[48]

Meanwhile, at 23:44 Tanaka ordered his ships to break contact and retire from the battle area. As they proceeded up Guadalcanal's coast, Kuroshio and Kagerō fired eight more torpedoes towards the American ships, which all missed. When Takanami failed to respond to radio calls, Tanaka directed Oyashio and Kuroshio to go to her assistance. The two destroyers located the burning ship at 01:00 on December 1 but abandoned rescue efforts after detecting American warships in the area. Oyashio and Kuroshio quickly departed the sound to rejoin the rest of Tanaka's ships for the return journey to the Shortlands, which they reached 10 hours later. Takanami was the only Japanese warship hit by American gunfire and seriously damaged during the battle.[49]

Aftermath

Takanami's surviving crew abandoned ship at 01:30, but a large explosion killed many more of them in the water, including the destroyer division commander, Toshio Shimizu, and the ship's captain, Masami Ogura. Of her crew of 244, 48 survived to reach shore on Guadalcanal and 19 of them were captured by the Americans.[50]

 
A PT boat carries Northampton survivors near Tulagi on the morning of December 1. New Orleans is in the background.

Northampton's crew was unable to contain the ship's fires and list and began to abandon ship at 01:30. The ship sank at 03:04 about 4 nautical miles (7 km; 5 mi) from Doma Cove on Guadalcanal (09°12′S 159°50′E / 9.200°S 159.833°E / -9.200; 159.833). Fletcher and Drayton rescued the ship's 773 survivors.[51]

Minneapolis, New Orleans, and Pensacola were able to sail the 19 nautical miles (35 km; 22 mi) to Tulagi by the morning of December 1, where they were berthed for emergency repairs. The fires on Pensacola burned for 12 hours before being extinguished. Pensacola departed Tulagi for rear area ports and further repair on December 6. After construction of temporary bows from coconut logs, Minneapolis and New Orleans departed Tulagi for Espiritu Santo or Sydney, Australia on December 12. All three cruisers required lengthy and extensive repairs. New Orleans returned to action in August, Minneapolis in September, and Pensacola in October 1943.[52]

The battle was one of the worst defeats suffered by the US Navy in World War II, third only to the Attack on Pearl Harbor and the Battle of Savo Island. In spite of his defeat in the battle, Wright was awarded the Navy Cross, one of the highest American military decorations for bravery, for his actions during the engagement. Mitigating to some degree the destruction of his task force, Wright, in his after-action report, claimed that his force sank four Japanese destroyers and damaged two others. Halsey, in his comments on Wright's report, placed much of the blame for the defeat on Cole, saying that the destroyer squadron commander fired his torpedoes from too great a distance to be effective and should have "helped" the cruisers instead of circling around Savo Island. Tanaka claimed to have sunk a battleship and two cruisers in the battle.[53] After the war, Tanaka said of his victory at Tassafaronga, "I have heard that US naval experts praised my command in that action. I am not deserving of such honors. It was the superb proficiency and devotion of the men who served me that produced the tactical victory for us."[54] As for the U.S. Navy, he said: "The enemy had discovered our plans and movements, had put planes in the air beforehand for purposes of illumination, had got into formation for an artillery engagement, and cleverly gained the advantage of prior neutralization fire. But his fire was inaccurate, shells improperly set for deflection were especially numerous, and it is conjectured that either his marksmanship is not remarkable or else the illumination from his star shells was not sufficiently effective.”[55]

 
New Orleans 'B' turret following a Japanese torpedo-initiated explosion of the forward magazine

Historian Samuel Eliot Morison assessed the outcome by saying: "It is a painful truth that the Battle of Tassafaronga was a sharp defeat inflicted on an alert and superior cruiser force by a partially surprised and inferior destroyer force."[56]

Cole's experience at Tassafaronga led to Arleigh Burke's standing orders to his own ships that "destroyers are to attack the enemy on first contact without awaiting orders from task force commander," which were instrumental in his success in the battles of Empress Augusta Bay and Cape St. George. Cole also influenced Commander Frederick Moosbrugger's tactics at the Battle of Vella Gulf, in which Moosbrugger withheld gunfire until his own torpedoes were observed hitting enemy ships, surprising the Japanese.[57]

The results of the battle led to further discussion in the US Pacific Fleet about changes in tactical doctrine and the need for technical improvements, such as flashless powder. It was not until eight months later that the naval high command recognized there were serious problems with the functioning of the torpedoes.[58] The Americans were still unaware of the range and power of Japanese torpedoes and the effectiveness of Japanese night battle tactics. In fact, Wright claimed that his ships must have been fired on by submarines since the observed position of Tanaka's ships "make it improbable that torpedoes with speed-distance characteristics similar to our own" could have caused such damage. The Americans would not recognize the true capabilities of their Pacific adversary's torpedoes and night tactics until well into 1943.[59]

 
Pensacola (center) and New Orleans (right) (with Salt Lake City) at Pearl Harbor on October 31, 1943 after completion of repairs

In spite of their defeat in the battle, the Americans had prevented Tanaka from landing the desperately needed food supplies on Guadalcanal, albeit at high cost. A second Japanese supply delivery attempt by ten destroyers led by Tanaka on December 3 successfully dumped 1,500 drums of provisions off Tassafaronga, but strafing American aircraft sank all but 310 of them the next day before they could be pulled ashore. On December 7, a third attempt by 12 destroyers was turned back by US PT boats off Cape Esperance. The next night, two US PT boats torpedoed and sank the Japanese submarine I-3 as it attempted to deliver supplies to Guadalcanal. Based on the difficulties experienced trying to deliver food to the island, the Japanese Navy informed Imamura on December 8 that they intended to stop all destroyer transportation runs to Guadalcanal immediately. After Imamura protested, the navy agreed to one more run to the island.[60]

The last attempt to deliver food to Guadalcanal by destroyers in 1942 was led by Tanaka on the night of December 11 and consisted of 11 destroyers. Five US PT boats met Tanaka off Guadalcanal and torpedoed his flagship Teruzuki, severely damaging the destroyer and injuring Tanaka. After Tanaka transferred to Naganami, Teruzuki was scuttled. Only 220 of the 1,200 drums released that night were recovered by Japanese army personnel on shore. Tanaka was subsequently relieved of command and transferred to Japan on December 29, 1942.[61]

On December 12, the Japanese Navy proposed that Guadalcanal be abandoned. Despite opposition from Japanese Army leaders, who still hoped that Guadalcanal could eventually be retaken from the Allies, on December 31, 1942 Japan's Imperial General Headquarters, with approval from the Emperor, agreed to the evacuation of all Japanese forces from the island and the establishment of a new line of defense for the Solomon Islands on New Georgia. The Japanese evacuated their remaining forces from Guadalcanal over three nights between February 2 and February 7, 1943, conceding the hard-fought campaign to the Allies. Building on their success at Guadalcanal and elsewhere, the Allies continued their campaign against Japan, ultimately culminating in Japan's defeat and the end of World War II.[62]

