Friday, December 30, 2022

JR Yokosuka Station

During the latter half of 2022, as things finally started to normalize again following the COVID-19 pandemic, more public events and festivals have been occurring in Yokosuka City.

One such event, the "YY Nori-mono Festa", was held in areas around JR Yokosuka Station on 03-04 December.

The first one was held in 2009 as part of an event to commemorate the 120th anniversary of the establishment of JR Yokosuka Station... 
 
  "The Yokosuka Line opened between Ofuna and Yokosuka in 1889 and was sung in the 'railroad songs' of the Meiji era.  The line was positioned as an important route connecting the capital and military ports and was extended to Kurihama at the request of the Navy in 1944.  The Yokosuka station building was reconstructed to its present form in 1940, but it is known as a station building without stairs, and some of the pillars supporting the roof of the platform are reused old railroad rails with an engraving from 1886."




   
























Wednesday, December 28, 2022

花の国 (HANA NO KUNI) -- "Flower World"

One special characteristic of Yokosuka City is that some of its large parks are located on land which used to be used for military purposes. During the decades following the end of World War II, many Japanese Imperial Army and Navy facilities and training areas were converted for civilian use. One good example is 中央平和公園 (CHUO HEIWA KOEN), or "Central Peace Park", which used to be a coastal defense artillery battery.  In Yokosuka's southern Kurihama district, there is a large and unique/beautiful park called 花の国 (HANA NO KUNI) -- "Flower World", where vast fields of seasonal Poppy and Cosmos flowers can be viewed and enjoyed. HANA NO KUNI also has walking trails, an herb garden complex (with foot bath), and a huge area with playground equipment for children to enjoy. Of special interest, there is one of Japan's largest statues of Godzilla located in the same area -- and the reason for its being there is because, according to local urban legend, when Godzilla rose from the depths of the ocean and swam into Tokyo Bay, it first stepped ashore on a nearby beach in Kannonzaki, Yokosuka. HANA NO KUNI takes up a large amount of real estate and owes its existence to the fact that the land was originally used by the Japanese Imperial Navy for a large number of warehouses and ammunition storage facilities. From 1945 to 1972, the area was under the control of the U.S. military, and that kept it from being built-upon -- so the natural features and greenery were preserved. Following the return of the area to Japan, plans and arrangements were eventually made for Yokosuka City to convert it into a park, and HANA NO KUNI was opened for visitors in 1988 -- and it soon became very popular, attracting over 500,000 visitors per year.



















Art Objects at Fishing Park

 





Tuesday, November 29, 2022

Yokosuka Central Park's Monument: "Axis of Peace"






































Renewal of a peace-themed monument was carried out in conjunction with the renewal of the Central Park in Yokosuka City.

At sunset, the monument becomes illuminated and emits the light of peace into the sky, representing an axis of unshakable peace.

The circle has the ancient meaning of “infinity, eternity,” and the monument is decorated with many circles drawn by citizens with the wish for lasting peace. 

During the day, it is a place where sunlight pours in. People can feel peace from the light leaking from the circles they have drawn and the open landscape in front of them. 

At night, it is filled with grains of light carrying people’s wishes for peace. Words of peace from around the world come to life.

Manhole Cover Art In Yokosuka

































Yokosuka Overview

The Story of Yokosuka, Japan's Naval Base City | YABAI - The Modern, Vibrant Face of Japan

Where is Yokosuka?

Yokosuka is a core city that is part of the Kanagawa Prefecture, by the middle easternmost coast of Japan. Kanagawa Prefecture falls under the Kanto Region, which is located on the main island of Japan; Honshu.

Zooming back into the city: Yokosuka city is found on a peninsula called “Miura peninsula”. To the west of this peninsula the Pacific Ocean, and to its east is Tokyo Bay. Surrounding Yokosuka are municipalities, namely Miuria, Hayama, Kanazawa-ku Yokohama, and Hayama.

More Information About Yokosuka

Yokosuka city ranks in 12th place in terms of being the most populated in the Kanto region, and 11th when it comes to Greater Tokyo. As of the first of June 2012, Yokosuka was estimated to have a population of 414,960 people, with a density of 4,120 people per square kilometer. The total size of its area measures at 100.7 square kilometers.

The tree that represents Yokosuka is the Prunus speciosa, its symbolic flower is the Crinum asiaticum, and its representative bird is the Common gull. Its current mayor is Katsuaki Ueji.

The History of Yokosuka, Japan

As with many of the other parts of Japan, the area of modern-day Yokosuka was once inhabited by people thousands of years ago, as early as the Paleolithic period (~14,000 B.C.). Archaeologists could prove this from excavating shell middens from this age and found further evidence of the Jomon and Kofun eras from the indicating ceramic shards.

Fast forward a little less than a thousand years later to the Heian period, when trades between countries were becoming more frequent and the exchange of religions and cultures were at their peak. At this point, the feudal warlord or “daimyo” Muroka Tamemichi began to build his kingdom around Yokosuka which would continue for the next few centuries to govern the eastern Sagami Province. Muroka Tamemichi established the beginnings of the Miura clan.

