Japanese submarine I-39
{{short description|Type B1 submarine}}
{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image | Ship image = I-39-19420415.jpg | Ship caption = Launching of I-39, 15 April 1942 }} {{Infobox ship career | Hide header = | Ship country = Japan | Ship flag = {{Shipboxflag|Empire of Japan|naval}} | Ship name = Submarine No. 152 | Ship namesake = | Ship ordered = | Ship builder = Sasebo Naval Arsenal | Ship laid down = 19 June 1941 | Ship renamed = I-39 }} {{Infobox ship career | Hide header = yes | Ship launched = 15 April 1942 | Ship completed = 22 April 1943 | Ship acquired = | Ship commissioned = 22 April 1943 | Ship decommissioned = | Ship in service = | Ship out of service = | Ship fate = *Missing after 25 November 1943
}} {{Infobox ship career | Hide header = yes | Ship struck = 30 April 1944 | Ship reinstated = }} {{Infobox ship characteristics | Hide header = | Header caption = | Ship class = Type B1 submarine | Ship displacement = *2,584 tons surfaced
| Ship length = {{convert|108.7|m|ftin|abbr=on}} | Ship beam = {{convert|9.3|m|ftin|abbr=on}} | Ship draft = {{convert|5.14|m|ftin|abbr=on}} | Ship propulsion = *2 diesels: {{convert|12400|hp|abbr=on}}
| Ship speed = *{{convert|23.5|kn|km/h}} surfaced
| Ship range = {{convert|14000|nmi|km |
3}} at {{convert|16|kn|km/h|0}}
| Ship endurance = | Ship test depth = {{convert|100|m|ft|abbr=on}} | Ship complement = 94 | Ship sensors = | Ship EW = | Ship armament = *6 × {{convert|533|mm|in|0|abbr=on}} forward torpedo tubes
| Ship aircraft = 1 Yokosuka E14Y seaplane | Ship notes = }} |
I-39 was an Imperial Japanese Navy B1 type submarine. Completed and commissioned in 1943, she served in World War II, operating in support of Japanese forces in the Battle of Tarawa before she was sunk in November 1943.
Construction and commissioning
I-39 was laid down on 19 June 1941 by at the Sasebo Navy Yard at Sasebo, Japan, with the name Submarine No. 152.{{cite web |url= http://www.combinedfleet.com/I-39.htm |title=IJN Submarine I-39: Tabular Record of Movement |first1=Bob |last1=Hackett |first2=Sander |last2=Kingsepp |work=combinedfleet.com |year=2003|access-date=19 August 2020}} Renamed I-39 by the time she was launched on 15 April 1942 and provisionally attached to the Yokosuka Naval District that day, she was completed and commissioned on 22 April 1943.
Service history
Upon commissioning, I-39 was attached formally to the Yokosuka Naval District and assigned to Submarine Squadron 11 for work-ups. With those completed, she was reassigned to Submarine Division 14 in Submarine Squadron 8 in the Submarine Advance Force on 20 July 1943. She departed Yokosuka on 21 July 1943 and arrived at Truk on 27 July 1943.
=First war patrol=
On 2 August 1943, I-39 set out from Truk on her first war patrol, with a patrol area in the New Hebrides. She was depth-charged briefly by a destroyer north of Espiritu Santo on 7 August 1943, and on 29 August 1943 two destroyers sighted and pursued her, but she suffered no damage in either encounter.
On 2 September 1943, I-39 sighted a convoy of three transports escorted by four destroyers. She fired two torpedoes, both of which exploded close astern of the attack transport {{USS|Fuller|APA-7|6}}, which was carrying the New Zealand Army′s 3rd Division from Port Vila on Efate to Point Cruz on Guadalcanal. A destroyer attempted a counterattack, but failed to locate I-39. On 10 September, I-39 sighted an unescorted transport heading toward Espiritu Santo at 09:50, but could not get within torpedo range of her. On 11 September I-39 sighted another unescorted transport east of Espiritu Santo at 05:05 and two transports escorted by a destroyer at 18:10, but made no attacks.
