Japanese cruiser Maya
| | | Career | |
|---|
| Ordered: | FY1927 |
| Laid down: | December 4 1928 |
| Launched: | November 8 1930 |
| Commissioned: | June 30 1932 |
| Fate: | Torpedoed October 23 1944 |
| Struck: | December 20 1944 |
| General Characteristics (initial â€" final) |
|---|
| Displacement: | 9,850 â€" 13,350 tons |
| Length: | 668.5 feet (203.76 m) |
| Beam: | 62.3 feet (19 m) â€" 68 feet (20.72 m) |
| Draft: | 20 feet (6.11 m) â€" 21 feet (6.44 m) |
| Propulsion: | 130,000 hp |
| Speed: | 35.5 knots â€" 34.6 knots |
| Range: | 8,000 nautical miles @ 14 knots |
| Complement: | 921 - 996 |
| Armament: | initially ten 8" guns, four 4.7" guns, , eight torpedo tubes; after final refit eight 8" guns, twelve 4.7" guns, up to one-hundred seventeen 25 mm AA guns, eight torpedo tubes; |
| Aircraft: | 3 |
Maya (摩耶) was one of four
Takao-class heavy cruisers, designed to be an improvement over the previous
Myoko-class design. These ships were fast, powerful and heavily armed with enough firepower to hold their own against any ships built. The
Takao-class ships were approved under the 1927 fiscal year budget as part of the
Imperial Japanese Navy's strategy of the Decisive Battle, and forming the backbone of a multipurpose long range strike force.
Maya was built by the
Kawasaki shipyards in
Kobe, and like her sister ships, was named after a mountain.
Mount Maya is located outside of Kobe.
At the start of the
Pacific War,
Maya was assigned to support the invasion of the
Philippines. From January through March of 1942, the
Maya was involved in operations to seize the oil-rich
Dutch East Indies, participating in numerous combat operations, including the Japanese attack on
Port Darwin,
Australia on
February 26 1942.
Returning to Japan in April 1942 she was assigned to the unsuccessful pursuit of Admiral
William F. Halsey's Task Force 16.2 after the
Doolittle Raid on
Tokyo. In May-June 1942, she participated in the successful invasion of the
Aleutian Islands.
In August 1942, the
Maya was assigned south, to the reinforcement of the
Solomon Islands, and participated in the
Battle of the Eastern Solomons. The
Maya remained in based out of
Truk through the remainder of 1942. However, during the American bombardment of
Henderson Field on
November 14 1942, the
Maya task force was attacked by the
USS Flying Fish (SS-229), which missed the
Maya with six torpedoes. Later, the
Maya was attacked by
Douglas SBD "
Dauntless"
dive-bombers of
VB-10, one of which drops a 500 lb bomb astern of the ship, but whose starboard wing struck the
Mayas mainmast; the plane crashed into the ship's portside and ignited 4.7 inch shells. Thirty-seven crewmen were killed.
The Maya
returned to Yokosuka for repairs and refit in January 1943, and was then reassigned to the Northern fleet, supporting supply missions to the Kurile Islands and the Aleutian islands. On March 26 1943, the Maya participated in the Battle of the Komandorski Islands, off Kamchatka Peninsula. Rear Admiral (later Vice Admiral) Charles H. McMorris Task Group 16.6's USS Richmond
(CL-9), USS Salt Lake City
(CA-25) and four destroyers engage Vice Admiral Hosogaya's Fifth Fleet cruisers Nachi
, Maya
, Tama
and Abukuma
and two destroyers that were escorting a convoy with troops and supplies for the isolated garrison on Attu. The Maya
catapulted her spotter aircraft and launched Type 93 "Long Lance" torpedoes, but scored no hits. In a four-hour running gun battle, the Salt Lake City
and the USS Bailey
(DD-492) were damaged by gunfire. The Maya
and the Nachi
were also damaged in the exchange of fire and the Japanese were forced to abort their resupply mission.
After repairs again at Yokosuka, the Maya
returned to the Kuriles in late April, and became flagship of the Fifth Fleet, assisting in the evacuation of Kiska island after the loss of Attu to the Americans in August 1943.
After refit in Yokosuka with additional twin-mount Type-96 AA guns (bringing its total to 16 barrels), the Maya
accompanied the Chokai back to Truk, arriving in late September, and started shuttling troops and supplies between Truk and Rabaul. In November, the Maya
was attacked by SBD Dauntless dive-bombers from the USS Saratoga
(CV-3). A bomb hit the aircraft deck portside above the No. 3 engine room and started a major fire. Seventy crewmen were killed. Emergency repairs weremade at Rabaul, and the Maya
returned to Yokosuka at the end of 1943.
From end December 1943 â€" April 1944, the Maya
underwent at massive refit. Her No. 3 200 mm (8 inch) 200 mm turret was removed as was her twin-mount 25 mm AA guns, 120 mm (4.7 inch) HA guns, twin torpedo tube mounts and the seaplane hangar. Thirteen Type 96 triple-mount 25 mm AA guns and six twin 127 mm HA guns were installed as were nine Type 96 single-mount 25 mm AA guns and 36 Type 93 13 mm MGs. Four Type 92 quadruple torpedo mounts, loaded with 16 Type 93 "Long Lance" torpedoes, were also fitted as is a Type 22 surface-search radar. A centerline depth charge rail is installed aft. As a result of this work, the Mayas displacement rose to 13,140 tons.
At
Kure, the
Maya embarked two
Aichi E13A1 Jake long-range scout planes, troops and materials. A monkey, donated to the Maya by the Kure Zoo, was also embarked. During the voyage, the aircrew teach the monkey to smartly salute the senior officers - much to their annoyance.
From April-June 1944, the
Maya supported other units in the defense of the Philippines, cumulating in the
June 19â€"
June 20 1944 Battle of the Philippine Sea, in which the
Maya was damaged slightly by near-misses. On
June 20 1944, the
Maya retired with the remnants of the fleet via
Okinawa to Yokosuka, where the aircrew and their pet monkey disembarked. In a final refit, eighteen more Type 96 single-mount 25 mm AA guns were installed bringing the
Mayas total 25 mm suite to 66 barrels.
On October 22 1944, the Battle of Leyte Gulf, Maya
was assigned to Cruiser Division 5 with sister ships Atago, Takao
and Chokai
. On October 23 1944, Maya
was part of the Battle of the Palawan Passage. At 05:33, the Mayas sister-ships
Atago and
Takao were torpedoed by the American submarine
USS Darter (SS-227). The Atago sank in approximately 18 minutes. Twenty minutes later the submarine
USS Dace (SS-247) fired six torpedoes at the
Maya, mistaking it for a
Kongo-class battleship; the
Maya was struck by four torpedoes portside: one in the foreward chain locker, another opposite No. 1 gun turret, a third in No. 7 boiler room and the last in the aft engine room. Powerful secondary explosions followed immediately, and by 06:00
Maya was dead in the water and listing heavily to port. She sank five minutes later taking 336 officers and men to the bottom, including her last captain.
The
Akishimo rescued 769 men, and transferred them to the battleship
Musashi , which is sunk the following day. Thus, from the final crew of 1105 crewmen, 470 were lost.