The Nonstop Warring States

The Kamakura period, which occurred between 1185 A.D. to 1333 A.D.. The next periods leading up all the way to when Tokugawa Ieyasu was placed in power, were violent times for the different kingdoms of Japan. Due to the constant bloodshed from sieges, battles, and plots for Kingdom domination. Yokosuka was not spared from this. The Hojo and Miura clans would war neck and neck until Toyotomi Hideyoshi’s firm orders to keep Tokugawa Ieyasu in control over all the region of Kanto.

Being located at the vulnerable eastern coast of Japan and also being in proximity to Tokyo Bay, Yokosuka’s coast was turned into a post named “Uraga Bugyo” by the ruling Shogunate. This would mean that any vessel that was headed to Edo for any reason would first have to make a pit stop here to be inspected. They strengthened their military powers around that area because of the many foreign ships had come by in attempts to coax Japan into opening their doors.

The Opening Of Doors – or Rather, Ports

Eventually, Commodore Perry would come to convince (or rather, intimidate) Japan with his advanced machinery and weaponry to open its doors to exchange with foreigners. This would lead to Bakumatsu period, and eventually, the Meiji period, where Japan’s feudal warlord system and Tokugawa Shogunate was overturned.

War in Japan: The History Behind the Naval Base in Yokosuka

The Bakumatsu period is when Yokosuka was elected to be the site of a naval base. The layout and content of this naval base were engineered by Frenchman Leonce Verny, who included facilities that would construct ships, and everything needed to supply those facilities, such as an Iron Foundry. To prove that Japan was moving forward with the times, they built a Naval Arsenal, which would be known as the Yokosuka Naval Arsenal. As the years would pass, other industrial developments (more foundries, the Hashirimizu waterway, and brick factories) would emerge around the naval base.

The entire Japan went through many drastic changes during the Meiji Period. The Imperial Japanese Navy had complete control of Japan, thus naval districts were strategically fortified, with its headquarters being in Yokosuka, in the Yokosuka Naval District. By 1889, Yokosuka was referred to as Dai-ichi kaigunku, or the “First Naval District”. Warships would dock here, and more establishments would propagate the development as the base, such as the creations of military schools, and the equipment and storage of arsenal for battle.

Yokosuka, during the second world war, saw many bombings placed by the United States Army Air Forces and the United States Navy. Many of its equipment and bases would be later taken over by the allied forces, once the Americans started occupying Japan. Because the United States had infiltrated their naval district and called it theirs in 1945, today, it is called “Shirei-kan kantai katsudo Yokosuka” or “United States Fleet Activities: Yokosuka”.

The U.S. Naval forces Japan still uses Commander Fleet Activities/United States Fleet Activities: Yokosuka as its base in partnership and support of the Naval Forces Japan. The Japanese Maritime Self-Defense Force still uses a part of the Yokosuka Naval District, however not the entire base.

Thursday, October 27, 2022

Laid Back West Yokosuka

Yokosuka City straddles the Miura Peninsula, with its east coast facing busy Tokyo Bay, and its west coast facing Sagami Bay.  

Eastern Yokosuka is more urbanized and there is a lot of shipping activity in the naval and civilian harbor areas.  Also, rail lines and highways are concentrated in eastern Yokosuka.  

On the other hand, western Yokosuka (Akiya District) is much less crowded and more laid back, with spectacular views of Mount Fuji when the weather is clear.  The narrow coastal two-lane road runs through scenic fishing villages and small clusters of homes, restaurants, and stores.  

There are also some iconic spots along the coast where the views are spectacular, and one of those is the 立石 (Ta-te Ishi, "Standing Rock") park, where a large rock formation with pine trees overlooks Sagami Bay and out across the waves to distant Mount Fuji.  The Ta-te Ishi rock formation has been a famous scenery spot for hundreds of years -- from back when Japanese traveled along the coastal roads on foot.

Adding to the special ambience of west coast Yokosuka is the location of toney Hayama Town just to the north, where the Japanese Emperor's summer palace and private beach is located.  The local hills and ridges are dotted with ocean-view luxury homes and summer mansions.  During weekends and holidays, day drivers from Tokyo and Yokohama crowd the narrow roads, so it is on the other days when it is best to go explore the area (via car, bus, or bike).


















Yokosuka Overview Video


Discover the beauty of Yokosuka through these highlights and accompanying music! Listen to the rich sounds of this city of music and view captivating footage of sightseeing spots and the local scenery. Featured Spots: Verny Park, Memorial Ship MIKASA, Sarushima, West Kano Shrine, Uraga Ferry "Uraga no Watashi," East Kano Shrine, Kannonzaki Prefectural Park, Kannonzaki Lighthouse, Nagai Seaside Park Soleil Hill, Jorakuji Temple, Akiya Beach, Tateishi Park, Wakamatsu Market, Dobuita Street

LINK:





The Great Yokosuka Air Raid Of July 18, 1945

The Attempted Sinking of Japanese Battleship Nagato - Rebellion Research

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== The Attempted Sinking of Japanese Battleship Nagato 

By July 1945, what was left of the Imperial Japanese Navy was immobilized in Japanese ports due to lack of fuel and critical maintenance.

Japanese ships contributed to the anti-aircraft defenses of several major bases, several of which, especially the main naval base at Kure, were already heavily defended by shore-based anti-aircraft weapons, making air attacks on the bases a formidable prospect.

