My sincerest thanks to BB1987 for the redo of the B64-class battle cruisers for this AU.
By 1935, despite having been given extensive refits, it was obvious to all that the
Amagi-class battle cruisers, let along the preceding
Kongo-class, weren't going to be around forever. It was therefore decided to develop a new battle cruiser design. The hull selection was no problem, for the hull that had worked so well for the three classes of large cruiser was fairly easy to produce now that the shipyards that normally built major combatants had already built fourteen of them. The guns took some time to design, however, with the Naval General Staff wanting a ship that had bigger guns than the large cruisers, but not as large as the
Amagis. Therefore, a new 12.2-inch gun was designed, and the ships were designed to mount three triple turrets.
The first ship,
Tsushima, was laid down at the Yokosuka Navy Yard on 8 September 1940, with
Hitachi and
Chishima following in January 1941, and
Hidaka that September. All were launched by mid-February 1943, and
Tsushima was commissioned that September. She and sisters
Hitachi and
Chishima provided part of Ozawa's carrier screen at the Battle of the Philippine Sea in June 1944, and all four ships participated in the Battle of Leyte Gulf that October, with
Hidaka barely three months in commission.
At the Battle of San Bernardino Strait, the class got its baptism of fire. The sisters also suffered their first loss between them, when
Hitachi deliberately placed herself in the path of a twelve-torpedo spread originally intended for battleship
Kitami. As sailors of both sides watched in horror, at least eight torpedoes slammed into the proud battle cruiser, ripping her apart and sinking her in seconds with only eight survivors. The other three ships were all damaged in various degrees, but managed to escape back to Brunei.
Hidaka managed to add insult to injury when she scraped a reef while anchoring at Lingga, thereby necessitating her return to Japan for repairs.
In December 1944,
Tsushima and
Chishima were assigned to the San Jose Bombardment Force along with heavy cruiser
Ashigara and light cruiser
Oyodo. The force made it to the beachhead and commenced its bombardment mission, but PT-boats and air strikes soon forced the Japanese ships to concentrate on getting out alive rather than bombarding American ground forces. PT-boat attacks sank destroyer
Kiyoshimo and hit
Tsushima with two torpedoes, while air strikes put five torpedoes and seven bombs into
Chishima, sinking her with heavy casualties.
Tsushima lagged behind the rest of the Bombardment Force, but managed to escape towards Lingga. On 29 December 1944, she was only two hours from success when she was sighted by submarine
U.S.S. Bergall. Three torpedoes ripped her apart, sinking her in minutes.
Hidaka spent the rest of the war running between Japanese naval bases, somehow managing to survive the war to enjoy a long and profitable career in the post-war IJN. She was decommissioned in April 1960 and has been part of the Hashirajima Fleet Museum since December 1966. She is currently Japan's only preserved battle cruiser.