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Japanese amphibious assault ship Shinshū Maru

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History
Japan
NameShinshu Maru
Laid down8 April 1933
Launched14 March 1934
Commissioned15 November 1934
FateSunk 3 January 1945
General characteristics
Displacement7,100 tons standard, 8,108 tons full
Length144 meters
Beam22 meters
Draft4.2 meters
Speed20.4 knots
Complement2,000
Armament4 × 75 mm Type 88, 4 × 20 mm AA
Armornone
Aircraft carried6 × Nakajima Army Type 91 Fighters 6 × Mitsubishi Ki-30 Bombers
Aviation facilitieshangar and catapult; no flight deck

Shinshu Maru (神州丸) was a ship of the Japanese Imperial Army during World War II. She was the world's first landing craft carrier ship to be designed as such, and a pioneer of modern-day amphibious assault ships. During some of her operations, she was known to have used at least two cover names, Fuso Maru, and Ryujo Maru.

At least one source claims that the Shinshū Maru was one of the ships sunk by friendly fire at the Battle of Sunda Strait and then salvaged & returned to service.

Design features

Shinshu Maru was a significant advance in amphibious warfare, having incorporated numerous innovative features, and as such she was shrouded in a veil of secrecy throughout her existence. She could carry 29 Daihatsu-class landing craft, 25 Shohatsu-class landing craft and 4 armoured gunboats, to be launched from a floodable well deck.

In addition, Shinshu Maru could carry landplanes in a hangar within her superstructure; these aircraft could be launched by catapult to support amphibious assaults, but could not return to the ship, and must (hopefully) land on captured airfields instead.

These concepts pioneered by Shinshu Maru persist to the current day, in the U.S. Navy's LHA and LHD amphibious assault ships.

Fate

On 3 January 1945, while returning to Takao after a supply mission to Leyte Island, Shinshu Maru was heavily damaged by a US air attack; after the ship was abandoned she was sunk by the USS Aspro.

Photos

References

  • Murray, Williamson and Millett, Alan R. Military Innovation in the Interwar Period. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996. ISBN 0-521-55241-9.

See also