December 1942–April 1943 Upon commissioning,
I-177 was assigned to the Kure Submarine
Squadron in the
Kure Naval District.
Centaur had departed
Sydney,
Australia, on 12 May 1943 bound for
Port Moresby,
New Guinea, via
Cairns, Australia, to evacuate sick and wounded personnel during fighting in the
New Guinea campaign, and was steaming northward in darkness
I-177 nonetheless submerged to
periscope depth and fired a
torpedo at
Centaur at 04:10 which struck her at 04:15. The torpedo ignited a fuel tank, setting the ship ablaze. The
United States Navy destroyer departed Brisbane to come to their assistance, arriving on the scene at 14:00 on 15 May and pulling them from the water.
Second war patrol I-177 departed Truk on 14 June 1943 to begin her second war patrol, again in an area off the east coast of Australia. and Lieutenant Commander Zenji Orita became
I-177′s new commanding officer.
I-177 began her third supply run on 1 September 1943, when she departed Rabaul in company with the submarine for another trip to Lae, where she arrived on 3 September and unloaded her cargo. She made port at Rabaul on 5 September 1943. She put to sea from Rabaul on both 6 and 8 September 1943, returning the same evening on both occasions.
I-177 got underway from Rabaul on 10 September 1943 for her fourth supply run to Lae, which was threatened by a nearby landing on the
Huon Peninsula by the
Australian Army′s
9th Division that had taken place on 4 September 1943 as the
Salamaua–Lae campaign neared its end. On 13 September, she received orders to divert to attack Allied landing forces at
Finschhafen, New Guinea, but she found no targets there and resumed her voyage to Lae. By the time she reached Lae on 14 September 1943, it was under attack by Allied forces. She unloaded her cargo and put back to sea, where during the evening of 14 September she detected the
propeller noises of what her crew assessed as several U.S. Navy destroyers at a range of a few thousand yards while she was on the surface. Assuming that the destroyers had detected her on
radar, she submerged to her
test depth of to await a depth-charge attack, but none came. Orita concluded that the destroyers had failed to gain
sonar contact on
I-177 because of her depth and the negative effect of
thermoclines on sonar performance. While
I-177 was at sea, Submarine Division 22 was disbanded on 15 September 1943, and she was reassigned directly to the 6th Fleet. She returned to Rabaul on 17 September 1943, completing the Imperial Japanese Navy′s last supply run to Lae.
Finschhafen On 19 September 1943,
I-177 departed Rabaul′s
Simpson Harbour to conduct deep-diving tests, then returned to the harbor later in the day. On 21 September, she got underway from Rabaul for a supply run to Finschhafen. While at sea, she received orders on 22 September to attack Allied landing forces in the Finschhafen area, so her crew dumped her deck cargo overboard and she headed for the landing area, which she reconnoitered on 23 September. She did not attack any ships there, and proceeded to Finschhafen, where she unloaded the rest of her cargo on 24 September during lulls in Allied air attacks. She again reconnoitered the landing area on 25 September 1943 and detected several Allied ships, but made no attacks. She returned to Rabaul on 26 September 1943.
Sio supply runs On 2 October 1943,
I-177 set out from Rabaul on her first supply run to
Sio, New Guinea. She arrived there on 4 October, unloaded her cargo, and returned to Rabaul, which she reached on 6 October. On her second run, she departed Rabaul on 8 October, unloaded at Sio on 10 October, and returned to Rabaul on 12 October 1943. That day, the
United States Army Air Forces Fifth Air Force attacked Rabaul in what at the time was the largest air raid of the Pacific war, with 349 aircraft striking Rabaul's airfields and
Simpson Harbour off Rabaul. Moored in deep water,
I-177 submerged and avoided damage during the raid. In October and November 1943,
I-177 continued to make supply runs to Sio, departing Rabaul on 19 October, visiting Sio on 21 October, and returning to Rabaul on 23 October; getting underway from Rabaul on 26 October, discharging cargo at Sio on 28 October, and arriving at Rabaul on 30 October 1943; putting to sea from Rabaul on 2 November, delivering her cargo at Sio on 4 November, and making port at Rabaul on 6 November 1943; and leaving Rabaul on 9 November, calling at Sio on 11 November, and returning to Rabaul on 13 November 1943. On 20 November 1943, she departed Rabaul in company with the submarine for her seventh supply run to Sio, where she unloaded her cargo on 22 November. She returned to Rabaul on 24 November 1943. In the immediate aftermath of the
Battle of Cape St. George, fought on the night of 24–25 November 1943 in the waters between
Buka Island and
Cape St. George on
New Ireland,
I-177 got underway from Rabaul on 25 November to search for survivors of the sunken destroyer ; she rescued 279 men and the submarine rescued 11. As
I-177 returned to Rabaul, a U.S. Navy
Lockheed PV-1 Ventura patrol bomber of
Patrol Squadron 138 (VP-138) attacked her off Cape St. George on 26 November 1943, but she avoided damage. She returned to Rabaul later that day, loaded provisions, and put back to sea the same day, then again returned to Rabaul on 29 November 1943.
