"Clash at Tassafaronga: A Fierce Naval Battle in the Solomons, 1942"
During the Battle of Guadalcanal Japanese Navy operations were directed at reinforcing their troops on the island and harassing the Americans by shelling them at night.
The US
Navy countered this by attacking Japanese units, and nightly gun battles
between American and Japanese ships led to heavy losses on both sides. So many
ships were sunk in the waters around Guadalcanal that a portion of them were
nicknamed Ironbottom Sound.
On the
night of November 30, 1942 a force of Japanese destroyers was sent to the area
of the Sound known as The Slot to deliver supplies. The Japanese had by then
taken to floating supplies ashore in barrels towed to the area by destroyers.
The force of eight Japanese destroyers was attacked by a task force of five
cruisers and four destroyers under the command of US Admiral Carlton Wright.
The
Americans had the advantage of surprise afforded them by the use of radar and
opened a gun battle with the severely outgunned Japanese. With the island at
their backs and the US cruisers blocking their escape to the open sea, the
Japanese fired a “shotgun blast” of long range torpedoes at the American battle
line.
Four of
the five cruisers were hit. USS Minneapolis, USS Pensacola, and USS New
Orleans, all received severe damage. USS Honolulu emerged unscathed but the
last American cruiser in the battle line, USS Northampton, was not so lucky.
Struck by two of the Japanese torpedoes, Northampton both burned and flooded
before being abandoned by its crew. The other three badly damaged cruisers
managed to make it to nearby Tulagi; all three were out of action for many
months. The Japanese lost one destroyer.
After the
attack on Pearl Harbor and the Battle of Savo Island (in which the US Navy lost
four heavy cruisers), Tassafaronga was the worst defeat suffered by the United
States Navy during the Second World War. It led to changes in the manner of
deploying US capital ships and provided further impetus for the development of
flashless propellant for the Navy’s big guns. Despite the heavy losses taken by
the Navy at Tassafaronga, they did succeed in preventing the Japanese from
resupplying their troops, helping the Japanese decision to abandon Guadalcanal
at the end of the year.
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