Navy

Stories Told in Stone: History and Remembrance at Sasebo’s Navy Cemetery
Stories Told in Stone: History and Remembrance at Sasebo’s Navy Cemetery

Stories Told in Stone: History and Remembrance at Sasebo’s Navy Cemetery

I like to visit Sasebo’s former naval cemetery at Highasi Park from time to time, looking at ship memorials and enjoying the changing seasons there. It’s Japan’s largest naval cemetery and since the first burials in 1892, it’s kept alive…

Fighting the Kriegsmarine and Kamikazes: A Short History of USS Emmons (DD-457/DMS-22)
Fighting the Kriegsmarine and Kamikazes:  A Short History of USS Emmons (DD-457/DMS-22)

Fighting the Kriegsmarine and Kamikazes: A Short History of USS Emmons (DD-457/DMS-22)

This article was originally written for a college class, but the uncommon subject matter is one I think my readers would find interesting so I am presenting it here with minor changes. To learn more about Emmons I recommend reaching…

Picnic among the Pits: Tajimadake Naval Guard Station and Submarine No. 43 Memorial
Picnic among the Pits: Tajimadake Naval Guard Station and Submarine No. 43 Memorial

Picnic among the Pits: Tajimadake Naval Guard Station and Submarine No. 43 Memorial

Looking up at the sky, I imagined what it was like standing here and watching more than 100 heavy bombers fly overhead. Tajimadake, a high hill with the city of Sasebo spread out before it, housed a battery of anti-aircraft…

Mutsu: Japan’s Most Visitable World War II Battleship?
Mutsu: Japan’s Most Visitable World War II Battleship?

Mutsu: Japan’s Most Visitable World War II Battleship?

After World War II most of the Imperial Japanese Navy’s battleships were at the bottom of the sea or scrapped, leaving the pre-dreadnought-turned-memorial ship Mikasa, victor of the 1905 Battle of Tsushima, as Japan’s sole survivor. Yamato is Japan’s most…