Talk:Tango Maru

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

[copied from Talk:USS Rasher (SS-269) ]

I stumbled acrcoss the article on one of the ships sunk by this ship (the Tango Maru. I decided to add a date to the sinking to expand it's substub status, but when i googled the name it turned up, on three different pages (two outside wikipedia and this one) three different dates. Any ideas on the way forward? I notice this page seems really comprehensive, so perhaps the author can point me in the direction of a decent source? Sabine's Sunbird 04:19, 26 May 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Hmm. I took the text of the article from DANFS, http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/r3/rasher.htm -- I don't know who originally wrote it. Checking, I see two(2) Tango Marus!
  • while patrolling the shipping lanes off the Borneo coast, ... The submarine's next victim was tanker Tango Maru which lost her stern to a spread of three torpedoes on the afternoon of 8 November [1943].
  • On 25 February [1944] she attacked a Japanese convoy off Bali, sinking cargo ships Tango Maru and Ryusei Maru.
Looking further, I found
http://warfare.gq/dutcheastindies/allied_losses.html suggests that the Japanese really did have multiple Tangos:
  • Talang Akar (2.046 tons) - Tanker
    Date of loss - March 2nd, 1942
    Reason for loss - Scttled off Soerabaja, salved by IJN and renamed Tango Maru, sunk by torpedo from USN submarine Rasher on November 8th, 1943 in Strait Makassar.
  • Toendjoek (6,200 tons) - Freighter, confiscated former German ship Rendsburg
    Date of loss - March 2nd, 1942
    Reason for loss - Scuttled as blockship off Tandjung Priok, salved by IJN, renamed Tango Maru, sunk by torpedo from USN submarine Rasher on February 25th, 1944 in the Java Sea.
That matches DANFS--but they may both be drawing on the same sources.
If we assume the tanker was correctly identified as such, we can put that aside. That leaves two reports that a cargo ship was sunk by Rasher in February 1944, another saying February 1943, and another saying June 1944, and a totally different story about aircraft in 1942. The simplest explanation is that a couple of people got the date of one incident wrong--one the year and one the month--and the last is something else entirely. If DANFS is correct, Rasher hadn't even been commissioned in Feb '43.
The next step would seem to be to go into the page histories and find the users who added the info to Tango Maru and List of disasters, and ask them what their sources said. Also, searching for Rendsburg might be fruitful.
—wwoods 09:19, 26 May 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Obviously Feb. 1943 is wrong, so I've changed it to 1944. This is a bit more detailed than the rest and states it happened in 1944. Clarityfiend (talk) 17:26, 14 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]
The more I read, the more clear it becomes that there were at least two Tango Maru's (It takes two to tango?), so I've amended the article accordingly. Clarityfiend (talk) 18:18, 14 September 2008 (UTC)[reply]

There were three Tango Marus during WW2. Two of them were captured from Netherlands and sunk by USN submarine Rasher.

  • Tango Maru (丹後丸) (6200 GT) - Cargo ship, ex. German ship Rendsburg captured by Netherlands and renamed Toendjoek in 1940. Scuttled as blockship off Tandjung Priok, salved by Japanese, renamed Tango Maru, sunk by USN submarine Rasher on 1944-02-25 in the Java Sea with Ryusei Maru. About 5700 soldiers of Pembela Tanah Air (Javanese) , Indian National Army (ex. Allied POWs) and IJA were onboard with 45 ship crews. Most of soldiers and 34 crews were killed. [1][2][3]
  • Tango Maru (丹後丸) (7463 GT => 6893 GT) - Passenger cargo ship, ran aground on Amami Ōshima in East China Sea by typhoon on 1943-09-19. Further damaged by a torpedo of unknown Allied submarine on 1943-11-03 or 13, and abandoned. [4][5] After abandonment, attacked by US airplanes sometimes in 1944-1945. [6]
  • Tango Maru (端午丸) (2046 GT) - Tanker, ex. Talang Akar, sunk by USN submarine Rasher on 1943-11-08 in Makassar Strait. [7]

--Snlf1 (talk) 07:37, 25 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]