Ukishima Maru

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NameUkishima Maru (浮島丸)
OwnerOsaka Shosen Kaisha Lines
OperatorImperial Japanese Navy from Sep. 1941
Port of registryOsaka, Japan
Ukishima Maru
History
Japan
NameUkishima Maru (浮島丸)
OwnerOsaka Shosen Kaisha Lines
OperatorImperial Japanese Navy from Sep. 1941
Port of registryOsaka, Japan
BuilderMitsui Tama Shipyard
LaunchedMarch 1937
FateSank 24 August 1945
General characteristics
Tonnage4,731 GRT
Length108.43 m
Beam15.70 m
Depth9.75 m
Capacity219 tons; 677 passengers
Crew89

Ukishima Maru was a 4,731-ton Japanese naval transport vessel originally built as a passenger ship in March 1937. On 24 August 1945, while on a trip to repatriate Koreans in the wake of World War II, it exploded and sank in the harbor of Maizuru, Kyoto Prefecture. The sinking caused controversy in Korea and became the subject of documentaries films years later, such as the 2000 the North Korean film Souls Protest.[1]

The vessel was originally used as a passenger transport between Osaka and Okinawa. The Imperial Japanese Navy requisitioned it in September 1941 and primarily employed it on a routing between Aomori and Hakodate, connecting the main islands of Honshu and Hokkaido.[2]

Final voyage and sinking

Legacy

References

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