Everything about Japanese Submarine I-25 totally explained
I-25 (
Jp:イ-25) was a
B1-Type (I-15 Class) submarine of the
Imperial Japanese Navy that served in
World War II and took part in the
Attack on Pearl Harbor, and carried out
The Lookout Air Raid incident.
I-25, of 2,600 tons, was 108 metres long, with a range of, a maximum surface speed of and a maximum submerged speed of . She carried a two-seater
Yokosuka E14Y reconnaissance floatplane know to the
Allies as "Glen". It was disassembled and stowed in the front of the conning tower.
In battle
In World War II
I-25 served under the command of
Lieutenant Commander Meiji Tagami who had graduated from Class 51 at
Etajima, Hiroshima. 26-year-old
Lieutenant Tatsuo Tsukudo was the
Executive Officer(XO) on
I-25.
I-25 and three other submarines patrolled a line north of
Oahu during the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor. After the Japanese
aircraft carriers sailed west following the attack,
I-25 and eight other submarines sailed eastwards to patrol the west coast of the United States.
I-25 attacked a cargo ship ten miles (16 km) off the US coast. The ship managed to escape but ran aground at the mouth of the
Columbia River.
I-25 then returned to
Kwajalein atoll, arriving on
11 January 1942 to refuel and be refurbished.
I-25 left Kwajalein atoll in the
Marshall Islands on
5 February 1942 for its next operational patrol in the south
Pacific. Tagami's orders were to reconnoitre the
Australian harbours of
Sydney,
Melbourne and
Hobart followed by the
New Zealand harbours of
Wellington and
Auckland.
I-25 travelled on the surface for nine days, but as she approached the Australian coastline, she only travelled on the surface under the cover of night.
On
13 February 1942,
I-25 sank the
United Kingdom merchant ship "Derrymore" at . On Saturday
14 February 1942,
I-25 was within a few miles of the coast near Sydney. The searchlights in Sydney could clearly be seen from the bridge of
I-25. Tagami then took
I-25 to a position south east of Sydney.
A number of days of rough swell prevented an immediate launch of the "Glen" floatplane. They stayed submerged during the day and went back to the surface at night. Finally on Tuesday
17 February 1942 Warrant Flying Officer Nobuo Fujita took off in the "Glen" for a reconnaissance flight over
Sydney Harbour. The purpose was to look at Sydney's airbase. By 07.30 Fujita had returned to
I-25 and disassembled the "Glen" and stowed it in the water tight hangar. Commander Tagami then pointed
I-25 southwards on the surface at . By midday on Wednesday
18 February 1942 they were nearly south east of Sydney still heading southwards.
Their next mission was a similar flight over Melbourne. Tagami decided to launch the aircraft from
Cape Wickham at the northern end of
King Island at the western end of
Bass Strait about half way between
Victoria and
Tasmania. The floatplane was launched on
26 February 1942 for its reconnaissanceflight to Melbourne over
Port Phillip Bay.
Fujita's next reconnaissance flight in Australia was over Hobart on
1 March 1942. I-25 then headed for New Zealand where Fujita flew another reconnaissance flight over Wellington on
8 March 1942. Fujita next flew over Auckland on
13 March 1942, followed by
Fiji on
17 March 1942.
I-25 returned to its base at Kwajalein on
31 March 1942.
First aerial bombing of the continental U.S.
In June 1942,
I-25 was patrolling the coast of
Oregon, and shelled Battery Russell, a small coastal army installation within now decommissioned
Fort Stevens. Damage was minimal. In fact, the only item of significance destroyed on the fort was a baseball backstop. On
September 9,
1942, the crew again deployed the Glen, which dropped
incendiary bombs over Oregon forest land, in the first ever time that the continental United States was bombed from the air, known as "
The Lookout Air Raid". The goal was to trigger wildfires across the coast, but light winds, wet weather conditions and two quick acting
Fire Lookouts kept the fires under control. In fact, had the winds been sufficiently brisk to stoke widespread forest fires, the lightweight Glen would have been unable to fly.
I-25 was sunk less than a year later by the destroyer
USS Patterson off the
New Hebrides islands on
September 3,
1943.
Commanding Officers
Chief Equipping Officer - Cmdr. Meiji Tagami - 28 April 1941 - 15 October 1941
Cmdr. Meiji Tagami - 15 October 1941 - 7 July 1943
Cmdr. Tsuneo Shichiji - 7 July 1943 - 15 July 1943
Cmdr. / Capt.* Masaru Kohiga - 15 July 1943 - 25 August 1943 (KIA; posthumously promoted Captain.)
Further Information
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