Notes

  1. ^ Nevitt, Allyn D., Combinedfleet.com: IJN Takanami, accessed April 2, 2008. Dull, p. 255; Evans, pp. 202–203; Kilpatrick, p. 146; Frank, p. 513. Of Takanami's crew, Frank says 33 survived and Kilpatrick says 26 were captured by the Americans. Dull & Frank says 211 of the crew died.
  2. ^ Frank, p. 516. Crenshaw, p. 99, quotes a report by Chester Nimitz stating that 398 men and 19 officers were killed in the battle.
  3. ^ "Solomons Campaign: Guadalcanal". Naval History and Heritage Command. The Japanese were able to inflict heavy damage on the U.S. ships, but were unable to complete their resupply mission, with deleterious effects for their troops on Guadalcanal.
  4. ^ "H-Gram 009: Savo Island". H-Gram. No. 9. Naval History and Heritage Command. 8 August 2017. the naval battles around Guadalcanal were bookended with two of the worst defeats in U.S. naval history (Savo Island and Tassafaronga), eclipsed only by Pearl Harbor.
  5. ^ "H-013-1 The Battle of Tassafaronga". H-Gram. No. 13. Naval History and Heritage Command. 7 December 2017. Thus ended one of the most ignominious defeats in U.S. Navy history, although technically Wright and TF-67 succeeded in their mission, since none of the supplies from Tanaka's destroyers made it ashore to starving Japanese troops on Guadalcanal.
  6. ^ Hogue, pp. 235–236.
  7. ^ Morison, pp. 14–15; Miller, p. 143; Frank, p. 338; Shaw, p. 18.
  8. ^ Griffith, pp. 96–99; Dull, p. 225; Miller, pp. 137–138.
  9. ^ Frank, pp. 202, 210–211.
  10. ^ Morison, pp. 108–287; Frank, pp. 141–143, 156–158, 228–246, 337–367, 428–492, 681.
  11. ^ Dull, p. 261; Frank, pp. 497–499.
  12. ^ Frank, pp. 500–502; Jersey, pp. 342–343. The barge bases were established in the Shortland Islands and on Vella Lavella and Gizo.
  13. ^ Evans, pp. 197–198; Crenshaw, p. 136; Frank, pp. 499–502.
  14. ^ Hara, pp. 160–161; Roscoe, p. 206; Dull, p. 262; Evans, pp. 197–198; Crenshaw, p. 137; Toland, p. 419; Frank, p. 502; Morison, p. 295.
  15. ^ Brown, D. pp. 16, 209
  16. ^ Dull, pp. 262–263; Evans, pp. 198–199; Crenshaw, p. 137; Morison, p. 297; Frank, pp. 502–504.
  17. ^ United States Strategic Bombing Survey (USSBS), p. 139; Roscoe, p. 206; Dull, pp. 262–263; Crenshaw, pp. 25–27; Kilpatrick, p. 135; Morison, pp. 291–293, 296; Frank, pp. 503–504.
  18. ^ Roscoe, p. 207; Dull, pp. 262–263; Crenshaw, pp. 25–27; Kilpatrick, p. 137; Morison, p. 294; Frank, p. 503.
  19. ^ Brown, pp. 124–125; USSBS, p. 139;, Roscoe, p. 206; Dull, p. 262; Crenshaw, pp. 26–33; Kilpatrick, pp. 139–142; Morison, pp. 294–296; Frank, p. 504.
  20. ^ Hara, p. 161; USSBS, p. 139; D'Albas, p. 228; Evans, p. 199; Crenshaw, pp. 137–138; Kilpatrick, pp. 140–141; Morison, pp. 295–296; Frank, p. 504.
  21. ^ "H-013-1: The Battle of Tassafaronga—Night of the Long Lances 30 November–1 December 1942". H-Gram. No. 13. 7 December 2017.
  22. ^ Office of Naval Intelligence, U.S. Navy. "Combat Narratives: Solomon Islands Campaign: VII Battle of Tassafaronga, 30 November 1942".
  23. ^ "Walter Ford - Recipient -". Hall of Valor: The Military Medals Database.
  24. ^ "人名事典くま". The Naval Data Base.
  25. ^ "Gelzer Sims - Recipient -". Hall of Valor: The Military Medals Database.
  26. ^ "Destroyer Photo Index DD-401 USS MAURY". NavSource.org.
  27. ^ "人名事典おくら". The Naval Data Base.
  28. ^ "人名事典ひた". The Naval Data Base.
  29. ^ "人名事典さとう(た)". The Naval Data Base.
  30. ^ "人名事典やな". The Naval Data Base.
  31. ^ USSBS, pp. 139–140; Roscoe, p. 207; Evans, p. 199; Crenshaw, pp. 33–34; Kilpatrick, pp. 142–143; Morison, pp. 297–298; Frank, p. 507.
  32. ^ "1942 Moon Phases". calendar-12.com.
  33. ^ Hara, p. 161; USSBS, p. 139; Roscoe, p. 207; Evans, pp. 199–200; Crenshaw, pp. 34, 63, 139; Kilpatrick, pp. 143–144; Morison, pp. 297–298, 305; Frank, p. 507.
  34. ^ USSBS, p. 139; Roscoe, p. 207; Dull, pp. 263–265; Evans, p. 200; Crenshaw, pp. 48–49, 139, 145; Kilpatrick, pp. 143–144; Morison, pp. 297–298; Frank, pp. 507–508.
  35. ^ Kilpatrick, p. 144; Morison, p. 299; Frank, p. 508.
  36. ^ Roscoe, pp. 207–208; Dull, pp. 263–265; Crenshaw, pp. 48–51; Kilpatrick, pp. 144–145; Frank, p. 508; Morison, pp. 299–300. Fletcher fired ten, Perkins eight, and Drayton two torpedoes.
  37. ^ Brown, p. 128; Roscoe, p. 208; Dull, pp. 263–265; Evans, pp. 200–201; Crenshaw, pp. 51–54; Kilpatrick, pp. 145–146; Morison, p. 300; Frank, pp. 508–509. Tanaka thought that Cole's destroyer's star shells were flares dropped by aircraft.
  38. ^ Hara, pp. 162–163; USSBS, p. 139; Roscoe, p. 208; Dull, pp. 263–265; Evans, p. 200; Crenshaw, pp. 146–147; Kilpatrick, pp. 145–146; Morison, pp. 301–302; Frank, p. 509; Toland, p. 420.
  39. ^ Crenshaw Jr., Russell S. The Battle of Tassafaronga, p. 155.
  40. ^ Dull, p. 265; Evans, pp. 201–202; Crenshaw, pp. 146–148; Morison, p. 302; Frank, pp. 509–510.
  41. ^ Hara, p. 164; Dull, p. 265; Evans, pp. 201–202; Crenshaw, pp. 146–151; Morison, pp. 302–303; Frank, pp. 509–510.
  42. ^ Roscoe, p. 208; Dull, p. 265; D'Albas, p. 229; Crenshaw, p. 56; Kilpatrick, p. 146; Morison, pp. 303–304; Frank, pp. 510–511, 514. After his ship was hit, Wright turned command of his force over to Rear Admiral Mahlon S. Tisdale on Honolulu.
  43. ^ Brown, pp. 137–138; Roscoe, p. 208; Dull, pp. 265–266; D'Albas, p. 229; Crenshaw, pp. 56–57; Kilpatrick, p. 146; Morison, pp. 304–305; Frank, p. 511.
  44. ^ Brown, pp. 134–135.
  45. ^ Roscoe, p. 208; Dull, p. 266; D'Albas, p. 229; Crenshaw, pp. 57–58; Kilpatrick, pp. 147–148; Morison, pp. 305–306; Frank, pp. 511–512, 514.
  46. ^ Roscoe, p. 208; Dull, p. 266; Crenshaw, pp. 58–59; Kilpatrick, pp. 148–149; Morison, p. 306; Frank, p. 512.
  47. ^ Roscoe, p. 208; Dull, p. 266; D'Albas, p. 229; Crenshaw, pp. 59–60; Kilpatrick, pp. 148–149; Morison, pp. 306–307; Frank, pp. 512–513.
  48. ^ Roscoe, p. 208; Crenshaw, pp. 59–60; Kilpatrick, pp. 148–149; Morison, pp. 306–307; Frank, pp. 512–513.
  49. ^ D'Albas, p. 232; Evans, p. 202; Crenshaw, pp. 152–154; Kilpatrick, p. 151; Morison, p. 307; Frank, p. 513.
  50. ^ Nevitt, Allyn D., CombinedFleet.com, April 2, 2008; Dull, p. 265; Evans, pp. 202–203; Kilpatrick, p. 146; Frank, p. 513. Frank says 33 survived and Kilpatrick says 26 were captured by the Americans. Dull says 211 of her crew died.
  51. ^ Roscoe, p. 209; D'Albas, p. 232; Evans, p. 521; Crenshaw, pp. 65–66; Kilpatrick, p. 149; Morison, p. 312; Frank, pp. 514–515.
  52. ^ Brown, pp. 141–158, 173; Crenshaw, p. 68; Kilpatrick, pp. 154–156; Morison, pp. 309–312; Frank, pp. 514–515.
  53. ^ Hara, p. 164; Crenshaw, pp. 102, 107; Kilpatrick, pp. 151–154; Morison, p. 314; Frank, pp. 515–516. Of Cole's actions, Halsey stated, "Destroyers fired torpedoes at an excessive range. Torpedo firing ranges at night of more than 4,000–5,000 yards are not acceptable." and "The van destroyers, after firing torpedoes, did not assist the cruisers, but turned away and retired to the northwest. Similar lack of offensive action on the part of destroyers in future operations will not be tolerated." Says Crenshaw of Halsey's comments on Cole's actions, "Admirals Halsey and Nimitz, aided and abetted by their large staffs, didn't understand what had happened, yet felt they must take a firm stand to encourage better performance in the future. After exploring every aspect they could think of, they ended in heaping criticism on the only subordinate who had used his weapons to their maximum capability and who had handled his ships with both skill and determination."
  54. ^ Hara, p. 164; Roscoe, p. 209; Coombe, p. 140; Crenshaw, pp. 88, 102, 105; Frank, pp. 516–517.
  55. ^ USSBS, p. 139.
  56. ^ Morison 1958, p. 313.
  57. ^ "2. Guadalcanal: Battle of Tassafaronga—Night of the Long Lances". H-Gram. No. 13. Naval History and Heritage Command. 7 December 2017.
  58. ^ Crenshaw Jr., Russell S. The Battle of Tassafaronga, p. 161.
  59. ^ Hara, p. 164; Roscoe, p. 209; Coombe, p. 140; Crenshaw, p. 88, 102, 105; Frank, p. 516–517.
  60. ^ Roscoe, p. 209; Dull, pp. 266–267; D'Albas, pp. 232–233; Evans, pp. 203–205; Kilpatrick, p. 156; Morison, pp. 318–319; Frank, pp. 518–521, 523. Tanaka states that the reasons that the 1,500 drums weren't pulled to shore immediately after his destroyers unloaded them was due "to the lack of shore personnel to haul in the lines, the physical exhaustion of the men who were available, and the fact that many of the ropes parted when drums got stuck on obstacles in the water". (Evans, p. 204.) Only four of I-3's crew survived her sinking and reached Japanese forces ashore (Hackett & Kingsepp, "HIJMS Submarine I-3: Tabular Record of Movement" [1]).
  61. ^ Hara, p. 164; Roscoe, p. 210; Dull, pp. 266–267; D'Albas, pp. 232–233; Evans, pp. 205–209; Morison, pp. 319–321; Frank, pp. 523–524.
  62. ^ Evans, pp. 208–209; Dull, pp. 261, 268; Toland, pp. 420–421.

