Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Japanese submarine I 15 (1939)

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Name
  
I-15

Commissioned
  
30 September 1940

Fate
  
Sunk 10 November 1942

Construction started
  
January 1938

Length
  
109 m

Laid down
  
January 1938

Struck
  
24 December 1942

Class and type
  
Type B1 submarine

Launched
  
7 March 1939

Japanese submarine I-15 (1939) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

I-15 was a Japanese B1 type submarine. She was completed at Kure Navy Yard on September 30, 1940, whereupon she entered into service with the Imperial Japanese Navy. Her first and only commanding officer was Commander Nobuo Ishikawa. I-15 operated off the north coast of Oahu during the raid on Pearl Harbor. Her second wartime patrol, in May and June 1942, took her to the Aleutians, where she conducted reconnaissance of several islands. I-15's third and final patrol took place from August to November 1942, when she operated in the Solomon Islands in the South Pacific, supporting the Japanese efforts to hold Guadalcanal. One source (Morison) suggests that I-15 hit the battleship USS North Carolina with a torpedo on September 15, 1942, but more recent authorities (Hackett & Kingsepp) maintain that the torpedo came from another submarine operating in the area, I-19, which was also responsible for the sinking of the USS Wasp, which I-15 duly observed and reported. On November 10, 1942, a U.S. ex-destroyer (modified to a fast minesweeper), USS Southard, sank I-15 at Cape Recherche, San Cristóbal, with all hands lost. Commander Ishikawa was promoted to the rank of Captain posthumously. On December 14, 1942, more than one month after I-15 was sunk, USS Wahoo (SS-238) sank an unknown submarine which it misidentified as the I-15.

References

Japanese submarine I-15 (1939) Wikipedia