Although some argued that attacking the ships was unnecessary as the Japanese navy was a spent force, Fleet Admiral Chester Nimitz wanted them destroyed, and Admiral William Halsey carried out his orders.

Following strikes by Task Force 38 carrier aircraft in the Tokyo area on 10 July, photo-reconnaissance analysis revealed Japanese battleship Nagato deep in a cove at Yokosuka. 

Nagato was the flagship of the commander-in-chief of the Japanese Combined Fleet, Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, at the time of the attack on Pearl Harbor.

By the spring of 1945, Nagato had been relegated to a floating coastal defense battery to defend against landings in Sagami Wan and Tokyo Bay. 

Most of her anti-aircraft weapons were removed and placed on high hills around the ship. 

Her secondary battery was also removed and dispersed to be used in an anti-landing role at Yokosuka.

However, she was anchored in water that was too shallow for torpedoes. In addition, she was heavily camouflaged with netting to include potted pine trees and other plants.

Commencing about 1540 on 18 July, about 100 SB2C Helldiver dive-bombers from carriers Essex (CV-9), Yorktown (CV-10), Randolph (CV-15) and Shangri-La (CV-38) attacked the NAGATO, followed by F6F Hellcats from Belleau Wood (CVL-24). 

In order to maximize underwater hull damage, the dive-bombers had orders to aim for near misses. 

The raid was originally scheduled for 0400, but was delayed due to bad weather.

Three waves of 592 aircraft struck Yokosuka and other targets toward Tokyo, led by 62 TBM Avengers, each armed with four 500-pound bombs, which attacked the 154 heavy anti-aircraft guns and 225 machine guns around Yokosuka harbor.

At 1540, 60 Helldivers dove on Nagato, led by planes from Yorktown and Randolph.

At 1552, Nagato took a direct hit by a 500-pound bomb, which killed her commanding officer, Rear Admiral Miki Otsuka, along with the executive officer, the radar officer, and 12 other sailors. 

An ensign briefly assumed command until a severely burned commander (the main battery gunnery officer) took charge. Shortly afterward, another bomb hit the aft shelter deck and exploded at the base of the No. 3 16-inch gun turret, killing about 25 men and destroying four 25-mm anti-aircraft gun mounts. Later, a 5-inch rocket hit the fantail (some accounts say it was an 11.75-inch “Tiny Tim” rocket). It was a dud and passed out the starboard side.

The converted minesweeper Harashima Maru was alongside Nagato and was blown in two. Despite the intensity of the attack with 270 tons of bombs, Nagato remained afloat. She would finally capsize and sink on 29 July 1946 only after being severely damaged by the second atomic bomb test at Bikini Atoll on 24 July (the first test on 1 July only caused moderate damage).

The attack on Yokusuka ended at about 1610.

The old (a 1905 Battle of Tsushima veteran) armored cruiser Kasuga, the incomplete small destroyer Yaezakura, and submarine I-372 were sunk. The pre-dreadnought battleship Fuji (also a Tsushima veteran, used as a training vessel) and the obsolete destroyer Yakaze (used as a target-control vessel) were damaged. 

U.S. losses in the attack were 14 aircraft and 18 aircrewmen, most lost in the intense anti-aircraft fire at Yokosuka. Although the results of the raid were a disappointment, what was not known at the time was that the bomb that destroyed Nagato’s bridge hit the spot where Admiral Yamamoto had given the order to attack Pearl Harbor.



 