References

  This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Naval History and Heritage Command.

External links

  • Office of Naval Intelligence, U.S. Navy. "Combat Narratives: Solomon Islands Campaign: VII Battle of Tassafaronga, 30 November 1942".
  • Horan, Mark. "Battle of Tassafaronga". Order of Battle. from the original on 17 May 2006. Retrieved 2006-05-17.
  • Hough, Frank O.; Ludwig, Verle E.; Shaw Henry I. Jr. "Pearl Harbor to Guadalcanal". History of U.S. Marine Corps Operations in World War II. from the original on 27 June 2006. Retrieved 2006-05-16.
  • McComb, David W. (2008). . Destroyer History Foundation. Archived from the original on 15 May 2008. Retrieved 2008-04-16.
  • Parshall, Jon; Hackett, Bob; Kingsepp, Sander; Nevitt, Allyn. "Imperial Japanese Navy Page (Combinedfleet.com)". from the original on 13 June 2006. Retrieved 2006-06-14.
  • War damage report of USS Northampton and New Orleans, plus summary
  • Captain TOYAMA, Yasumi, IJN. "INTERROGATION NAV NO. 60. USSBS NO. 252. BATTLE OF TASSAFARONGA, 30 NOVEMBER 1942". In United States Strategic Bombing Survey [Pacific] (ed.). Interrogations of Japanese Officials. Vol. 1. p. 254.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

