Battle of Cape St. George

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Battle of Cape St. George
Part of the Pacific Theater of World War II

U.S. destroyer Charles Ausburne operating in the Solomon Islands around 1943.
Date November 26, 1943
Location Near Buka Island, north of Bougainville
Result U.S. victory
Combatants
United States Empire of Japan
Commanders
Arleigh Burke Kiyoto Kagawa
Strength
5 destroyers 5 destroyers
Casualties
None 3 destroyers sunk,
647 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 Cape St. George was a naval battle of the Pacific campaign of World War II, fought on November 26, 1943 between Cape St. George, New Ireland and Buka Island (now part of the North Solomons Province in Papua New Guinea). It was the last engagement of surface ships in the Solomon Islands campaign.

Contents

Americans had landed troops on Bougainville on November 1, 1943. This posed a threat to the Japanese base on Buka Island to the west, and 900 Army troops were loaded on the destroyer transports Amagiri, Yugiri, Uzuki and sent together with the destroyers Onami, Makinami under the command of Captain Kiyoto Kagawa to reinforce the garrison.

The US Navy learned of the convoy and sent the five destroyers Charles Ausburne, Claxton , Dyson, Converse, and Spence under the command of Captain Arleigh Burke to intercept it.

The Japanese destroyers landed the 900 troops and supplies, embarked an equivalent number of Navy personnel (that the Army troops replaced), and were returning to Rabaul when at about 01:40 they were spotted on radar by the U.S. warships. Superior radar allowed the American ships to approach and launch their torpedoes at about 01:55 before the Japanese sighted them. Onami was hit by several torpedoes and sank immediately. Makinami was hit by one torpedo, disabled, and then sunk by gunfire. The transport destroyers fled in different directions; Burke pursued Yugiri and sank her about 03:30.

The battle marked the end of the Tokyo Express and the end of Japanese resistance in the Solomon Islands, and the success of Allied efforts to achieve superiority in night combat using radar. There were no more surface engagements in the Pacific War until the Marianas Islands campaign began with the invasion of Saipan in June 1944.

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  1. ^ Morison, Breaking the Bismarcks, p. 353, & Nevitt, Combinedfleet.com. Nevitt says 228 were lost on Onami and 200 on Makinami and, along with Morison, says that there were 278 survivors from Yugiri. Morison says there were 300 troops on Yugiri, which along with a normal complement of 197 means about 497 were on board during this engagement. Subtracting 278 from 497 equals 219 killed on Yugiri.
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