Thursday, September 29, 2022

Yokosuka Navy Base Almost Closed In Early-1970s


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There are no “what ifs” in history unless you are a dedicated fan of alternative history fiction. We are, however, sometimes engaged in imagining “what if it (fill in the blank) had happened? Where would we be now?” Speculating on “might have been” results in considering a world that would be completely strange and unrecognizable compared to the reality we exist in.  
We might be tempted to think of those alternate histories when we look closer at some of the old plan that leaders had for the U.S. military facilities in Japan during the 1970s. Can you imagine a world where Yokosuka Naval Facilities, including Commander, Fleet Activities Yokosuka no longer existed?
In 1970, U.S. officials seriously considered changing U.S. military operations in Japan. In a Memorandum from the Executive Secretary of the Department of State (Theodore Eliot) to the President’s Assistant for National Security Affairs (Henry Kissinger), the U.S. and Japan discussed “a reduction of approximately 9,000 Japanese employees and some 10,000 U.S. service personnel. The major U.S. naval base at Yokosuka will be nearly closed with most of its principal functions transferred to Sasebo, including COMSEVENTHFLT headquarters.”
As part of the so-called Nixon Doctrine put forth in 1969, which aimed at ending the Vietnam War, the U.S. was forced to make a political change in its approach to diplomacy and military activities in Asia. This included the use of alternative solutions to support U.S. global strategy due to a loss of over 70,000 Americans in the South East Asia theaters, and a rise in negative public opinions. Additionally, the Vietnam War was far more expensive than the U.S. had anticipated.
According to the memorandum mentioned above, Armin H. Meyer, the U.S. Ambassador to Japan, presented an outline of the plan to Japan’s foreign minister in November of 1970, and “while a bit surprised at the plan to close Yokosuka, [he] undertook to study the package carefully.” And in Nov. 21, the Public Information Bureau Japan, Ministry of Foreign Affairs publicly announced subjects discussed in the package plan, which included down-sizing the Yokosuka Naval Facility with a large number of layoffs and a significant reduction in the facility scale. According to the memorandum, the plan was supposed to be carried out by June, 1946.
This was unexpected news in Yokosuka, and even much more so to those who worked at the U.S. Navy base. The impact was huge, especially on the Ship Repair Facility (SRF) which boasted more than 4,000 employees who specialized in ship repair and maintenance for decades. 
The plan also scheduled a substantial reduction in operational and logistics activities with the proposed realignments affecting around 12,000 U.S. military personnel, along with U.S. civilian employees and dependents.
SRF’s Reduction in Force (RIF) notification was posted Jan. 18, 1971 and as a result, 872 Master Labor Contract employees at SRF, which provided their status as working for the U.S. military installations, left CFAY for other places. Prior to that realignment, SRF even held their “last” New Year’s ceremony in preparation for their disestablishment in June. 
In SRF’s internal newspaper the Anchor, Hiroshi Honda, a budget analyst, expressed his defeat and disappointment at SRF’s closure in the last page of his business log, Jan. 19, 1971: 
“Now, I am writing the final page of this diary in the chaos of SRF’s phase down. It has been more than two months since the notification of SRF’s closure. We have been confused on SRF’s future and how the facility would be treated after the closure, etc. Actually, the phase down has temporarily been postponed. Someone says it will be postponed again ... but, I don’t know whether it will happen or not…. We had faced unaccountable numbers of RIFs and lays-off. In fear and despair, SRF employees are working hard without complaints. They are the driving force of SRF. Without their existence, SRF would have never gain an excellent reputation.”
Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, Henry Kissinger, commented that “the political impact within Japan of reductions in the U.S. military presence would be mixed: the firings of Japanese employees in rural areas would have negative effects, whereas the reduced number of bases would lessen the frictions produced by U.S. military involvement in Japan.” 
History, as always, is a witness to unpredictable twists and turns. In the case of the Yokosuka’s RIF, the tide was turned quite significantly. Not only was Yokosuka’s RIF postponed, it left room for further augmentation of the Navy’s capabilities in Yokosuka.
On March 30, 1971, a joint U.S.-Japan statement announced that the actions planned for Yokosuka and Yokohama had been postponed or modified. Consequently, about 4,000 Japanese employees in the area would continue to be employed past the originally determined 30 June 1971 separation date, states the Command History 1971 of Commander in Chief in Pacific.
As is shown in the Joint Chiefs of Staff and National Policy 1969-1972, when Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Thomas Hinman Moorer visited Japan, Japanese officials showed a strong preference for retaining Yokosuka as the primary U.S. Navy complex in Japan. Officials from both the U.S. and Japan officially announced an agreement to continue the U.S. Navy’s presence on March 30, 1971. 
Around the same time, the idea of harboring a forward-deployed U.S. aircraft carrier in Yokosuka was discussed unofficially between Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird, and Director General of the Japan Defense Agency Yasuhiro Nakasone. And in 1972, the forward deployment of USS Midway (CV 41) was unofficially agreed upon between the two countries. As a result, Midway pulled into Yokosuka, Oct. 5, 1973, which marked the first forward-deployment of a full-fledged carrier task group complete with Carrier Air Wing 5 to a U.S. Navy facility in Japan.
Even though Yokosuka had seen several port visits of various aircraft carriers in its history, such as USS Constellation (CV 64) and USS Franklin D. Roosevelt (CV 42), permanently accommodating an aircraft carrier caused considerable concern within the Japanese public, which led to fierce opposition when the ship’s homeporting was announced.
On the other hand, the carrier’s homeporting in Yokosuka was highly beneficial for the U.S. on many fronts. The fuel needed for an aircraft carrier to transit the Pacific was no longer needed, which was a significant savings as well as the additional morale impact relocating families of afloat Sailors which the Navy believed would help maintain the morale of Sailors even while they were in a foreign country. 
And the rest is history, which has led us to a point where we can look back and reflect upon the path we have followed up to now. As we have seen, Yokosuka has increased its strategic and logistic importance over the years, having survived crises and a sometimes precarious existence. For decades, Yokosuka has been a lynchpin in the Pacific in terms of security and stability in the western Pacific region for Japan and its ally, the United States.

New and Improved Port Market --- Opens on 28 October


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The YOKOSUKA PORT MARKET, which closed its doors for a time in 2019, will reopen on Friday, October 28, 2022 as "Ichigo YOKOSUKA PORT MARKET" (nickname: YOKOSUKA PORT MARKET) with a completely new building design, tenants, and everything.

The renewal concept is "Miura Peninsula Food Experience.

Fresh ingredients and rich food culture of the Miura Peninsula are gathered in one place. We will create a place where you can not only "eat" and "buy" but also connect with people and the community, learn new things, and think about society and the earth through "food" together.

Compared to the former Port Market, the sales floor area has doubled, and the huge windows and spacious deck facing the sea have created a very open space that takes advantage of its seafront location.

We are aiming to become a new "food distribution center" representing Yokosuka and the Miura Peninsula that will please both "tourists and leisure visitors" and "local people who live and work in the area.