I-177 loaded supplies for New Guinea at Rabaul on 30 November 1943, and returned to her routine of supply runs: She departed Rabaul on 3 December 1943, called at Sio on 5 December, and returned to Rabaul on 7 December, then got back underway on 12 December 1943, visited Sio on 14 December, and returned to Rabaul on 15 December. Once again bound for Sio, she departed Rabaul on 16 December 1943 and discharged her cargo at Sio on 17 December, then conducted a brief patrol south of
Marcus Bay on the coast of New Britain from 18 to 20 December before returning to Rabaul on 21 December 1943. After leaving Rabaul on 23 December 1943 and discharging her cargo at Sio on 25 December 1943,
I-177 sighted several Allied
amphibious landing ships, but did not attack them. She returned to Rabaul on 27 December 1943, then put back to sea on 28 December to make her first and only supply run to
Garove Island, where she arrived on 30 December 1943. She again made port at Rabaul on 1 January 1944. On 3 January 1944,
I-177 departed Rabaul to begin her twelfth Sio supply run. While at sea, she was reassigned to Submarine Squadron 1 on 5 January 1944. She arrived off Sio at sunset on 8 January 1944 and made contact with Japanese troops ashore. A
daihatsu barge came alongside and began loading cargo from
I-177, and a boat set out from shore carrying the commander of the
18th Army,
General Hatazō Adachi, the commander of the 7th Base Unit,
Rear Admiral Kyuhachi Kudo, and ten of their staff officers. Meanwhile, the U.S. Navy
PT boat PT-146 detected
I-177 on
radar at a range of and headed toward
I-177 in company with
PT-143. One of
I-177′s lookouts spotted the approaching PT boats, prompting
I-177 to submerge and Adachi′s boat, which had made it about halfway to
I-177, to return to shore. The two PT boats continued to search the area, later making a radar contact at a range of and sighting
I-177′s
periscope at a range of . Each of them dropped two depth charges, but
I-177 escaped damage.
I-177 returned to Sio on the evening of 9 January 1944, but again found U.S. PT boats in the area, so she signaled Japanese forces on New Guinea that she would return on the evening of 10 January and requested their support in driving off the PT boats. When she surfaced off Sio on 10 January, the PT boats
PT-320 and
PT-323 approached, but
I-177, armed
daihatsu barges, and
sokoteis (armored barges armed with
tank gun turrets) engaged the two PT boats and drove them off, and
I-177 suffered no damage. After taking Adachi and Kudo and their staffs aboard, she left Sio for the last time and proceeded to
Madang, New Guinea, where her passengers disembarked at around 12:00 on 11 January 1944. She returned to Rabaul on 15 January 1944.
January–February 1944 I-177′s arrival at Rabaul occurred a few days after the Japanese had decided to abandon it as a submarine base. After only a brief stop, she got underway again on 15 January 1944, leaving Rabaul for the last time, calling at Truk from 18 to 20 January, and then heading for Sasebo, which she reached on 27 January 1944. She underwent repairs at Sasebo.
North Pacific On 25 February 1944,
I-177 was assigned to the
Northeast Area Fleet for operations in the
North Pacific. After completion of her repairs, she departed Sasebo on 22 March 1944 and headed north, arriving at
Ōminato, Japan, on 25 March 1944. She departed
Ōminato on 11 April 1944 to operate in the waters off the
Aleutian Islands, then returned to Ōminato on 27 May 1944. She again put to sea from Ōminato on 8 June 1944 to conduct a war patrol in the North Pacific east of the
Kuril Islands. It was uneventful, and after making an overnight stop at Ōminato from 22 to 23 June 1944, she headed for Yokosuka, where she arrived on 25 June 1944 and began repairs. When Submarine Division 22 was disbanded on 10 August 1944, she was reassigned to Submarine Division 34.
Palau Islands campaign The
Battle of Peleliu and
Battle of Angaur began in the
Palau Islands on 15 September 1944 when
United States Marine Corps forces landed on
Peleliu and
United States Army forces on
Angaur. On 19 September 1944,
I-177 departed Kure, Japan, with the commander of Submarine Division 34 embarked to conduct a war patrol off the Palaus, off
Halmahera in the Japanese-occupied
Netherlands East Indies, and off
Mindanao in the
Philippine Islands. When she arrived in her patrol area off the Palaus on 24 September 1944, she received orders to reconnoiter
Ulithi Atoll in the
Caroline Islands.
Loss I-177 had completed her reconnaissance of Ulithi and was on the surface returning to her patrol area off the Palaus when a U.S. Navy
PBM Mariner flying boat of
Patrol Bomber Squadron 16 (VPB-16) detected her on radar on the evening of 1 October 1944. As the aircraft approached,
I-177 crash-dived, but not before the Mariner′s crew identified her as a Japanese submarine. The Mariner dropped a
Mark 24 FIDO acoustic homing torpedo which inflicted heavy damage on
I-177. The Mariner then passed
I-177′s position to a nearby
hunter-killer group centered around the
escort aircraft carrier , which began a search for
I-177.
Hoggatt Bay was north-northeast of Angaur at 03:11 on 3 October 1944 when she made radar contact on
I-177 at a range of . The
destroyer escort was detached from
Hoggatt Bay′s screen to investigate. At 04:40,
Samuel S. Miles′s lookouts sighted
I-177 on the surface and she steered toward
I-177.
I-177 crash-dived, but
Samuel S. Miles gained sonar contact on her.
Samuel S. Miles fired a salvo of 24
Hedgehog projectiles, and then a second salvo that sank
I-177 at with the loss of all 101 men on board, about from where the PBM attacked her. On 4 October 1944, the Japanese transmitted an order to
I-177 to return after completing her reconnaissance of Ulithi Atoll, but she never acknowledged the order. On 18 November 1944, the Imperial Japanese Navy declared her to be presumed lost with all hands in the Palaus area. The Japanese removed her from the
navy list on 1 March 1945. ==References==