1st Carrier Division (Imperial Japanese Navy) explained

Unit Name:First Carrier Division
Dates:April 1, 1928  - April 10, 1945
Country:Empire of Japan
Allegiance:Axis Powers of World War II
Branch:Imperial Japanese Navy
Type:Naval aviation unit
Role:Aircraft carrier support
Battles:Attack on Pearl Harbor
Battle of Rabaul
Bombing of Darwin
Indian Ocean raid
Battle of Midway
Battle of the Eastern Solomons
Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands
Battle of the Philippine Sea
Notable Commanders:Chūichi Nagumo Jisaburo Ozawa

was an aircraft carrier unit of the Imperial Japanese Navy's First Air Fleet. At the beginning of the Pacific Campaign of World War II, the First Carrier Division consisted of the fleet carriers Akagi and Kaga. The division participated in the Attack on Pearl Harbor and Indian Ocean Raid. After Akagi and Kaga were sunk at the Battle of Midway in June 1942, carriers Shōkaku, Zuikaku, and Zuihō were redesignated as the First Carrier Division.

Organization (extract)

DateShips
1 April 1928 (original) , and Destroyer Squadron 6:,
1 December 1931 , and Destroyer Squadron 2 :,,,
15 November 1934 , Hōshō and Destroyer Squadron 5:,,,
1 December 1937 Kaga and Destroyer Squadron 29:,,,
15 November 1939 Akagi and Destroyer Squadron 19:,,,
10 April 1941 Akagi, Kaga and Destroyer Squadron 7:,
14 July 1942 ,,
1 April 1944 , Shōkaku, Zuikaku
15 August 1944 ,
15 December 1944 Amagi, Unryū,,,
10 April 1945 dissolved

Commander

RankName Date
1R.ADM 1 April 1928
xDisbanded 10 December 1928
2R.ADM Sankichi Takahashi 1 April 1929
3R.ADM 30 November 1929
4R.ADM 1 December 1930
5R.ADM 15 November 1932
6R.ADM 3 October 1933
7R.ADM 1 June 1934
8R.ADM 15 November 1935
9R.ADM 1 December 1936
10R.ADM 1 December 1937
11R.ADM 25 April 1938
12R.ADM 15 November 1939
13R.ADM 1 November 1940
14V.ADM 10 April 1941
15V.ADM 11 November 1942
16R.ADM 1 October 1944
17R.ADM 10 December 1944
xvacant post 10 February 1945
xdissolved 10 April 1945

The First Carrier Division participated in the largest carrier-to-carrier battle in history, the Battle of the Marianas, and specifically the aircraft carrier Battle of the Philippine Sea (the so-called “Great Marianas Turkey Shoot”) on 19–20 June, where the Japanese naval forces were decisively defeated with heavy and irreplaceable losses to their carrier-borne and land-based aircraft.[1]

References

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Aircraft Carriers: A History of Carrier Aviation and Its Influence on World Events, 1946-2006 . II . Norman . Polmar . 377–400 . January 24, 2008 . Washington, D.C . Potomac Books Inc . 978-1574886658 . hardcover . June 1, 2014.