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Zuiho

Country Japan Ship Class Zuiho-class Light Carrier Builder Name Yokosuka Naval Arsenal Laid Down 20 Jun 1935 Launched 19 Jun 1936 Commissioned 27 Dec 1940 Sunk 25 Oct 1944 Displacement 11,262 tons standard; 13,950 tons full Length 712 feet Beam 76 feet Draft 22 feet Machinery Geared turbines, two shafts Power Output 52,000 SHP Speed 28 knots Crew 785 Armament 8x100mm (pre-1934), 4x100mm (post-1934), 56,x25mm anti-aircraft Aircraft 24-30

Contributor: C. Peter Chen

ww2dbaseWhen Zuiho and her sister ship Shoho were laid down, they were of a flexible design that could eventually be completed as a light carrier, an oil tanker, or a submarine tender. She was originally launched in 1934 as the oil tanker Takasaki, but was converted to a light carrier in 1941. She was assigned to Carrier Division 3 in Jan 1941 and participated in the Japanese southward expansion in the opening chapters of the Pacific War at the end of that year. In Jun 1942, she carried 12 Zero fighters and 11 D3A dive bombers and sailed with the support fleet during the Midway operation, but did not engage in combat. In Oct 1942, with Carrier Division 1, she participated in the Battle of Santa Cruz and suffered serious flight deck damage by carrier Enterprise's aircraft. In early 1943, she supported the evacuation of Guadalcanal. In Feb 1944, she participated in the Battle of the Philippine Sea. In Oct 1944, during the Battle off Cape Engaño as a part of Jisaburo Ozawa's decoy fleet, the first wave of American attacks damaged her flight deck, but damage control crew quickly repaired the ship to working condition. However, she was eventually sunk by subsequent waves of American attacks in the same battle.

ww2dbaseSource: Wikipedia.

Last Major Revision: Mar 2007

Light Carrier Zuiho Interactive Map

Zuiho Operational Timeline

27 Dec 1940 Zuiho was commissioned into service. 26 Oct 1942 Kumano screened the carriers Shokaku, Zuikaku, and Zuiho in the Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands.

Photographs

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