Chiaki Matsuda file photo [27705]

Chiaki Matsuda

SurnameMatsuda
Given NameChiaki
CountryJapan
CategoryMilitary-Sea
GenderMale

Contributor:

ww2dbaseChiaki Matsuda was born in Kamoto (now a part of Yamaga), Kunamoto Prefecture, Japan in 1896. He entered the Japanese Naval Academy in Sep 1913 and graduated in Dec 1916. In Aug 1917, he was assigned to battleship Haruna. In Dec 1917, he was promoted to the rank of ensign and was assigned to battleship Kawachi. After Kawachi was lost to an accidental magazine explosion in Jul 1918, he returned to Haruna in the following month. In Nov 1918, he was assigned to cruiser Azuma as a supplementary guidance officer. In Dec 1919, he was promoted to the rank of sub-lieutenant and was assigned to the Torpedo School. In May 1920, he entered the Gunnery School. In Dec 1920, he was assigned to cruiser Yudachi. In Dec 1921, he was made the squadron strategy officer with his post aboard battleship Kongo. In Dec 1922, he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant. Between Dec 1922 and Nov 1923, he studied graduate level courses at the Gunnery School. Upon graduation, he was made the chief gunnery officer of the destroyer Kamikaze. In Dec 1924, he was made a squad leader aboard battleship Mutsu. In Dec 1925, he was made an instructor at the Gunnery School. Between Dec 1926 and Nov 1928, he studied at the Naval War College. In Dec 1928, he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant commander and was assigned to the Bureau of Personnel in the Navy Ministry. In May 1930, he was made a military attaché and aide at the US embassy. In May 1931, he was assigned to cruiser Kiso as the chief gunnery officer. In Sep 1931, he was assigned to the first division of the Naval General Staff. In Nov 1933, he was promoted to the rank of commander. In Apr 1934, he was appointed to the Army General Staff as a naval liaison officer. In Nov 1934, he was assigned to the second division of the Naval General Staff. In this role, he was involved in the planning and design of the Yamato-class battleships. In 1935, he was made the executive officer of light cruiser Abukuma. In Nov 1935, he was made a faculty member at the Naval War College. In Dec 1935, he was promoted to the rank of captain. In early 1936, he was placed on a watch list by the Japanese secret police for having possible links to the mutineers of the 26 Feb Incident, in which a group of young Japanese Army officers attempted to overthrow the government. In Aug 1938, he was made the commanding officer of seaplane carrier Kamoi. In 1940, he was made a section chief a the Naval General Staff headquarters. Later in the same year, he traveled to Europe and North America. In Oct 1940, he was made a staff member at the Institute for Total War. In Sep 1941, he was made the commanding officer of old battleship Settsu; in this role, he developed a manual to prevent air attacks. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, he made comments that the seemingly successful raid might actually be a strategic failure. Between Feb and Dec 1942, he was the commanding officer of battleship Hyuga. Between Dec 1942 and Sep 1943, he was the commanding officer of battleship Yamato. In May 1943, he was promoted to the rank of rear admiral. After some time as the chief staff officer of the first division of the Naval General Staff, he was assigned the commanding officer of the Carrier Division 4 along with the 4th Aircraft Squadron in May 1944; Carrier Division 4 contained, among other ships, his former command Hyuga, although the ship had since been converted into a battleship-carrier hybrid. In Feb 1945, he successfully completed Operation Kita, which brought warships and oil and other important raw materials from Singapore to Japan. He was made the commanding officer of the Yokosuka Naval Air Corp in Feb 1945; he would be at this position at the end of the war. After the war, he was interrogated by Lieutenant Commander J. A. Field, Jr. of the United States Naval Reserves in Tokyo on 12 Nov 1945, and was commented by Field as "an exceedingly agreeable and cooperative witness and his testimony was considered generally accurate". Matsuda shared his less-than-enthusiastic personal opinion of the hybrid battleship-carrier platform such as Ise and Hyuga, and the theoretical doctrine for operating such hybrids. He indicated that Hyuga and Ise were never fully used as hybrids because they never received sufficient number of carrier pilots. Matsuda also shared his observation that when a Japanese air unit was placed in combat, all pilots stay on the front lines until all pilots were lost; had some pilots been withdrawn to the rear for reorganization of new units, the veterans could have formed nuclei of the new units, providing experience to new units and guidance to newly trained pilots. After the war, he became an inventor and a businessman. Matsuda passed away in 1995.