battle, tassafaronga, sometimes, referred, fourth, battle, savo, island, japanese, sources, battle, lunga, point, ルンガ沖夜戦, lunga, naval, night, battle, nighttime, naval, battle, that, took, place, november, 1942, between, united, states, navy, imperial, japanes. The Battle of Tassafaronga sometimes referred to as the Fourth Battle of Savo Island or in Japanese sources as the Battle of Lunga Point ルンガ沖夜戦 Lunga naval night battle was a nighttime naval battle that took place on November 30 1942 between United States Navy and Imperial Japanese Navy warships during the Guadalcanal Campaign The battle took place in Ironbottom Sound near the Tassafaronga area on Guadalcanal Battle of TassafarongaPart of the Pacific Theater of World War IIUSS Minneapolis at Tulagi with torpedo damage December 1 1942DateNovember 30 1942LocationOff Tassafaronga Pacific OceanResultJapanese victoryBelligerents Japan United StatesCommanders and leadersRaizō Tanaka Sato Torajiro Giichiro NakaharaCarleton Wright Mahlon S Tisdale William M Cole Laurence A AbercrombieUnits involved8th Fleet Destroyer Squadron 2Sixth Fleet Task Force 67Strength8 destroyers4 heavy cruisers 1 light cruiser 6 destroyersCasualties and losses197 211 killed 1 1 destroyer sunk395 killed 2 1 heavy cruiser sunk 3 heavy cruisers severely damaged In the battle a US force of five cruisers and four destroyers under the command of Rear Admiral Carleton H Wright intercepted eight Japanese destroyers attempting to deliver food to their forces on Guadalcanal The US destroyers waited four minutes after radar contact for permission to launch torpedoes and missed the optimal firing position the torpedoes all missed and the destroyers retired The US cruisers opened fire and sank one destroyer The muzzle flash exposed the US cruisers positions Under the command of Rear Admiral Raizō Tanaka Japanese destroyers quickly launched Type 93 Long Lance torpedoes sinking one US cruiser and heavily damaging three others The rest of Tanaka s force escaped undamaged but failed to complete the intended supply mission Rear Admiral Samuel J Cox director of the Naval History and Heritage Command considers this battle and the Battle of Savo Island to be two of the worst defeats in U S naval history behind only Pearl Harbor 3 4 5 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Guadalcanal Campaign 1 2 Supply crisis 2 Battle 2 1 Order of battle 2 2 Prelude 2 3 Action 3 Aftermath 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksBackground EditGuadalcanal Campaign Edit Main article Guadalcanal Campaign On August 7 1942 Allied forces landed on Guadalcanal Tulagi and the Florida Islands in the Solomon Islands The landings were meant to deny the Japanese access to bases that they could use to threaten supply routes between the US and Australia and to secure the islands as starting points for a campaign with the eventual goal of neutralizing the major Japanese base at Rabaul while also supporting the Allied New Guinea campaign The landings began the six month Guadalcanal campaign 6 The nearly 2 000 to 3 000 Japanese personnel on the islands were taken by complete surprise and by nightfall on August 8 the 11 000 Allied troops under the command of Lieutenant General Alexander Vandegrift secured Tulagi and nearby small islands as well as the Japanese airfield under construction at Lunga Point on Guadalcanal later renamed Henderson Field by the Allies Allied aircraft operating from Henderson were called the Cactus Air Force CAF after the Allied code name for Guadalcanal To protect the airfield the US Marines established a perimeter defense around Lunga Point Reinforcements over the next two months increased the number of US troops at Lunga Point on Guadalcanal to more than 20 000 7 In response to the Allied landings on Guadalcanal the Japanese Imperial General Headquarters assigned the Imperial Japanese Army s 17th Army a corps sized command based at Rabaul and under the command of Lieutenant General Harukichi Hyakutake the task of retaking the island The first units of the 17th Army began to arrive there on August 19 8 The Solomon Islands The Slot New Georgia Sound runs down the center of the islands from Bougainville and the Shortlands center to Guadalcanal lower right Because of the threat by CAF aircraft based at Henderson Field the Japanese were rarely able to use large slow transport ships or barges to deliver troops and supplies to the island instead they used warships based at Rabaul and the Shortland Islands to carry their forces to Guadalcanal The Japanese warships mainly light cruisers and destroyers from the Eighth Fleet under the command of Vice Admiral Gunichi Mikawa were usually able to make the round trip down The Slot to Guadalcanal and back in a single night thereby minimizing their exposure to CAF air attack Delivering the troops in this manner however prevented most of the soldiers heavy equipment and supplies such as heavy artillery vehicles and much food and ammunition from being carried to Guadalcanal with them These high speed warship runs to Guadalcanal occurred throughout the campaign and were later called the Tokyo Express by Allied forces and Rat Transportation by the Japanese 9 The Japanese attempted several times between August and November 1942 to recapture Henderson Field and drive Allied forces from Guadalcanal to no avail The last attempt by the Japanese to deliver significant additional forces to the island failed during the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal of November 12 15 10 On November 26 Japanese Lieutenant General Hitoshi Imamura took command of the new Eighth Area Army at Rabaul The new command encompassed both Hyakutake s 17th Army in the Solomons and the 18th Army in New Guinea One of Imamura s first priorities upon assuming command was the continuation of the attempts to retake Henderson Field and Guadalcanal However the Allied attempt to take Buna in New Guinea changed Imamura s priorities it was considered a more severe threat to Rabaul and Imamura postponed further major reinforcement efforts to Guadalcanal to concentrate on the situation in New Guinea 11 Supply crisis Edit Raizō Tanaka Carleton H Wright Due to a combination of the threat from CAF aircraft US Navy PT boats stationed at Tulagi and a cycle of bright moonlight the Japanese had switched to using submarines to deliver provisions to their forces on Guadalcanal Beginning on November 16 1942 and continuing for the next three weeks 16 submarines made nocturnal deliveries of foodstuffs to the island with one submarine making the trip each night Each submarine could deliver 20 to 30 tons of supplies about one day s worth of food for the 17th Army but the difficult task of transporting the supplies by hand through the jungle to the frontline units limited their value to sustain the Japanese troops on Guadalcanal At the same time the Japanese tried to establish a chain of three bases in the central Solomons to allow small boats to use them as staging sites for making supply deliveries to Guadalcanal but damaging Allied airstrikes on the bases forced the abandonment of this plan 12 On November 26 the 17th Army notified Imamura that it faced a critical food crisis Some front line units had not been resupplied for six days and even the rear area troops were on one third rations The situation forced the Japanese to return to using destroyers to deliver the necessary supplies 13 Eighth Fleet personnel devised a plan to help reduce the exposure of destroyers delivering supplies to Guadalcanal Large oil or gas drums were cleaned and filled with medical supplies and food with enough air space to provide buoyancy and strung together with rope When the destroyers arrived at Guadalcanal they would make a sharp turn the drums would be cut loose and a swimmer or boat from the shore could pick up the buoyed end of the rope and return it to the beach where the soldiers could haul in the supplies 14 The Eighth Fleet s Guadalcanal Reinforcement Unit based in the Shortland