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Mutsuki, name ship of a class
of twelve 1315-ton first-class
destroyers, was built at Sasebo, Japan. Completed as (Destroyer) Number
19 in March 1926, she was renamed Mutuski
in 1928.
Prior
to World War II, she took part in the arduous exercises that helped
prepare the Japanese Navy for war and was also present during combat
operations in China. On 11 December 1942, a few days after Japan began
the Pacific War, Mutuski
participated in the initial attempt to capture Wake Island, an effort
repulsed with heavy casualties by U.S. Marine Corps gunners and
aviators. In May 1942, she was part of the Port Moresby Invasion Group
during the Battle of the Coral Sea.
On 24 August 1942, as the Japanese made their first major attempt to
recapture Guadalcanal, Mutuski
briefly bombarded U.S. Marine Corps' positions at Henderson Field. The
next day, she went alongside the disabled transport Kinryu Maru to rescue that ship's
crew and troops. While so immobilized, a formation of U.S. B-17 bombers
appeared. Aware of the poor accuracy of high-level bombing, the
destroyer's captain elected to continue his rescue efforts. However, in
a rare event, the bombers scored well and Mutuski was sunk. Her captain,
hauled from the water with his ship's other surviving crewmen, is said
to have remarked "even the B-17s could make a hit once in a while!"

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Sources: Public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships
and pictures from my father's 1943 Naval Recognition Manual
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