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Japanese Battlecruiser Hiei

Japanese Battlecruiser Hiei

Laid down on the 4th of November 1911 and launched on the 21st of November 1912, Hiei was the second of the four-ship Kongo-class battlecruisers built for the Imperial Japanese Navy. Her three sisters were Kongo, Kirishima and Haruna. Commissioned into the fleet on the 19th of April 1915, she saw no action during the First World War, although she undertook patrols off the Chinese coast.

From 1929, Hiei was converted into a gunnery training ship, so that she would not be scrapped under the terms of the Washington Naval Treaty. During the 1930s she also acted as a transport for Emperor Hirohito.

When the treaty was not renewed in 1937, she underwent a full-scale reconstruction. Her superstructure was completely rebuilt, her machinery upgraded, and launch catapults for floatplanes added. Now fast enough to accompany Japan’s aircraft carriers, she was reclassified as a fast battleship.

During the early stages of the Second World War, she escorted Japan’s aircraft carriers. Later she was deployed to the Solomon Islands during the Battle of Guadalcanal. She escorted Japanese carrier forces during the battles of the Eastern Solomons and Santa Cruz Islands, before sailing as part of a bombardment force under Admiral Kondō during the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal. In the early hours of 13 November 1942, Hiei engaged American cruisers and destroyers alongside her sister ship Kirishima. After inflicting heavy damage on American cruisers and destroyers, Hiei was crippled by shell hits from the heavy cruiser USS San Francisco that jammed her rudder. Subjected to a daylight air attack from the USS Enterprise, she was scuttled on the evening of 13 November 1942.