Islands and under the command of Rear Admiral Raizō Tanaka was tasked by Mikawa with making the first of five scheduled runs using the drum method on the night of November 30 Tanaka s unit was centered on the eight ships of Destroyer Squadron Desron 2 with six destroyers assigned to carry from 200 to 240 drums of supplies apiece to Tassafaronga at Guadalcanal Tanaka s flagship Naganami along with Takanami acted as escorts The six drum carrying destroyers were Kuroshio Oyashio Kagerō Suzukaze Kawakaze and Makinami To save weight the drum carrying destroyers left their reloads of Type 93 torpedoes Long Lances 15 at the Shortlands leaving each ship with eight torpedoes one for each tube 16 After the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal US Vice Admiral William Halsey commander of Allied forces in the South Pacific had reorganized US naval forces under his command including on November 24 the formation of Task Force 67 TF67 at Espiritu Santo comprising the heavy cruisers USS Minneapolis New Orleans Pensacola and Northampton the light cruiser Honolulu and four destroyers Fletcher Drayton Maury and Perkins US Rear Admiral Carleton H Wright replaced Thomas Kinkaid as commander of TF67 on November 28 17 Upon taking command Wright briefed his ship commanders on his plan for engaging the Japanese in future he expected night battles around Guadalcanal The plan which he had drafted with Kinkaid stated that radar equipped destroyers were to scout in front of the cruisers and deliver a surprise torpedo attack upon sighting Japanese warships then vacate the area to give the cruisers a clear field of fire The cruisers were then to engage with gunfire at a range of 10 000 to 12 000 yards 9 100 to 11 000 m The cruisers floatplanes would scout and drop flares during the battle 18 TF67 heads for Guadalcanal on November 30 Fletcher foreground is followed by Perkins Maury Drayton and the cruisers far distance On November 29 Allied intelligence personnel intercepted and decoded a Japanese message transmitted to the 17th Army on Guadalcanal alerting them to Tanaka s supply run Informed of the message Halsey ordered Wright to take TF67 to intercept Tanaka off Guadalcanal TF67 with Wright flying his flag on Minneapolis departed Espiritu Santo at 27 knots 31 mph 50 km h just before midnight on November 29 for the 580 miles 930 km run to Guadalcanal En route destroyers Lamson and Lardner returning from a convoy escort assignment to Guadalcanal were ordered to join up with TF67 Lacking the time to brief the commanding officers of the joining destroyers of his battle plan Wright assigned them a position behind the cruisers At 17 00 on November 30 Wright s cruisers launched one floatplane each for Tulagi to drop flares during the expected battle that night At 20 00 Wright sent his crews to battle stations 19 Tanaka s force departed the Shortlands just after midnight on November 30 for the run to Guadalcanal Tanaka attempted to evade Allied aerial reconnaissance aircraft by first heading northeast through Bougainville Strait before turning southeast and then south to pass through Indispensable Strait Paul Mason an Australian coastwatcher stationed in southern Bougainville reported by radio the departure of Tanaka s ships from Shortland and this message was passed to Wright At the same time a Japanese search aircraft spotted an Allied convoy near Guadalcanal and communicated the sighting to Tanaka who told his destroyer commanders to expect action that night and that In such an event utmost efforts will be made to destroy the enemy without regard for the unloading of supplies 20 Battle EditOrder of battle Edit United States Task Force 67 Japan Destroyer Squadron 2 ja TF TG Vessel a Commander b TF Vessel CommanderVanguard TG 67 4 Fletcher DD g Cdr William M Cole Des Div 31Perkins DD g Lt Cdr Walter Chilcott Ford 23 Escort Force Naganami DD FF Rear Admiral Raizō Tanaka Cdr Kumabe Tsutau 24 Maury DD Lt Cdr Gelzer Loyall Sims 25 26 Takanami DD Cdr Ogura Masami ja 27 Drayton DD g Lt Cdr Jacob Elliott Cooper Transport Force 1 to Tassafaronga Point Makinami DD Cdr Hitomi Toyoji ja 28 TF 67 2 Minneapolis CA g Rear Admiral Carleton H WrightCapt Charles E Rosendahl Des Div 15New Orleans CA g Capt Clifford H Roper Oyashio DD Capt Sato Torajiro 29 Lt Cdr Hideo AzumaPensacola CA Capt Frank L Lowe Kuroshio DD Cdr Hajimi TakeuchiTG 67 2 3 Honolulu CL g Rear Admiral Mahlon S Tisdale Capt Robert W Hayler Kagero DD Cdr Terumichi ArimotoNorthampton CA x Capt Willard A Kitts III Des Div 24rearguard Lamson DD Cdr Laurence A AbercrombieLt Cdr Phillip Henry Fitzgerald Transport Force 2 Kawakaze DD Cdr Giichiro Nakahara ja Lt Cdr Yoshio Yanase 30 Lardner DD Lt Cdr Willard M Sweeter Suzukaze DD Lt Cdr Kazuo Shibayama g SG onboard SG radar detects surface craft and is also useful for night navigation x CXAM onboard CXAM radar is a medium range radar to detect both ships and aircraft 21 22 Officer in tactical command is in bold Prelude Edit US Navy chart of the Battle of Tassafaronga based on accounts by both Japanese and US participants At 21 40 on November 30 Tanaka s ships sighted Savo Island from Indispensable Strait The Japanese ships were in line ahead formation interval 600 metres 660 yd in the order of Takanami Oyashio Kuroshio Kagerō Makinami Naganami Kawakaze and Suzukaze At this same time TF67 entered Lengo Channel en route to Ironbottom Sound Wright s ships were in column in the order Fletcher Perkins Maury Drayton Minneapolis New Orleans Pensacola Honolulu Northampton Lamson and Lardner The four van destroyers led the cruisers by 4 000 yards 3 700 m and the cruisers steamed 1 000 yards 910 m apart 31 At 22 40 Tanaka s ships passed south of Savo about 3 miles 5 km offshore from Guadalcanal and slowed to 12 knots 14 mph 22 km h as they approached the unloading area Takanami took station about 1 mile 2 km seaward to screen the column At the same time TF67 exited Lengo Channel into the sound and headed at 20 knots 23 mph 37 km h towards Savo Island Wright s van destroyers moved to a position slightly inshore of the cruisers The night sky was moonless the third quarter moon would rise after midnight 32 after the fight was over with between 2 miles 3 km and 7 miles 11 km of visibility Because of extremely calm seas which created a suction effect on their pontoons Wright s cruiser floatplanes were delayed in lifting off from Tulagi harbor and would not be a factor in the battle 33 At 23 06 Wright s force began to detect Tanaka s ships on radar near Cape Esperance on Guadalcanal about 23 000 yards 21 000 m away Wright s destroyers rejoined the column as it continued to head towards Savo At the same time Tanaka s ships which were not equipped with radar split into two groups and prepared to shove the drums overboard Naganami Kawakaze and Suzukaze headed for their drop off point near Doma Reef while Makinami Kagerō Oyashio and Kuroshio aimed for nearby Tassafaronga At 23 12 Takanami s crew visually sighted Wright s column quickly confirmed by lookouts on Tanaka s other ships At 23 16 Tanaka ordered unloading preparations halted and All ships attack 34 Action Edit USS Minneapolis At 23 14 operators on Fletcher established firm radar contact with Takanami and the lead group of four drum carrying destroyers At 23 15 with the range 7 000 yards 6 400 m Commander William M Cole commander of Wright s destroyer group and captain of Fletcher radioed Wright for permission to fire torpedoes Wright waited two minutes and then responded with Range on bogies Tanaka s ships on radar excessive at present 35 Cole responded that the range was fine Another two minutes passed before Wright responded with permission to fire In the meantime the US destroyers targets escaped from an optimum firing setup ahead to a marginal position passing abeam giving the American torpedoes a long overtaking run near the limit of their range At 23 20 Fletcher Perkins and Drayton fired a total of 20 Mark 15 torpedoes towards Tanaka s ships Maury lacking SG radar and thus