Sunday, September 25, 2022

History of Yoksuka's Naval Air Base

https://www.usni.org/magazines/proceedings/1948/march/yokosuka-naval-air-base-and-japanese-naval-aviation

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(1948 article about naval aviation history in Yokosuka)

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What is presently known as the Marine Air Base at Yokosuka, Japan, was the birthplace of Japanese Naval Aviation and came into being as an air station in 1911 when an English seaplane was brought to what was then known as Oppama Naval Air Base. Shortly afterward the plane complement of the base was increased to two seaplanes by the importation of one of the first Farman airplanes. Before the commissioning of the base as an air station, it had been a naval ship base for a little over twenty-five years.

The primary purpose of the base was to determine the usefulness of the airplane in military reconnaissance work. With this in mind, the Japanese had, two or three years prior to the opening of the air base, sent eight or ten naval officers to England to take flight instruction. These men formed the nucleus of what was to become in later years the “Wright Field” of Japan.

It might be interesting to note at this point that the first recorded “flight” in Japan took place in the late 1860’s when an unknown Japanese used a parachute-like affair to float from the top of a mountain to a village below. The local overlord, fearing that such an occurrence might lead to spying upon his castle, an act as taboo in those days as viewing the interior of the Emperor’s palace is today, played upon the superstitions of the ignorant villagers to such extent that they scalded the pioneer to death as a “devil.” For thirty or forty years thereafter, experimentation in aviation in Japan lapsed.

A revival of interest in flying was brought about by the Wright brothers’ flight at Kitty Hawk, N.C., in 1903. Shortly after Orville and Wilbur Wright startled the world with their epoch-making soar, Japan sent an emissary to the United States to study the Wrights’ methods of airplane construction. He returned to Japan a few months later and spent the next year in an almost vain effort at imitation of the Wrights’ plane. The model that this Japanese constructed made one flight at an exposition in Tokyo in 1905 during which it attained an altitude of four feet and a sustained flight of approximately five hundred yards. After several more years of experimentation, the Japanese became discouraged with their own efforts and in 1911 imported English and French models for their Army and Navy.

In 1912, satisfying themselves that the airplane would prove to be an invaluable reconnaissance component, they set up at Yokosuka Naval Air Base a section dedicated to the design and study of various types of aircraft. In 1913-14, one plane, the Yokosho (contraction of Yokosuka Naval Dock Yard) was designed and completed, and for the next five or six years various modifications of this first seaplane were used for research and training purposes. Nearly one hundred of this Jap-designed plane were built in this period.

However, in 1919 the Japanese again became dissatisfied with their aviation progress. After noting that most of the world was surpassing them in plane design, Japan once more turned to England for guidance, importing Avro planes of both land and sea types. At the same time English instructors were brought over to teach the Japanese fine points of flying these new types of planes. During this period, a landplane base was established at Kasumi-ga-ura—a base which later served the same function as a landplane base that Yokosuka did as a sea­plane station.

Meanwhile, the Japanese commissioned the great Mitsubishi organization to manufacture fighter and torpedo planes, and in 1921 the first fighter, the Dyu Nen Shiki, was completed. Two years later, initial production was started on torpedo planes. Kasumi-ga-ura, blossoming forth as a full-fledged technical research laboratory for landplanes, was carrying on the same type of work for land-based fighters and bombers at this time, and in addition had become one of Japan’s major primary training schools. All pilots desiring to take advanced training on seaplanes at Yokosuka had first to complete their primary flight training at Kasumi-ga-ura.

Work in the Technical Research Section was continued at Yokosuka until 1931 when the division was transferred to a site about eight miles from the Naval Air Base. A year prior to the removal of the Research Section, the Technical Area Arsenal was established at Yokosuka for experimentation with various designs and types of new aircraft. To some extent, the development of new armaments was carried out here although the major portion of this work was done at the Technical Area Arsenal Branch, located about ten miles from the base.

However, one of Japan’s deadliest weapons—the Baka bomb which carried its own suicide pilot and was slung underneath a regular bomber—was the direct result of work at the main arsenal at Yokosuka Air Base. In addition to the development of the Baka bomb here, great strides had been made in the realm of jet and rocket propulsion. In fact, at the war’s end, not only had jet-propulsion planes undergone complete flight tests, but over three hundred of them had been produced and were ready to take their place on Japan’s warfronts.

Although the Yokosuka Naval Air Base was primarily developed as a seaplane base, flight training center, and research organization, it possesses several fine airstrips for land-based craft, the first of which strips was started in 1920 and completed in 1922. During the course of the war, these fields were used by several fighter and torpedo squadrons, based there as defense units.

Even considering the strides that Japan had made with various new types of armament and aircraft, in the opinion of one of the former high-ranking Japanese naval officers who had been stationed at Yokosuka she would have lost the war. For even without the advent of the atomic bomb, Japan’s supply lines were practically non-existent, and she was suffering from critical shortages of practically every major war material.

Also, according to this same Japanese source, the Air Base was attacked by our planes only twice—one a strafing foray and the other a bombing attack—and only minor damage was done. The former Japanese officer, now in charge of native labor at Yokosuka, expressed amazement that the American bombers had not attacked this important installation oftener. Possibly the explanation of this fact can be attributed to the nature of the work carried on there with the attendant desire that the base be spared for American intelligence purposes, if possible.

