was one of four principal naval shipyards owned and operated by the Imperial Japanese Navy, and was located at Yokosuka city, Kanagawa prefecture
on Tokyo Bay
, south of Yokohama.
History
In 1866,
the Tokugawa shogunate government
established the Yokosuka Seisakusho, a military arsenal and naval base,
with the help of foreign
engineers, including the French
naval architect Léonce Verny. The new facility was
intended to produce modern, western-style
warships and equipment for the Tokugawa navy. The
construction of the arsenal was an important first step for the
modernization of Japan's industry. Modern buildings, an
aqueduct,
foundry,
brick factories, technical schools to train Japanese
technicians were established.
After the
Boshin War and the
Meiji Restoration, the new
Meiji government took over control of the
facility in 1871, renaming it the
Yokosuka Zosenjo
(Yokosuka Shipyards). The first
dry dock
was opened in 1871, and is still in operation today. Japan's first
domestically produced warship,
Saiki, was completed the
same year.
The
Yokosuka Naval District was
established at Yokosuka, Kanagawa
in 1884, as the first of the naval districts responsible for the
defense of the Japanese home islands
, and the Yokosuka Shipyards was renamed the
Yokosuka Naval Arsenal in 1903. Japan had purchased five
submarines from the
Electric Boat Company [U.S.]
during the
Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905). These
Holland Type VII submarines were
built by
Arthur Leopold Busch
as he traveled to Japan during this time.
Mr. Busch was a naval
architect and shipbuilder who represented the newly organized
company (Electric Boat
Company) now located at the Quincy Massachusett's shipyard
known as the Fore River Ship and Engine
Company
. These first five submarines became Japan's
(IJN) initial entry into the theater of
underwater warfare that began nearly the
same time as the outbreak of the
Russo-Japanese conflict. Another
representitive of Electric Boat,
Frank
Cable, an electrician working for Isaac L. Rice's company
trained two Japanese crews in the operation of such craft.
Arthur Busch was also the man responsible for building the
United States Navy's first submarine some
five or so years before this time for the
Holland Torpedo
Boat Company. This (particular craft) was named the
USS Holland and was America's
first commissioned craft (of this) type. Two additional Holland
designed submarines were built for Japan by 1906 "under contract"
and a licencing "agreement" with Holland's company back in 1905.
These pioneering submarines progressively got larger and larger as
time went on. In 1909, Japan's first domestically designed and
produced
battleship,
Satsuma was
launched.
Yokosuka became one of the main shipyards of the
Imperial Japanese Navy in the 20th
century, building numerous battleships such as
Yamashiro, and
aircraft carriers such as
Hiryu and
Shokaku.
Naval aircraft were designed at the nearby
Yokosuka Naval Air
Technical Arsenal.
The facilities were seized by the
Allied forces at the end of
World War II, and on
1945-10-15 the Yokosuka Naval Arsenal was
officially abolished.
However, the facilities continued to be used in the post-
World War II period, by the
United States Navy as the
Yokosuka
Ship Repair Facility and its former property is now under the
control of the
United States Fleet
Activities Yokosuka.
A steam hammer from the former Yokosuka Naval Arsenal is on display
at the
Verny Commemorative Museum in Yokosuka.
See also
References