having no contacts withheld fire 36 At the same time Wright ordered his force to open fire At 23 21 Minneapolis complied with her first salvo quickly followed by the other American cruisers Cole s four destroyers fired star shells to illuminate the targets as previously directed then increased speed to clear the area for the cruisers to operate 37 Because of her closer proximity to Wright s column Takanami was the target of most of the Americans initial gunfire Takanami returned fire and launched her full load of eight torpedoes but was quickly hit by American gunfire and within four minutes was set afire and incapacitated As Takanami was destroyed the rest of Tanaka s ships almost unnoticed by the Americans were increasing speed maneuvering and preparing to respond to the American attack All of the American torpedoes missed 38 Historian Russell S Crenshaw Jr postulates that had the twenty four Mark 15 torpedoes fired by US Navy destroyers during the battle not been fatally flawed the outcome of the battle might have been different 39 Japanese destroyer Kawakaze Tanaka s flagship Naganami reversed course to starboard opened fire and began laying a smoke screen The next two ships astern Kawakaze and Suzukaze reversed course to port At 23 23 Suzukaze fired eight torpedoes in the direction of the gunflashes from Wright s cruisers followed by Naganami and Kawakaze which fired their full loads of eight torpedoes at 23 32 and 23 33 respectively 40 Meanwhile the four destroyers at the head of the Japanese column maintained their heading down the Guadalcanal coast allowing Wright s cruisers to pass on the opposite course Once clear of Takanami at 23 28 Kuroshio fired four and Oyashio fired eight torpedoes in the direction of Wright s column and then reversed course and increased speed Wright s cruisers maintained the same course and speed as the 44 Japanese torpedoes headed in their direction 41 At 23 27 as Minneapolis fired her ninth salvo and Wright prepared to order a course change for his column two torpedoes from either Suzukaze or Takanami struck her forward half One warhead exploded the aviation fuel storage tanks forward of turret one and the other knocked out three of the ship s four firerooms The bow forward of turret one folded down at a 70 degree angle and the ship lost power and steering control Thirty seven men were killed 42 New Orleans near Tulagi the morning after the battle showing everything missing forward of turret twoLess than a minute later a torpedo hit New Orleans abreast of turret one and exploded the ship s forward ammunition magazines and aviation gasoline storage The blast severed the ship s entire bow forward of turret two The bow twisted to port damaging the ship s hull as it was wrenched free by the ship s momentum and sank immediately off the aft port quarter Everyone in turrets one and two perished New Orleans was forced into a reverse course to starboard and lost steering and communications A total of 183 men were killed 43 Herbert Brown a seaman in the ship s plotting room described the scene after the torpedo hit I had to see I walked alongside the silent turret two and was stopped by a lifeline stretched from the outboard port lifeline to the side of the turret Thank God it was there for one more step and I would have pitched head first into the dark water thirty feet below The bow was gone One hundred and twenty five feet of ship and number one main battery turret with three 8 inch guns were gone Eighteen hundred tons of ship were gone Oh my God all those guys I went through boot camp with all gone 44 Pensacola followed next astern in the cruiser column Observing Minneapolis and New Orleans taking hits and slowing Pensacola steered to pass them on the port side and then once past returned to the same base course At 23 39 Pensacola took a torpedo abreast the mainmast The explosion spread flaming oil throughout the interior and across the main deck of the ship killing 125 of the ship s crew The hit ripped away the port outer driveshaft and the ship took a 13 degree list and lost power communications and steering 45 Astern of Pensacola Honolulu s captain chose to pass Minneapolis and New Orleans on the starboard side At the same time the ship increased speed to 30 knots 35 mph 56 km h maneuvered radically and successfully transited the battle area without taking any damage while maintaining main battery fire at the rapidly disappearing Japanese destroyers 46 The last cruiser in the American column Northampton followed Honolulu to pass the damaged cruisers ahead to starboard Unlike Honolulu Northampton did not increase speed or attempt any radical maneuvers At 23 48 after returning to the base course Northampton was hit by two of Kawakaze s torpedoes One hit 10 feet 3 m below the waterline abreast the after engine room and four seconds later the second hit 40 feet 12 m further aft The after engine room flooded three of four shafts ceased turning and the ship listed 10 degrees to port and caught fire Fifty men were killed 47 The last ships in Wright s column Lamson and Lardner failed to locate any targets and exited the battle area to the east after being mistakenly fired on by machine guns from New Orleans Cole s four destroyers circled completely around Savo Island at maximum speed and reentered the battle area but the engagement had already ended 48 Meanwhile at 23 44 Tanaka ordered his ships to break contact and retire from the battle area As they proceeded up Guadalcanal s coast Kuroshio and Kagerō fired eight more torpedoes towards the American ships which all missed When Takanami failed to respond to radio calls Tanaka directed Oyashio and Kuroshio to go to her assistance The two destroyers located the burning ship at 01 00 on December 1 but abandoned rescue efforts after detecting American warships in the area Oyashio and Kuroshio quickly departed the sound to rejoin the rest of Tanaka s ships for the return journey to the Shortlands which they reached 10 hours later Takanami was the only Japanese warship hit by American gunfire and seriously damaged during the battle 49 Aftermath EditTakanami s surviving crew abandoned ship at 01 30 but a large explosion killed many more of them in the water including the destroyer division commander Toshio Shimizu and the ship s captain Masami Ogura Of her crew of 244 48 survived to reach shore on Guadalcanal and 19 of them were captured by the Americans 50 A PT boat carries Northampton survivors near Tulagi on the morning of December 1 New Orleans is in the background Northampton s crew was unable to contain the ship s fires and list and began to abandon ship at 01 30 The ship sank at 03 04 about 4 nautical miles 7 km 5 mi from Doma Cove on Guadalcanal 09 12 S 159 50 E 9 200 S 159 833 E 9 200 159 833 Fletcher and Drayton rescued the ship s 773 survivors 51 Minneapolis New Orleans and Pensacola were able to sail the 19 nautical miles 35 km 22 mi to Tulagi by the morning of December 1 where they were berthed for emergency repairs The fires on Pensacola burned for 12 hours before being extinguished Pensacola departed Tulagi for rear area ports and further repair on December 6 After construction of temporary bows from coconut logs Minneapolis and New Orleans departed Tulagi for Espiritu Santo or Sydney Australia on December 12 All three cruisers required lengthy and extensive repairs New Orleans returned to action in August Minneapolis in September and Pensacola in October 1943 52 The battle was one of the worst defeats suffered by the US Navy in World War II third only to the Attack on Pearl Harbor and the Battle of Savo Island In spite of his defeat in the battle Wright was awarded the Navy Cross one of the highest American military decorations for bravery for his actions during the engagement Mitigating to some degree the destruction of his task force Wright in his after action report claimed that his force sank four Japanese destroyers and damaged two others Halsey in his comments on Wright s report placed much of the