History
Name
  • Rozan Maru (1919–1931)
  • Karafuto Maru (1931–1937)
  • Nichiryu Maru (1937–1943)
Owner
BuilderAsano Ship Building Company, Tsurumi
Launched1919
CompletedMay 1919
FateSunk by Australian aircraft on 6 January 1943
General characteristics
Tonnage5,870 GRT
Length400 feet (122 m)[1]
Beam53 feet (16 m)
Draught29.4 feet (9.0 m)
PropulsionTriple expansion engines (513 NHP)

The Nichiryu Maru (Nitiryu Maru) was a 5,447 gross register ton cargo ship built by Asano Ship Building Company, Tsurumi in 1919 as Rozan Maru. She was the third ship of the Yoshida Maru No 1-class of 25 standard cargo ships (referred to as Type B at the time) built by Asano Shipyard (one was built at the Uraga Dock Company) between 1918 and 1919.[2] In April 1929, she was acquired by Karafuto Kisen Kabushiki Kaisha and in 1931, renamed Karafuto Maru.[3] On 22 November 1937, she was acquired by Nissan Kissen Kabushiki Kaisha and renamed Nichiryu Maru.[3] She was requisitioned by the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II.

Fate

On 6 January 1943, while steaming as part of a convoy, carrying two companies of the 3rd Battalion, 102nd Infantry Regiment and medical supplies for the garrison at Lae, was hit by bombs from a Royal Australian Air Force PBY Catalina aircraft, and was sunk at 06°30'S, 149°00'E. Destroyers rescued 739 of the 1,100 troops on board, but the ship took with it 361 soldiers and all of Okabe's medical supplies.

Notes

  1. "Lloyd's Register 1942–43" (PDF). plimsollshipdata. Retrieved 22 November 2011.
  2. Nagasawa, Fumio (1998). "第一吉田丸型 YOSHIDA MARU No.1 Class 25隻 (1918-1919)". Nostalgic Japanese Steamships (in Japanese).
  3. 1 2 Nagasawa, Fumio (1998). "櫨山丸 ROZAN MARU (1919)". Nostalgic Japanese Steamships (in Japanese).
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