I-39 was {{convert|150|nmi}} east of Espiritu Santo on 12 September 1943 when she sighted the United States Navy fleet tug {{USS|Navajo|AT-64|6}} towing the 6,600-ton gasoline barge YOGN-42 from Pago Pago in American Samoa to Espiritu Santo. Mistaking Navajo for a British {{sclass|Leander|cruiser|0||1931}} light cruiser, she hit Navajo with a single torpedo amidships on her starboard side. Navajo exploded and sank by the bow in two minutes at {{coord|14|58|S|169|17|E|name=USS Navajo (AT-64)}} with the loss of 17 members of her crew.
While returning to Truk, I-39 suffered damage when she was depth-charged on 25 September 1943. She reached Truk on 27 September 1943 and underwent repairs there.
=Second war patrol=
The Gilbert and Marshall Islands campaign began on 20 November 1943 with the U.S. invasion of Tarawa and of Makin in the Gilbert Islands. On 21 November 1943, I-39 received orders to proceed to Tarawa along with the submarines {{ship|Japanese submarine|I-19||2}}, {{ship|Japanese submarine|I-35||2}}, {{ship|Japanese submarine|I-169||2}}, and {{ship|Japanese submarine|I-175||2}}. With a Yokosuka E14Y1 (Allied reporting name "Glen") floatplane aboard, she got underway from Truk on her second war patrol that day, with an assigned patrol area southwest of Tarawa. She reported on 24 November 1943 that she was approaching her patrol area, and on 25 November — the same day she was reassigned to Submarine Division 2 in Submarine Squadron 1 — she reported that she had arrived in her patrol area. The Japanese never heard from her again.
=Loss=
On 26 November 1943, the battleship {{USS|Massachusetts|BB-59|6}} was steaming {{convert|80|nmi}} southwest of Tarawa as part of Task Group 50.2, when she detected a surface target {{convert|9|nmi}} to the southwest on radar at 22:52. At 23:02 the destroyer {{USS|Boyd|DD-544|6}} was detached to investigate. She detected a surfaced submarine on radar at 23:20 and closed with it. She lost radar contact, apparently when the submarine submerged, but Boyd then located the submarine with her sonar. She dropped two patterns of depth charges, and heard a loud underwater explosion 15 minutes after the last attack at {{coord|00|31|N|172|16|E|name=I-39}}. On the morning of 27 November 1943, planes from the aircraft carrier {{USS|Enterprise|CV-6|6}} flew over the area and reported a large oil slick on the surface. It marked the end of a Japanese submarine.
The submarine probably was I-39, although it is possible that Boyd sank {{ship|Japanese submarine|I-40||2}}, which also disappeared in the Tarawa area around the same time.{{cite web |url= http://www.combinedfleet.com/I-40.htm |title=IJN Submarine I-40: Tabular Record of Movement |first1=Bob |last1=Hackett |first2=Sander |last2=Kingsepp |work=combinedfleet.com |year=2017|access-date=19 August 2020}} An alternative account claims that the destroyer escort {{USS|Griswold|DE-7|6}} sank I-39 off Koli Point, Guadalcanal, on 23 December 1943, although that location lies outside I-39′s patrol area and the date is four weeks after she last transmitted a message,
On 20 February 1944, the Imperial Japanese Navy declared I-39 to be presumed lost with her entire crew of 96 in the Gilbert Islands area. She was stricken from the Navy list on 30 April 1944.
Notes
{{reflist}}
Bibliography
- Hackett, Bob & Kingsepp, Sander. [http://www.combinedfleet.com/I-39.htm IJN Submarine I-39: Tabular Record of Movement]. Retrieved on August 26, 2020.
- {{cite book |last1=Milanovich |first1=Kathrin |editor1-last=Jordan |editor1-first=John |title=Warship 2021 |date=2021 |publisher=Osprey Publishing |location=Oxford, UK |isbn=978-1-4728-4779-9 |chapter=The IJN Submarines of the I 15 Class|pages=29–43}}
External links
{{Type B submarine}}
{{November 1943 shipwrecks}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:I-039}}
Category:Ships built by Sasebo Naval Arsenal
Category:World War II submarines of Japan
Category:Japanese submarines lost during World War II
Category:Warships lost in combat with all hands
Category:Japanese submarines lost with all hands
Category:Missing submarines of World War II