blame for the defeat on Cole saying that the destroyer squadron commander fired his torpedoes from too great a distance to be effective and should have helped the cruisers instead of circling around Savo Island Tanaka claimed to have sunk a battleship and two cruisers in the battle 53 After the war Tanaka said of his victory at Tassafaronga I have heard that US naval experts praised my command in that action I am not deserving of such honors It was the superb proficiency and devotion of the men who served me that produced the tactical victory for us 54 As for the U S Navy he said The enemy had discovered our plans and movements had put planes in the air beforehand for purposes of illumination had got into formation for an artillery engagement and cleverly gained the advantage of prior neutralization fire But his fire was inaccurate shells improperly set for deflection were especially numerous and it is conjectured that either his marksmanship is not remarkable or else the illumination from his star shells was not sufficiently effective 55 New Orleans B turret following a Japanese torpedo initiated explosion of the forward magazine Historian Samuel Eliot Morison assessed the outcome by saying It is a painful truth that the Battle of Tassafaronga was a sharp defeat inflicted on an alert and superior cruiser force by a partially surprised and inferior destroyer force 56 Cole s experience at Tassafaronga led to Arleigh Burke s standing orders to his own ships that destroyers are to attack the enemy on first contact without awaiting orders from task force commander which were instrumental in his success in the battles of Empress Augusta Bay and Cape St George Cole also influenced Commander Frederick Moosbrugger s tactics at the Battle of Vella Gulf in which Moosbrugger withheld gunfire until his own torpedoes were observed hitting enemy ships surprising the Japanese 57 The results of the battle led to further discussion in the US Pacific Fleet about changes in tactical doctrine and the need for technical improvements such as flashless powder It was not until eight months later that the naval high command recognized there were serious problems with the functioning of the torpedoes 58 The Americans were still unaware of the range and power of Japanese torpedoes and the effectiveness of Japanese night battle tactics In fact Wright claimed that his ships must have been fired on by submarines since the observed position of Tanaka s ships make it improbable that torpedoes with speed distance characteristics similar to our own could have caused such damage The Americans would not recognize the true capabilities of their Pacific adversary s torpedoes and night tactics until well into 1943 59 Pensacola center and New Orleans right with Salt Lake City at Pearl Harbor on October 31 1943 after completion of repairs In spite of their defeat in the battle the Americans had prevented Tanaka from landing the desperately needed food supplies on Guadalcanal albeit at high cost A second Japanese supply delivery attempt by ten destroyers led by Tanaka on December 3 successfully dumped 1 500 drums of provisions off Tassafaronga but strafing American aircraft sank all but 310 of them the next day before they could be pulled ashore On December 7 a third attempt by 12 destroyers was turned back by US PT boats off Cape Esperance The next night two US PT boats torpedoed and sank the Japanese submarine I 3 as it attempted to deliver supplies to Guadalcanal Based on the difficulties experienced trying to deliver food to the island the Japanese Navy informed Imamura on December 8 that they intended to stop all destroyer transportation runs to Guadalcanal immediately After Imamura protested the navy agreed to one more run to the island 60 The last attempt to deliver food to Guadalcanal by destroyers in 1942 was led by Tanaka on the night of December 11 and consisted of 11 destroyers Five US PT boats met Tanaka off Guadalcanal and torpedoed his flagship Teruzuki severely damaging the destroyer and injuring Tanaka After Tanaka transferred to Naganami Teruzuki was scuttled Only 220 of the 1 200 drums released that night were recovered by Japanese army personnel on shore Tanaka was subsequently relieved of command and transferred to Japan on December 29 1942 61 On December 12 the Japanese Navy proposed that Guadalcanal be abandoned Despite opposition from Japanese Army leaders who still hoped that Guadalcanal could eventually be retaken from the Allies on December 31 1942 Japan s Imperial General Headquarters with approval from the Emperor agreed to the evacuation of all Japanese forces from the island and the establishment of a new line of defense for the Solomon Islands on New Georgia The Japanese evacuated their remaining forces from Guadalcanal over three nights between February 2 and February 7 1943 conceding the hard fought campaign to the Allies Building on their success at Guadalcanal and elsewhere the Allies continued their campaign against Japan ultimately culminating in Japan s defeat and the end of World War II 62 Notes Edit Nevitt Allyn D Combinedfleet com IJN Takanami accessed April 2 2008 Dull p 255 Evans pp 202 203 Kilpatrick p 146 Frank p 513 Of Takanami s crew Frank says 33 survived and Kilpatrick says 26 were captured by the Americans Dull amp Frank says 211 of the crew died Frank p 516 Crenshaw p 99 quotes a report by Chester Nimitz stating that 398 men and 19 officers were killed in the battle Solomons Campaign Guadalcanal Naval History and Heritage Command The Japanese were able to inflict heavy damage on the U S ships but were unable to complete their resupply mission with deleterious effects for their troops on Guadalcanal H Gram 009 Savo Island H Gram No 9 Naval History and Heritage Command 8 August 2017 the naval battles around Guadalcanal were bookended with two of the worst defeats in U S naval history Savo Island and Tassafaronga eclipsed only by Pearl Harbor H 013 1 The Battle of Tassafaronga H Gram No 13 Naval History and Heritage Command 7 December 2017 Thus ended one of the most ignominious defeats in U S Navy history although technically Wright and TF 67 succeeded in their mission since none of the supplies from Tanaka s destroyers made it ashore to starving Japanese troops on Guadalcanal Hogue pp 235 236 Morison pp 14 15 Miller p 143 Frank p 338 Shaw p 18 Griffith pp 96 99 Dull p 225 Miller pp 137 138 Frank pp 202 210 211 Morison pp 108 287 Frank pp 141 143 156 158 228 246 337 367 428 492 681 Dull p 261 Frank pp 497 499 Frank pp 500 502 Jersey pp 342 343 The barge bases were established in the Shortland Islands and on Vella Lavella and Gizo Evans pp 197 198 Crenshaw p 136 Frank pp 499 502 Hara pp 160 161 Roscoe p 206 Dull p 262 Evans pp 197 198 Crenshaw p 137 Toland p 419 Frank p 502 Morison p 295 Brown D pp 16 209 Dull pp 262 263 Evans pp 198 199 Crenshaw p 137 Morison p 297 Frank pp 502 504 United States Strategic Bombing Survey USSBS p 139 Roscoe p 206 Dull pp 262 263 Crenshaw pp 25 27 Kilpatrick p 135 Morison pp 291 293 296 Frank pp 503 504 Roscoe p 207 Dull pp 262 263 Crenshaw pp 25 27 Kilpatrick p 137 Morison p 294 Frank p 503 Brown pp 124 125 USSBS p 139 Roscoe p 206 Dull p 262 Crenshaw pp 26 33 Kilpatrick pp 139 142 Morison pp 294 296 Frank p 504 Hara p 161 USSBS p 139 D Albas p 228 Evans p 199 Crenshaw pp 137 138 Kilpatrick pp 140 141 Morison pp 295 296 Frank p 504 H 013 1 The Battle of Tassafaronga Night of the Long Lances 30 November 1 December 1942 H Gram No 13 7 December 2017 Office of Naval Intelligence U S Navy Combat Narratives Solomon Islands Campaign VII Battle of Tassafaronga 30 November 1942 Walter Ford Recipient Hall of Valor The Military Medals Database 人名事典くま The Naval Data Base Gelzer Sims Recipient Hall of Valor The Military Medals Database Destroyer Photo Index DD 401 USS MAURY NavSource org 人名事典おくら The Naval Data Base 人名事典ひた The Naval Data Base 人名事典さとう た The Naval Data Base 人名事典やな The Naval Data Base USSBS pp 139 140 Roscoe p 207 Evans p 199 Crenshaw pp 33 34 Kilpatrick