was the first ship of the class to be laid down; construction began on 6 December 1920 at the naval yard in
Kure.
Amagi followed ten days later at the
Yokosuka naval yard. The projected completion dates for the first pair of ships were December and November 1923, respectively.
Atago was laid down in
Kobe at the
Kawasaki shipyard on 22 November 1921, and was projected to be finished in December 1924.
Takao, the fourth and final ship of the class, was laid down at the
Mitsubishi shipyard in
Nagasaki on 19 December 1921, and was also projected to be completed in December 1924.
Takao was initially to have been named
Ashitaka after
Mount Ashitaka. The
Washington Naval Treaty, signed in February 1922, greatly reduced the tonnage allowed for capital ships in the signatory nations. The treaty also instituted a moratorium on new warship construction; battlecruisers canceled under this included one class each from Japan, the United States, and Great Britain: the
Amagi class, the and the
G3 class, respectively. The treaty did allow for battleship and battlecruiser hulls currently under construction to be converted into aircraft carriers, but only if these new carriers were kept under a 27,000-ton limit. Considering that the
Amagi class were designed to displace at full load in their battlecruiser configuration, This resulted in the United States and Japan quickly reordering two ships each. Japan chose
Amagi and
Akagi, the two ships nearest to completion, for conversion. The September 1923
Great Kantō earthquake in Tokyo caused significant stress damage to the hull of
Amagi. The structure was too heavily damaged to be usable, and conversion work was abandoned.
Amagi was stricken from the navy list and sold for scrapping, which began on 14 April 1924. The other two ships,
Atago and
Takao, were officially canceled two years later (31 July 1924) and were
broken up for scrap in their
slipways.
Akagis career as an aircraft carrier The conversion of
Akagi began on 19 November 1923, and was completed in March 1927. However, the strange assortment of flight decks fitted on
Akagi—a main landing deck superimposed over two short take-off decks—proved unsatisfactory, and the ship was withdrawn from active service in 1935 for modernization. The lower two flight decks were removed, the main deck was lengthened to , and a third elevator was added. Refitting was completed in 1938.
Akagi supported operations off China in early 1939 and 1940, and underwent an overhaul in November 1940. Nagumo's
Kido Butai—composed of the carriers
Akagi,
Kaga, , , , and , supported by escorts—launched two waves of airstrikes on the American base at Pearl Harbor in a devastating surprise attack. American losses included four battleships and two destroyers sunk and nearly 200 aircraft destroyed. On 19 February 1942, aircraft from
Akagi,
Hiryū,
Sōryū, and
Kaga participated in the
bombing of Darwin, Australia. On 27 February, their bombers severely damaged the old American carrier , which was subsequently scuttled by her escort.
Akagi and the carriers
Hiryū and
Sōryū were sent in March 1942 with a mixed force of battleships, cruisers, and destroyers to the Indian Ocean to engage the British fleet there and to support planned attacks on
Ceylon. In the
Easter Sunday Raid on 5 April, aircraft from the carriers struck the British base at
Colombo, destroying a number of aircraft and sinking an armed merchant cruiser and the old destroyer in the harbor. The Japanese fleet also spotted the heavy cruisers and at sea; both ships were sunk in an overwhelming air attack.
Battle of Midway In late May 1942, in an effort to draw out and destroy the elusive American carriers, Japanese forces organized attacks on the
Aleutian Islands in Alaska and
Midway Atoll in the Western Pacific. Nagumo, aboard
Akagi, led
Kaga,
Sōryū, and
Hiryū and the support ships of the First Carrier Striking Force to Midway. In the initial attack, Japanese planes neutralized a small force of fighter aircraft and inflicted heavy damage to American installations. Torpedo planes and dive-bombers sent from Midway to harry the Japanese fleet had little effect, but the Japanese attack plan had been deciphered by codebreakers, and the American carriers' planes were already en route. Torpedo bombers from , , and joined the attack in succession, forcing the Japanese carriers to maneuver violently to avoid torpedoes and rendering them unable to launch additional aircraft. American dive-bombers, arriving late after difficulty locating the fleet, soon landed fatal strikes on
Akagi,
Kaga, and
Sōryū. ==Notes==