At the peak of its activities, the base’s complement exceeded 18,000 men and women. Of this number, 10,000 were employed in the factories and research laboratories maintained in the Technical Area Arsenal, the balance being aviation cadets and military personnel connected with the actual running of the base. In addition, there were also over three hundred pilots attached to the defense squadrons based there.

A year before the war’s end, the Japanese commanders, in anticipation of American bombing raids, started work on a tremendous number of caves and tunnels. Shortly before American Marine forces arrived to take over the Air Base, the majority of them were completed and over 7,000 men were living and working in them. Most of the caverns, with the exception of one huge underground hangar, were laboriously excavated by hand.

On September 7, 1945, Marine Air Group 31 along with elements of the Fourth Marine Regiment took over Yokosuka Naval Air Base, and intelligence officers immediately began an investigation of the Japanese work in the Technical Area Arsenal. Some startling facts were uncovered during the course of the search. The Japanese were not very far behind us in experimentation on rocket and jet propulsion. They were conducting experiments on powder-jet, liquid-propulsion, turbo-jet, and ram-rocket propulsion, and had several models under production.

The ram-rocket was of the simplest construction modeled after the German V-1, and would utilize almost any type of fuel. It was, however, a heavy fuel consumer, and was limited in its usefulness due to this fact. Various types of Japanese ram-rockets employed various combustibles as fuel—gasoline, diesel oil, and an oil extracted from the roots of pine trees. This pine-root oil could be refined to any required octane rating, and during the closing days of the war was used to considerable extent by the Japanese, as their facilities for obtaining petroleum products were rapidly on the wane.

The powder-jet model was used for flying bombs, some Kamikaze planes, and in some instances for auxiliary power on standard planes for quick getaways and take-offs. Because of the fuel problem involved, its use was limited to types of weapons and planes which required only short spurts of power.

According to Ryotaro Hikida, former commander of the Engineering Corps in the Technical Area Arsenal and a graduate of Tohoku Imperial University, the turbo-jet type of propulsion had been most successful from a Japanese standpoint, although at the close of hostilities experiments were being conducted utilizing hydrogen peroxide as a jet fuel. The major disadvantage of using peroxide as a fuel, he declared, was its “touchiness” and high explosive properties. The introduction of any foreign substance into the fuel system was likely to result in a tremendous blast. Several injuries resulted during the course of experiments run on hydrogen peroxide rockets. Hikida stated that if this fault could have been overcome an excellent propellant would have resulted producable at low cost.

Experiments being made on various types of jet-propulsion included a Jap-designed high-altitude engine employing liquid air as a fuel. Lack of liquid-oxygen manufacturing facilities, however, confined experimentation on this to a very small scale.

In the face of ever increasing metal shortages, the Japanese had designed and completed a plywood airplane which was to be utilized as a “hell-diver” or dive-bomber trainer. Research figures (Jap) indicated that this ship had undergone ground tests which showed it capable of withstanding 12.6 g pull-out, while it had actually been subjected to a 5 g strain in flight tests. Japanese technical men were amazed when told that with our new-type “zoot suits” our aviators could withstand almost double that figure.

One of the most amazing developments to come out of the Technical Area Arsenal was the automatic flap, which the Japanese claim to have pioneered. This new-type flap was so engineered that it would automatically lower to the required angle merely by the change in two variables—altitude (density of air) and acceleration—thus maintaining as closely as possible the proper correlation between load and drag. According to Japanese reports, this flap was in use on one of their single-engine fighters, and had proved highly successful in increasing the maneuverability of these planes in combat tactics.

There were also several different types of planes undergoing experimental tests in the Technical Area Arsenal. Among these were a twin turbo-jet plane designed for Kamikaze use; a pusher-fighter Ente-type (so-called after its German prototype) and a take-off on the Italian Campieni-type, with the engine installed in the fuselage about ten feet back of the nose, and employing a long drive-shaft to furnish driving power to the propeller.

As a result of the few bombings that Yokosuka Air Base underwent, most of the buildings on the station were in fairly good condition when the Marines took over, but little of the vaunted Japanese cleanliness and sanitation was found. Open sewers, great heaps of refuse, and filth of every kind were evident on every side, and it was only through great diligence and effort on the part of the Marines and Navy Medical Department that illness on the base was held to a minimum. It is interesting to note that according to the former Japanese executive officer of this base, the daily average of hospitalized Japanese was well over one hundred and fifty, while according to Colonel J. C. Munn, commanding Marine Air Group 31, there have never been more than twelve Marines confined to the sick bay and hospital at any one time.

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* Technical Sergeant Stokes was a journalist in Texas for thirteen years before entering the Marine Corps in July, 1943. After two years at Personnel Group Marine Corps Air Depot he served overseas with the Fleet Marine Force in Hawaii and with the Second Marine Aircraft Wing at Okinawa and Yokosuka. Leaving his civilian connections with radio stations, Sergeant Darling served in the Army in 1942 and then joined the Marine Corps as a combat radio correspondent in August, 1943, his final service as such being with the Second Marine Aircraft Wing at Yokosuka, Japan.

Friday, August 19, 2022

Yokosuka's All-Japan Hamburger Contest

'Shogun Burger' shop in Japan books ticket to World Food Championships in Texas - The Mainichi

Japan's Shogun Burger shop recently won the country's first qualification round to book a ticket to compete in the burger category at the World Food Championships in Dallas, Texas, in November.

