Battle of Blackett Strait

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Battle of Blackett Strait
Part of the Pacific Theater of World War II

USS Montpelier was Admiral Merrill's flagship
Date 6 March 1943
Location Blackett Strait, Solomon Islands
Result U.S. victory
Combatants
United States Empire of Japan
Commanders
Aaron S. Merrill Yōji Tanegashima
Strength
3 cruisers,
3 destroyers
2 destroyers
Casualties
None 2 destroyers sunk,
174 killed[1]
Solomon Islands campaign
1st TulagiGuadalcanalBlackett StraitCartwheelDeath of YamamotoNew GeorgiaKula GulfKolombangaraVella GulfHoraniuVella LavellaNaval Vella LavellaTreasury Is.ChoiseulBougainvilleRabaul carrier raidCape St. GeorgeGreen Is.

The Battle of Blackett Strait (Japanese: ビラ・スタンモーア夜戦) was a naval battle of the Pacific campaign of World War II, fought on 6 March 1943 in the Blackett Strait, between Kolombangara Island and Arundel Island in the Solomon Islands.

Contents

After the American victory in the battle of Guadalcanal, operations in the Solomon Islands shifted to the west, where the Japanese maintained a substantial garrison on Kolombangara. On the night of 5 March 1943 the Japanese destroyers Murasame and Minegumo, commanded by Lieutenant Commander Yōji Tanegashima took supplies to the Japanese base at Vila, on Kolombangara.

As they withdrew after landing their cargo, the two ships encountered the American Task Force 68 of three cruisers (Montpelier, Cleveland , and Denver) and three destroyers (Conway , Cony , and Waller) commanded by Rear Admiral Aaron S. Merrill, that had been bombarding Japanese positions at Vila.

In a short battle, both Japanese destroyers were sunk. Fifty-three survivors from Murasame and 122 survivors from Minegumo managed to reach Japanese lines. Two other survivors from Minegumo were later captured by U.S. forces.[2]

On May 7, 1943, U.S. minelayers Gamble, Breese, and Preble laid mines across Blackett Strait in an attempt to interdict Japanese ship movements traveling through the strait. The next day, Japanese destroyers Oyashio, Kagero, and Kuroshio all hit mines in that area. Kuroshio sank immediately. Kagero and Oyashio sank later that day after being attacked and further damaged by U.S. aircraft from Henderson Field.

see main article PT-109

Another engagement occurred in Blackett Strait when 15 PT boats were sent to intercept the Tokyo Express destroyer supply convoy on 2 August 1943. The PT boats fired many torpedoes, but observed only a few explosions. On the return trip the Japanese destroyer Amagiri struck the American patrol torpedo boat PT-109 The captain of PT-109 was future U.S. president John F. Kennedy. His crew was assumed lost by the US Navy, but found by islander scouts Biuku Gasa and Eroni Kumana in a dugout canoe.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

  1. ^ Nevitt, Combinedfleet.com. Murasame: [1] & Minegumo: [2].
  2. ^ Nevitt, Combinedfleet.com. Murasame: [3] & Minegumo: [4].


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