Class Members
| Kanji | Name | Builder | Laid down | Launched | Completed | Fate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 神風 | Kamikaze DD-1 |
Mitsubishi-Nagasaki, Japan | 1921-12-15 | 1922-09-25 | 1922-12-19 | renamed Kamikaze 1928-08-01; demilitarized repatriation ship 1945-12-01; grounded Omaezaki 1946-06-07; stricken 1946-06-26 |
| 朝風 | Asakaze DD-3 |
Mitsubishi-Nagasaki, Japan | 1922-02-16 | 1922-12-08 | 1923-06-16 | renamed Asakaze 1928-08-01; Torpedoed W of Luzon 1944-08-23; stricken 1944-10-10 |
| 春風 | Harukaze DD-5 |
Maizuru Naval Arsenal, Japan | 1922-05-16 | 1922-12-18 | 1923-05-31 | renamed Harukaze 1928-08-01; surrendered to USN 1945-11-10; scrapped 1947 |
| 松風 | Matsukaze DD-7 |
Maizuru Naval Arsenal, Japan | 1922-12-02 | 1923-10-30 | 1924-04-05 | renamed Matsukaze 1928-08-01; Torpedoed NW Chichijima 1944-06-09; stricken 1944-08-10 |
| 旗風 | Hatakaze DD-9 |
Maizuru Naval Arsenal, Japan | 1923-07-03 | 1924-03-15 | 1924-08-30 | renamed Hatakaze 1928-08-01; Air attack off Takao 1945-01-15; stricken 1945-03-10 |
| 追風 | Oite DD-11 |
Uraga Dock Company, Japan | 1923-03-16 | 1924-11-27 | 1925-10-30 | renamed Oite 1928-08-01; Air attack at Truk 1944-02-18; stricken 1944-03-11 |
| 疾風 | Hayate DD-13 |
Ishikawajima Shipyards, Japan | 1922-11-11 | 1925-03-24 | 1925-11-21 | renamed Hayate 1928-08-01; combat loss Battle of Wake Island 1941-12-11; stricken 1942-01-10 |
| 朝凪 | Asanagi DD-15 |
Fujinagata Shipyards, Japan | 1923-03-05 | 1924-04-21 | 1925-12-29 | renamed Asanagi 1928-08-01; torpedoed W of Ogasawara 1944-05-22; stricken 1944-07-10 |
| 夕凪 | Yūnagi DD-17 |
Sasebo Naval Arsenal, Japan | 1923-09-17 | 1924-04-23 | 1925-05-24 | renamed Yunagi 1928-08-01; torpedoed NW of Luzon 1944-08-25; struck 1944-10-10 |
Read more about this topic: Kamikaze Class Destroyer (1922)
Famous quotes containing the words class and/or members:
“The traveler to the United States will do well ... to prepare himself for the class-consciousness of the natives. This differs from the already familiar English version in being more extreme and based more firmly on the conviction that the class to which the speaker belongs is inherently superior to all others.”
—John Kenneth Galbraith (b. 1908)
“This will not be disloyalty but will show that as members of a party they are loyal first to the fine things for which the party stands and when it rejects those things or forgets the legitimate objects for which parties exist, then as a party it cannot command the honest loyalty of its members.”
—Eleanor Roosevelt (18841962)