The first-ever preliminary round in Japan ran from July 29 to 31 at Saikaya Department Store Co.'s Yokosuka branch in Yokosuka, Kanagawa Prefecture. Eight famous hamburger restaurants from across the country competed in making five burgers in 90 minutes, and judges evaluated their workmanship and taste.

Shogun Burger has branches in Toyama, Tokyo and elsewhere. Its entry was praised by judges as "like a course meal" in one burger, and for having "the taste of Japanese cuisine," and was crowned champion.

Teruyuki Nakajima, 35, a Tokyo-based food and beverage consultant and self-proclaimed "unparalleled hamburger lover," negotiated with the international competition's organizers by phone and email to get permission to hold a qualifier in Japan. Nakajima's initiative became a reality in collaboration with the Yokosuka Municipal Government, which has been moving to boost the local economy with gourmet hamburgers, and the Saikaya Department Store.

Nakajima plans to cover the about 3.5-million-yen (approx. $26,000) cost of traveling to Dallas through crowdfunding. "I'd like to see how Japanese hamburgers, which are evolving in a unique way, will be evaluated in America -- the home of burgers," he said.

Sunday, July 31, 2022

The Big Downtown Shopping Mall

In addition to the traditional shopping streets, or SHOTEN-GAI (商店街), there are many other stores and retailers in Yokosuka City.  

The largest shopping mall in the area is conveniently located only a few-minutes-walk from the front gate of the Navy Base, and is named: "Coaska Bayside Stores", but often is just called: Coaska.  

The mall was built back in 1991, on a waterfront site which had been used by the Japanese Imperial Navy from 1908 to 1945.  Originally, located on the site was a huge gantry crane facility for ship construction and launching, which was a well-known landmark in Yokosuka.  The crane was dismantled in 1975, and by the late-1980s, a plan was approved to build a six-story shopping center, which would be run by Daiei corporation (a national retailer.)  The company currently managing Coaska did a major renovation to the mall from 2019~2020, but the main structure has basically remained unchanged.  

Coaska is filled with all kinds of stores, including a large supermarket and other businesses selling fresh seafood, fruits, and vegetables.  It has a multiplex movie theater, clothing and furniture stores, a large food court, Starbucks and Tully's coffee shops, a section filled with Japanese and Western-style sit-down restaurants, and much more.  Coaska also has lots of parking, both on the ground level and up above on the 5th and 6th floors.  

The parking lot has an ingenious control system where, as you enter, a camera takes a photo of your car's license plate, and when you leave, you type your license plate number into a validation & payment machine.  

Coaska is a very user-friendly and well-designed mall, filled with all kinds of local goods and products which you may have never seen before, and therefore it would be a great place for your first Japanese shopping and foodie adventures. 

Artillery Fort Transformed...

 Yokosuka City straddles the Miura Peninsula, with its less-populated west coast facing Sagami Bay with views of Mount Fuji, while the east coast is urbanized and faces the busy shipping lanes going into Tokyo Bay.  

There is a hill which overlooks the downtown and harbor area of Yokosuka, and it is the site of 平和中央公園 ("Heiwa Chuo Koen" or Central Peace Park, in English.)  

Back during Japan's Meiji era (1868~1912), due to its unobstructed view of Tokyo Bay, the hill was fortified, and a Japanese Imperial Army coastal artillery facility was built there -- called: "Yonegahama Battery."  The site was demilitarized after World War II, and then in 1970, it was converted into a public park.  

Central Peace Park is a nice green & breezy place to go for a jog, walk, or picnic, and it provides spectacular views of the city below and out over Tokyo Bay and its surroundings.  There are several interesting monuments, including a statue of one of the first commanders of Yokosuka Navy Base, Captain Benny Decker, and during early spring weeks many blooming cherry blossom trees can be seen.  Recently, a small playground area for children has been added.  

Located adjacent to the park are Yokosuka Cultural Hall and Yokosuka Museum of Nature and Human Culture, and there is a large surrounding parking lot, so access by car is possible.  

In summary, this scenic hilltop park, located close to the Yokosuka downtown area and the navy base, is a great place to "get away from it all" for a while and just to enjoy and relax.

Thursday, June 30, 2022

The Hidden Hot Spring Spa in Sano

Sano Natural Hot Spring Noborigumo - Yokosuka - (virtualombudsman.com)

Noborigumo (のぼり雲) is an inviting local onsen with open-air baths, sauna, and a pleasing facade. 

The water is pumped from 800 meters below ground level and flows out at a temperature of 32.5°C. From here it is re-heated to about 42-43°C for the baths—perhaps a little hotter than most onsen. The water itself is mineral rich and clear, although certain elements in the water color upon contact with air. 

The onsen building itself is conical with natural light pouring in from the top, creating a feeling of spaciousness. There is just one indoor bath—a rectangular tub where the water is hottest. 

Outside there are two baths, one with natural stone surrounding the tub, as well as a walk-in bath set at a much cooler temperature where visitors can stride through the water. 

There is also a standard sauna, mizu-buro, and low-temperature salt sauna.
































Kannonzaki Park


Kannonzaki is a cape situated at the east end of Miura Peninsula, blessed with various attractions including a lighthouse, museums, an interesting shrine, tasty restaurant and even a spa to relax. Above all, a one-day stroll through the cape will prove picturesque views of beautiful blue ocean and green mountains.