ww2dbaseSources:
Interrogations of Japanese Officials
Wikipedia

Last Major Revision: Feb 2007

Chiaki Matsuda 互動地圖

Chiaki Matsuda Timeline

1896年9月26日 Chiaki Matsuda was born in Kamoto, Kunamoto Prefecture, Japan.
1916年12月11日 Chiaki Matsuda graduated from the Japanese Naval Academy.
1917年3月3日 Chiaki Matsuda returned to Japan after completing his midshipmen cruise.
1917年4月5日 Chiaki Matsuda departed for a training cruise.
1917年8月17日 Chiaki Matsuda returned to Japan after completing a training cruise.
1917年8月19日 Chiaki Matsuda was assigned to battleship Haruna.
1917年12月1日 Chiaki Matsuda was promoted to the rank of ensign and was assigned to battleship Kawachi.
1918年8月15日 Chiaki Matsuda was assigned to battleship Haruna.
1918年11月9日 Chiaki Matsuda was assigned to cruiser Azuma as a supplementary guidance officer.
1919年7月20日 Chiaki Matsuda arrived in Japan after completing a cruise.
1919年12月1日 Chiaki Matsuda was promoted to the rank of sub-lieutenant and was assigned to the Torpedo School.
1920年5月31日 Chiaki Matsuda entered the Gunnery School.
1920年12月1日 Chiaki Matsuda was assigned to cruiser Yudachi.
1921年12月1日 Chiaki Matsuda was made the squadron strategy officer with his post aboard battleship Kongo.
1922年12月1日 Chiaki Matsuda was promoted to the rank of lieutenant and enrolled in graduate courses of the Gunnery School.
1923年11月29日 Chiaki Matsuda completed the graduate courses of the Gunnery School with honors and was assigned to destroyer Kamikaze as the chief gunnery officer.
1924年12月1日 Chiaki Matsuda was made a squad leader aboard battleship Mutsu.
1925年12月1日 Chiaki Matsuda was made an instructor at the Gunnery School.
1926年12月1日 Chiaki Matsuda entered the Naval War College in Kamiosaki, Shinagawa, Tokyo, Japan.
1928年11月6日 Chiaki Matsuda graudated from the Naval War College in Kamiosaki, Shinagawa, Tokyo, Japan.
1928年12月10日 Chiaki Matsuda was promoted to the rank of lieutenant commander and was assigned to the Bureau of Personnel in the Navy Ministry.
1931年9月7日 Chiaki Matsuda was assigned to the first division of the Naval General Staff.
1933年11月15日 Chiaki Matsuda was promoted to the rank of commander.
1934年4月2日 Chiaki Matsuda was appointed to the Army General Staff as a naval liaison officer.
1934年11月15日 Chiaki Matsuda was assigned to the second division of the Naval General Staff.
1935年11月21日 Chiaki Matsuda was made a faculty member at the Naval War College in Kamiosaki, Shinagawa, Tokyo, Japan.
1935年12月1日 Chiaki Matsuda was promoted to the rank of captain.
1938年8月25日 Chiaki Matsuda was made the commanding officer of seaplane carrier Kamoi.
1940年10月1日 Chiaki Matsuda was made a staff member at the Institute for Total War.
1941年9月1日 Chiaki Matsuda was made the commanding officer of old battleship Settsu.
1942年12月17日 Chiaki Matsuda was made the commanding officer of old battleship Yamato.
1943年5月1日 Chiaki Matsuda was promoted to the rank of rear admiral.
1944年5月1日 Chiaki Matsuda was made the commanding officer of Carrier Division 4 and 4th Aircraft Squadron.
1945年11月1日 Chiaki Matsuda was transferred to the reserves.
1945年11月12日 Chiaki Matsuda was interrogated by Lieutenant Commander J. A. Field, Jr. in Tokyo, Japan.
1995年11月6日 Chiaki Matsuda passed away in Japan.




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More on Chiaki Matsuda
Event(s) Participated:
» Mariana Islands Campaign
» Philippines Campaign, Phase 1, the Leyte Campaign

Ship(s) Served:
» Abukuma
» Haruna
» Hyuga
» Kamikaze
» Kamoi
» Kiso
» Kongo
» Mutsu
» Settsu
» Yamato

Document(s):
» Interrogation Nav 69, Rear Admiral Chiaki Matsuda

著名二戰名言
"An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile, hoping it will eat him last."

Winston Churchill


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