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HA. 19 (Japanese Midget Submarine)

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Name
  
Ha-19

Beam
  
1.8 m (5 ft 11 in)

Area
  
404.7 m²

Year built
  
1941

Added to NRHP
  
30 June 1989

Status
  
Museum Exhibit

Length
  
24 m

Launched
  
1938

Builder
  
Kure Naval Arsenal

HA. 19 (Japanese Midget Submarine) Florida Memory quotJapanese Midget Submarinequot at Naval Station Key

Captured
  
Grounded, Oahu 7 December 1941

Type
  
Type A Kō-hyōteki-class submarine

Displacement
  
46 long tons (47 t) submerged

Similar
  
Forceful, Roann, Luna, L A Dunton, RELIEF

The HA. 19 (also known as Japanese Midget Submarine "C" by the US Navy) is a historic Imperial Japanese Navy Type A Kō-hyōteki-class midget submarine that was part of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941. This submarine was ordered to enter Pearl Harbor then attack the American warships with its torpedoes and then scuttle it with its scuttling right next to a warship. However, she did not enter the harbor, and was grounded and captured. The submarine was eventually put on display near the submarine squadron at Naval Station Key West, Florida, then moved to the nearby Key West Lighthouse and Military Museum. HA-19 is now displayed at the National Museum of the Pacific War in Fredericksburg, Texas.

Contents

HA. 19 (Japanese Midget Submarine) Florida Memory quotJapanese Midget Submarinequot at Naval Air Station

Build

HA. 19 (Japanese Midget Submarine) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Ha-19 was built at Kure Naval Dockyard, Kure, Hiroshima, Japan as a Type A Kō-hyōteki-class midget submarine in 1938. The Type 92 periscope was installed later in May 1941.

Pearl Harbor

HA. 19 (Japanese Midget Submarine) Submarine Photo Index

In November 1941, Ha-19 was part of the Kido Butai and physically attached to I-24 as its mother ship at Kamegakubi Naval Proving Ground. Its two-man crew consisted of Ensign Kazuo Sakamaki (1918–1999) and Chief Warrant Officer Kiyoshi Inagaki (1915–1941).

HA. 19 (Japanese Midget Submarine) Submarine Photo Index

On 7 December 1941 at 3:30am, Ha-19 launched from I-24 with a broken gyrocompass. The crew had four and a half hours to get to Pearl Harbor, Hawaii to join the attack on Pearl Harbor and had to fix the compass en route.

HA. 19 (Japanese Midget Submarine) Historic Naval Ships Visitors Guide Japanese HA19

Ha-19 reached the entrance to the harbor, and impaired by the broken compass, hit a reef three times and grounded on the right side of the entrance at 8:00am. With the attack on the Harbor underway, the stranded submarine was spotted and attacked at 8:17 by the USS Helm. The destroyer missed and managed to blast Ha-19 off the reef, knocking Sakamaki unconscious. Inagaki dived the submarine, and when he resurfaced at 8:18, Helm opened fire again and missed. Inagaki dived once more to escape the confrontation.

HA. 19 (Japanese Midget Submarine) Japan39s Midget Submarine Attack on Pearl Harbor Was a Suicide Mission

When Sakamaki awoke, they made another attempt at the harbor. The grounding had damaged the vessel so she could not fire one of her torpedoes. HA-19 flooded and the batteries were giving off fumes from being in contact with seawater. Attempting to enter the harbor they hit the reef again and reversed for another attempt. On the next try, she grounded again, but after adjusting the ballast was freed. On the final attempt, HA-19 came under a depth charge attack that disabled her ability to fire the other torpedo and damaged the periscope. The crew decided to abort the attack and return to I-24 near Lanai. The fumes given off by the batteries finally overcame them and HA-19 was carried by the currents. The crew awoke to find it was night, and they intended to land the submarine ashore at Waimānalo. The engine died and she grounded on another reef. Sakamaki ordered Inagaki to abandon ship while he set the scuttling charge and followed suit. The charge failed to detonate likely from being in contact with seawater. Sakamaki managed to swim through the surf to shore where he collapsed and was captured the next day. Inagaki drowned and his body washed ashore the next day.

Capture

HA. 19 was given the designation of “Midget C”, the third letter of the alphabet, for being the third midget submarine sighted from the Japanese attack force. On 8 December 1941, HA. 19 was bombed by Army planes. The bombs missed and she broke free and washed ashore. In the days following the attack and with the aid of an Army tractor, she was pulled out of the sea. HA. 19 was built to be disassembled into three parts, and this characteristic was utilized. It was transported to the Naval Submarine Base Pearl Harbor and searched, yielding various documents. It was determined that most of the damage to HA. 19 was a result of the multiple groundings.

Exhibit

HA. 19 was sent to the US mainland in January 1942 where she went on war bond tours. She was at Navy Pier, Chicago, Illinois when the War ended.

On 20 January 1947, HA. 19 was put on outdoor display at Naval Station Key West, Key West, Florida. On 2 December 1964, she was loaned to the Key West Art and Historical Association and moved to an outdoor exhibit at the Key West Lighthouse and Military Museum adjacent to Key West Light. On 30 June 1989, HA. 19 was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places, and was declared a U.S. National Historic Landmark. In 1990, the association administering the Key West museum decided to transition their facility to strictly a lighthouse museum and began divesting itself of its military collections. In 1991, the HA. 19 was moved to Fredericksburg, Texas to become part of the National Museum of the Pacific War at the Admiral Nimitz State Historic Site. That same year, Sakamaki attended a historical conference in Texas and was reunited with his submarine.

References

HA. 19 (Japanese Midget Submarine) Wikipedia