Today, most of the cape is designated as prefectural park. As it is very large, it may take you a whole day to walk through it. There is free parking on weekdays, and you can also get there via a trains or bus on the Keikyu Line, as well.

In addition to the mountains, Kannonzaki has several good-sized, beautiful beaches where you can enjoy a barbecue or take a dip in the sea during the summer.

Kannonzaki has a pair of famous ties - it is the place where both Gulliver and Godzilla made their first steps in Japan.

In Gulliver’s Travels, written by Jonathan Swift, Gulliver made his first step on the Land of Rising Sun at a port called “Xamoschi”. Today, the port is considered to be modeled by Kannonzaki. Based on this consideration, Yokosuka City and local tourist associations hold Gulliver-Kannonzaki Festa in November every year, and during the event, American sailors from Yokosuka Naval Base dress up as Gulliver and parade around the district.

In the first “Godzilla” movie, the monster landed at Kannonzaki, then headed toward Tokyo, just like Gulliver did. There was a large Godzilla-shaped waterfront slide in the beach, commemorating his landing about 40 years ago.

Since Kannonzaki was utilized as a citadel by former Imperial Army, you can find old military structures including batteries, brick-made magazines and tunnels along your stroll. Despite long stairs and slopes, they are well maintained, so you can enjoy safe and pleasant hike. Signs with maps are installed throughout the park ensuring you won’t get lost.

Atop one hill in the park, there are large grassy fields dotted with flower gardens, and children’s playground with long slides, climbing apparatus and double zip line, along with a wooden lodge for visitors.

Although you need to walk up hundreds of stairs for half an hour, it worth visiting the majestic white Kannonzaki Lighthouse on a peak in the park. It is known as the first Western-style lighthouse in Japan, and was built by French engineers in 1869. After being destroyed twice by earthquakes, the current version was rebuilt in 1925. The view from the observation deck is breathtaking. The distance between Kannonzaki and Futtsu, a city on the opposite bank of gulf, is only 3.5 miles, so you can see mountains and towns over the gulf.










































Monday, May 30, 2022

Natsushima Shell Mound


The Natsushima Shell Mound (夏島貝塚, Natsushima Kaizuka) is an archaeological site in northeastern coastal Yokosuka.  It contains a ancient "Jōmon" era shell midden. It was designated a National Historic Site of Japan in 1972.  At that time, it was considered the oldest known shell midden in Japan.

During the early to middle Jōmon period (approximately 4000 to 2500 BC), sea levels were five to six meters higher than at present, and the ambient temperature was also 2 deg C higher.  During this period, the Kantō region was inhabited by the Jōmon people, many of whom lived in coastal settlements.  The middens associated with such settlements contain bone, botanical material, mollusk shells, sherds, lithics, and other artifacts and eco-facts associated with the now-vanished inhabitants, and these features, provide a useful source into the diets and habits of Jōmon society.  Most of these middens are found along the Pacific coast of Japan.

The Natsushima site is located on what was once an island in Tokyo Bay, but which is now surrounded by reclaimed land.  The midden is located at the eastern end of the former island, at an elevation of 50 meters above the present sea level.  It measures approximately 14 meters from east-to-west by 13 meters from north-to-south.  During archaeological excavations by Meiji University in 1950 and 1955 it was found to be clearly stratified into three layers, with a deposit of soil in between each layer.  Each of the strata had shards of Jōmon pottery, which greatly assisted in dating the mound, and radiocarbon dating of the lowest layer yielded a date of 9500 years ago, which created considerable academic interest.  Other artifacts in the midden included stone weapons and stone tools, bone weapons and tools, fishing hooks made from shell, and shell ring jewelry.  These artifacts are stored and exhibited at the Meiji University Museum.  The site is a 10-minute walk from the "Matsushima" bus stop on the Keikyu bus from Oppama Station on the Keikyū Main Line. 




















Historic Kannonzaki Lighthouse

Yokosuka: A Day Trip for History Buffs | Tokyo Weekender

Kannonzaki Lighthouse in its original manifestation was the first lighthouse to be constructed in Japan. It was built under the supervision of French engineer François Léonce Verny in 1869, who also supervised the creation of the Yokosuka Naval Arsenal. 

















The initial brick structure proved insufficient to withstand earthquakes, and both it and its initial replacement were devastated by earthquakes in 1922 and 1923 respectively.

The present structure dates from 1925 and boasts spectacular views of the surrounding scenery. The exhibition room goes into great detail concerning the history and logistics involved with illuminating the sea. Tours of the interior are also readily available. Japanese film history buffs should also note that the lighthouse was prominently featured in internationally underrated auteur Keisuke Kinoshita’s Times of Joy and Sorrow.

In addition to Kannonzaki, Verny oversaw the construction of four other lighthouses across what is now the Greater Tokyo Area. He also had other ambitious undertakings. Most visibly, the dry docks he built for usage by the Imperial Japanese Navy, now under American jurisdiction. His significant contribution to the modernization of Japan is remembered at Yokosuka’s Verny Park, which is filled with beautiful seasonal flowers and a bust of the man himself. There’s also a small museum detailing Verny’s life and accomplishments.