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Nittō Maru (1936)

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Nittō Maru (1936)
Ship nameNittō Maru
Ship ownerNippon Yusen Kaisha
Ship builderMitsubishi Shipbuilding & Engineering Co., Nagasaki
Ship laid down1935
Ship launched1936
Ship completed1936
Ship fateSunk, 19 February 1942
Ship typeRefrigerated cargo ship
Ship tonnage5,825 GRT
Ship length125.0 m
Ship beam16.2 m
Ship draught9.2 m
Ship propulsionDiesel engine
Ship speed17 knots

Nittō Maru (1936) was a Japanese refrigerated cargo ship constructed for Nippon Yusen Kaisha (NYK Line) and completed in 1936. It served primarily on routes between Japan and South America, transporting perishable goods like Argentine beef and fruit before being requisitioned for military service during World War II. The vessel was sunk in February 1942 by the United States Navy submarine while carrying a critical cargo of mercury, a loss that had significant repercussions for the Japanese war effort.

Construction and design

The *Nittō Maru* was built in 1936 at the Nagasaki shipyard of Mitsubishi Shipbuilding & Engineering Co., a leading member of the Mitsubishi zaibatsu. Its design was typical of modern refrigerated cargo ships of the era, intended for long-distance trade in temperature-sensitive commodities. With a gross register tonnage of 5,825 tons, a length of 125 meters, and powered by efficient diesel engines capable of 17 knots, it represented a significant investment for its owner, Nippon Yusen Kaisha. The ship's advanced refrigeration holds were specifically engineered for the transport of Argentine beef and other perishable foodstuffs from South America to the Japanese market, supporting the pre-war export economy of nations like Argentina and Uruguay.

Service history

Upon its completion, the *Nittō Maru* entered regular commercial service for Nippon Yusen Kaisha on the lucrative JapanSouth America route. Its operations were integral to the food supply chain, bringing large quantities of frozen meat and fruit from ports such as Buenos Aires and Montevideo to Yokohama and Kobe. Following the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War and the broader Pacific War, the ship, like many other Japanese merchant marine vessels, was requisitioned by the Imperial Japanese Navy for wartime logistics. It was converted for use as a military transport, tasked with carrying vital raw materials and supplies across the Empire of Japan's expanding sphere of control in the Pacific Ocean.

Loss

The *Nittō Maru* was sunk on 19 February 1942 in the South China Sea, approximately 250 miles west of Luzon. It was torpedoed by the American Gato-class submarine , under the command of Lieutenant Commander Frank W. Fenno. The submarine's patrol report detailed a successful attack on a large, lone merchant vessel. Unbeknownst to the crew of the *Trout* at the time, the *Nittō Maru* was carrying an exceptionally valuable and strategic cargo: 3,000 flasks (approximately 90 tons) of mercury. This material, essential for the production of detonators and other munitions in the Japanese arsenal, was en route from Kobe to support industrial operations in Singapore, which had recently fallen following the Battle of Singapore.

Aftermath and legacy

The loss of the *Nittō Maru* and its cargo of mercury constituted a serious, though initially unrecognized, strategic blow to Japan's war industry. The United States Navy only learned the full significance of the sinking after deciphering coded Japanese messages through the MAGIC intelligence program. This intelligence coup revealed severe Japanese shortages of mercury, directly impeding weapons production. The incident is frequently cited in historical analyses of Allied intelligence in World War II and the economic warfare of the Pacific War, highlighting how the interdiction of merchant shipping could cripple a nation's military logistics. The wreck of the *Nittō Maru* remains on the seabed, and its story is a noted case study in the Battle of the Atlantic-style submarine campaigns waged across the Pacific Ocean.

Category:World War II merchant ships of Japan Category:Ships built in Nagasaki Category:Refrigerated cargo ships Category:Maritime incidents in 1942