Authorized in the late 1942
Modified 5th Naval Armaments Supplement Program,
Take (bamboo) was
laid down by the
Yokosuka Naval Arsenal on 25 October 1943 and
launched on 28 March 1944. Completed on 16 June 1944, the ship was assigned to Destroyer Squadron 11 of the
Combined Fleet for a month's training. The ship was assigned to the newly formed Destroyer Division 43 of the squadron on 15 July. That same day she escorted a convoy to the
Ryukyu Islands, resuming training upon her return to home waters on 20 July.
Take and the rest of the division were transferred to the 31st Escort Squadron of the
5th Fleet on 20 August. At that time, the ship was conducting an unsuccessful search for survivors of the sunken
light cruiser near
Palau. Six days later she attempted to render assistance to the destroyer which had
run aground on Velasco Reef near Palau, but
Samidare had been torpedoed by the American submarine the day prior and broken in half.
Take rescued the survivors and ferried them to Palau. The ship escorted a convoy from
Manila, Philippines, to
Miri, Borneo, from 4 to 14 October and probably returned directly to Manila. Six days later she was part of the escort for Convoy MATA 30 (also known as the Harukaze Convoy) between Manila and
Takao,
Japanese Taiwan, between 20 and 26 October. During the voyage,
Take helped the destroyer sink the submarine on 24 October and rescued 347 survivors from the torpedoed
merchantman Airsan Maru.
Take arrived back at Manila on 30 October. The carriers of
Task Force 38 conducted airstrikes on ships in Manila Harbor beginning on 13 November, but
Take was not damaged. Together with four other destroyers, she withdrew to the
Spratly Islands that night. The group was ordered to proceed to occupied
Brunei, but
Take was detached and ordered to return to Manila to escort more reinforcements for Ormoc Bay. The destroyer was tasked with leading three fast transports as the second echelon of Convoy TA-5. They departed on 24 November and anchored overnight in the
Balanacan. The convoy was attacked the following morning by aircraft from the carrier . Two of the transports were sunk while the third one was badly damaged.
Take was not hit, but was damaged by near-misses that killed 15 crewmen. Bomb splinters caused leaks in her oil tanks and damaged her
gyrocompass and half her radios. The ship's
captain decided to return to Manila after rescuing survivors and they arrived there on 27 November.
Take began repairs at Cavite Navy Yard later that day. With the ship's repairs completed on 29 November,
Take and her
sister ship were ordered to escort the third echelon of Convoy TA-7 from Manila to Ormoc Bay. The ships departed on 1 December and arrived on the evening of 2 December;
Kuwa took up a patrol position seaward of the unloading convoy, while
Take loaded survivors from a previous convoy. The convoy had been spotted enroute by American aircraft and three destroyers had been ordered to intercept them. Their radar spotted the Japanese ships at a range of at 23:55 and the Americans opened fire at 00:08;
Take was engaged by at a range of while the other two ships targeted
Kuwa. The American gunfire was accurate and
Kuwa began taking hits three minutes after they opened fire. The sisters were able to fire their torpedoes before
Kuwa was crippled and set on fire by American shells by 00:20. One torpedo, probably fired by
Kuwa, struck and broke her in half at 00:13.
Take was hit two minutes later by a shell that failed to detonate in the forward engine room. The resulting flooding forced the abandonment of the engine room and the ship escorted her convoy back to Manila using only a single
propeller.
Take began repairs after her arrival at Manila on 4 December, but her engine damage was beyond the capabilities of the facilities in the Philippines. Forced to return to Japan, the ship escorted a convoy back home via Taiwan and arrived at
Sasebo Naval Arsenal on 15 December. She was present at
Kure when aircraft of
Task Force 58 attacked Kure on 19 March 1945, but was not damaged.
Take was modified on 20 April with a sloping ramp that overhung her
stern to operate a Kaiten manned torpedo. The destroyer was turned over to Allied forces at
Maizuru at the time of the
surrender of Japan on 2 September and was stricken from the
navy list on 5 October. She was disarmed and used to repatriate Japanese personnel in 1945–1947.
Take was turned over to Great Britain on 14 August of the latter year and scrapped the following year in
Singapore. ==Citations==