pp 142 143 Morison pp 297 298 Frank p 507 1942 Moon Phases calendar 12 com Hara p 161 USSBS p 139 Roscoe p 207 Evans pp 199 200 Crenshaw pp 34 63 139 Kilpatrick pp 143 144 Morison pp 297 298 305 Frank p 507 USSBS p 139 Roscoe p 207 Dull pp 263 265 Evans p 200 Crenshaw pp 48 49 139 145 Kilpatrick pp 143 144 Morison pp 297 298 Frank pp 507 508 Kilpatrick p 144 Morison p 299 Frank p 508 Roscoe pp 207 208 Dull pp 263 265 Crenshaw pp 48 51 Kilpatrick pp 144 145 Frank p 508 Morison pp 299 300 Fletcher fired ten Perkins eight and Drayton two torpedoes Brown p 128 Roscoe p 208 Dull pp 263 265 Evans pp 200 201 Crenshaw pp 51 54 Kilpatrick pp 145 146 Morison p 300 Frank pp 508 509 Tanaka thought that Cole s destroyer s star shells were flares dropped by aircraft Hara pp 162 163 USSBS p 139 Roscoe p 208 Dull pp 263 265 Evans p 200 Crenshaw pp 146 147 Kilpatrick pp 145 146 Morison pp 301 302 Frank p 509 Toland p 420 Crenshaw Jr Russell S The Battle of Tassafaronga p 155 Dull p 265 Evans pp 201 202 Crenshaw pp 146 148 Morison p 302 Frank pp 509 510 Hara p 164 Dull p 265 Evans pp 201 202 Crenshaw pp 146 151 Morison pp 302 303 Frank pp 509 510 Roscoe p 208 Dull p 265 D Albas p 229 Crenshaw p 56 Kilpatrick p 146 Morison pp 303 304 Frank pp 510 511 514 After his ship was hit Wright turned command of his force over to Rear Admiral Mahlon S Tisdale on Honolulu Brown pp 137 138 Roscoe p 208 Dull pp 265 266 D Albas p 229 Crenshaw pp 56 57 Kilpatrick p 146 Morison pp 304 305 Frank p 511 Brown pp 134 135 Roscoe p 208 Dull p 266 D Albas p 229 Crenshaw pp 57 58 Kilpatrick pp 147 148 Morison pp 305 306 Frank pp 511 512 514 Roscoe p 208 Dull p 266 Crenshaw pp 58 59 Kilpatrick pp 148 149 Morison p 306 Frank p 512 Roscoe p 208 Dull p 266 D Albas p 229 Crenshaw pp 59 60 Kilpatrick pp 148 149 Morison pp 306 307 Frank pp 512 513 Roscoe p 208 Crenshaw pp 59 60 Kilpatrick pp 148 149 Morison pp 306 307 Frank pp 512 513 D Albas p 232 Evans p 202 Crenshaw pp 152 154 Kilpatrick p 151 Morison p 307 Frank p 513 Nevitt Allyn D CombinedFleet com April 2 2008 Dull p 265 Evans pp 202 203 Kilpatrick p 146 Frank p 513 Frank says 33 survived and Kilpatrick says 26 were captured by the Americans Dull says 211 of her crew died Roscoe p 209 D Albas p 232 Evans p 521 Crenshaw pp 65 66 Kilpatrick p 149 Morison p 312 Frank pp 514 515 Brown pp 141 158 173 Crenshaw p 68 Kilpatrick pp 154 156 Morison pp 309 312 Frank pp 514 515 Hara p 164 Crenshaw pp 102 107 Kilpatrick pp 151 154 Morison p 314 Frank pp 515 516 Of Cole s actions Halsey stated Destroyers fired torpedoes at an excessive range Torpedo firing ranges at night of more than 4 000 5 000 yards are not acceptable and The van destroyers after firing torpedoes did not assist the cruisers but turned away and retired to the northwest Similar lack of offensive action on the part of destroyers in future operations will not be tolerated Says Crenshaw of Halsey s comments on Cole s actions Admirals Halsey and Nimitz aided and abetted by their large staffs didn t understand what had happened yet felt they must take a firm stand to encourage better performance in the future After exploring every aspect they could think of they ended in heaping criticism on the only subordinate who had used his weapons to their maximum capability and who had handled his ships with both skill and determination Hara p 164 Roscoe p 209 Coombe p 140 Crenshaw pp 88 102 105 Frank pp 516 517 USSBS p 139 Morison 1958 p 313 2 Guadalcanal Battle of Tassafaronga Night of the Long Lances H Gram No 13 Naval History and Heritage Command 7 December 2017 Crenshaw Jr Russell S The Battle of Tassafaronga p 161 Hara p 164 Roscoe p 209 Coombe p 140 Crenshaw p 88 102 105 Frank p 516 517 Roscoe p 209 Dull pp 266 267 D Albas pp 232 233 Evans pp 203 205 Kilpatrick p 156 Morison pp 318 319 Frank pp 518 521 523 Tanaka states that the reasons that the 1 500 drums weren t pulled to shore immediately after his destroyers unloaded them was due to the lack of shore personnel to haul in the lines the physical exhaustion of the men who were available and the fact that many of the ropes parted when drums got stuck on obstacles in the water Evans p 204 Only four of I 3 s crew survived her sinking and reached Japanese forces ashore Hackett amp Kingsepp HIJMS Submarine I 3 Tabular Record of Movement 1 Hara p 164 Roscoe p 210 Dull pp 266 267 D Albas pp 232 233 Evans pp 205 209 Morison pp 319 321 Frank pp 523 524 Evans pp 208 209 Dull pp 261 268 Toland pp 420 421 References EditBrown David 1990 Warship Losses of World War Two London Great Britain Arms and Armour ISBN 0 85368 802 8 Brown Herbert C 2000 Hell at Tassafaronga Ancient Mariners Pr ISBN 0 9700721 4 7 Coombe Jack D 1991 Derailing the Tokyo Express Harrisburg Pennsylvania Stackpole Books ISBN 0 8117 3030 1 Crenshaw Russell S Jr 1995 The Battle of Tassafaronga Nautical amp Aviation Publishing Company of America ISBN 1 877853 37 2 D Albas Andrieu 1965 Death of a Navy Japanese Naval Action in World War II Devin Adair Pub ISBN 0 8159 5302 X Dull Paul S 1978 A Battle History of the Imperial Japanese Navy 1941 1945 Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 097 1 Tanaka Raizō 1986 The Struggle for Guadalcanal In Evans David C ed The Japanese Navy in World War II In the Words of Former Japanese Naval Officers 2nd ed Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 316 4 Frank Richard B 1990 Guadalcanal The Definitive Account of the Landmark Battle New York Penguin Group ISBN 0 14 016561 4 Hara Tameichi 1961 Japanese Destroyer Captain New York amp Toronto Ballantine Books ISBN 0 345 27894 1 Hone Thomas C 1981 The Similarity of Past and Present Standoff Threats Proceedings of the U S Naval Institute No Vol 107 No 9 September 1981 Annapolis Maryland pp 113 116 ISSN 0041 798X Jersey Stanley Coleman 2008 Hell s Islands The Untold Story of Guadalcanal College Station Texas Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 1 58544 616 2 Kilpatrick C W 1987 Naval Night Battles of the Solomons Exposition Press ISBN 0 682 40333 4 Morison Samuel Eliot 1958 Chapter 13 The Battle of Tassafaronga The Struggle for Guadalcanal August 1942 February 1943 vol 5 of History of United States Naval Operations in World War II Boston Little Brown and Company ISBN 0 316 58305 7 Roscoe Theodore 1953 United States Destroyer Operations in World War II Ninth printing 1986 ed Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 726 7 Toland John 1970 The Rising Sun The Decline and Fall of the Japanese Empire 1936 1945 Random House ISBN 0 8129 6858 1 United States Strategic Bombing Survey Pacific Naval Analysis Division 1946 The Campaigns of the Pacific War Washington U S Government Printing Office ISBN 0 8371 2313 5 Google Books This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the Naval History and Heritage Command External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Tassafaronga Office of Naval Intelligence U S Navy Combat Narratives Solomon Islands Campaign VII Battle of Tassafaronga 30 November 1942 Horan Mark Battle of Tassafaronga Order of Battle Archived from the original on 17 May 2006 Retrieved 2006 05 17 Hough Frank O Ludwig Verle E Shaw Henry I Jr Pearl Harbor to Guadalcanal History of U S Marine Corps Operations in World War II Archived from the original on 27 June 2006 Retrieved 2006 05 16 McComb David W 2008 Battle of Tassafaronga Destroyer History Foundation Archived from the original on 15 May 2008 Retrieved 2008 04 16 Parshall Jon Hackett Bob Kingsepp Sander Nevitt Allyn Imperial Japanese Navy Page Combinedfleet com Archived from the original on 13 June 2006 Retrieved 2006 06 14 War damage report of USS Northampton and New Orleans plus summary Captain TOYAMA Yasumi IJN INTERROGATION NAV NO 60 USSBS NO 252 BATTLE OF TASSAFARONGA 30 NOVEMBER 1942 In United States Strategic Bombing Survey Pacific ed Interrogations of Japanese Officials Vol 1 p 254 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Tassafaronga amp oldid 1123163852, 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