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  2. Mitsubishi Heavy Industries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitsubishi_Heavy_Industries

    The works was renamed Mitsubishi Shipyard of Mitsubishi Goshi Kaisha in 1893 and additional dry docks were completed in 1896 and 1905. [7] The "Mitsubishi Heavy Industries - Shimonoseki Shipyard & Machinery Works" was established in 1914. It produced industrial machinery and merchant ships. [10] The launch of battleship Tosa at the Nagasaki ...

  3. JS Yahagi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JS_Yahagi

    Yahagi was ordered in the fiscal year 2020, based on the Mid-Term Defense Program, with her keel being laid down at Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Nagasaki Shipyard on 24 June 2021, [2] and was launched on 23 June 2022. [1]

  4. Japanese destroyer Suzutsuki (1942) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_destroyer...

    Mitsubishi Nagasaki Shipyard in the Pacific War built a total of 5 ships of the Akizuki class: Teruzuki, Suzutsuki, Niizuki, Wakatsuki, and Shimotsuki. On September 10, Lieutenant Colonel Tsuguto Akazawa, commander of the destroyer Shiranui, the second ship of the Kagerō class, was appointed Chief of Equipment on the Suzutsuki.

  5. SS Bridgeton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Bridgeton

    Ordered and built as al-Rekkah, the ship was built by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries in its Nagasaki shipyard and launched August 14, 1976.. In 1987, the United States agreed to Kuwaiti requests to provide naval escorts for its tankers on the condition that the civilian ships be reflagged under U.S. flag and al-Rekkah was perforce renamed Bridgeton.

  6. Unryū-class aircraft carrier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unryū-class_aircraft_carrier

    Amagi and Kasagi (built by Mitsubishi, Nagasaki Shipyard) were equipped with surplus stock of the Ibuki-class cruiser machinery. [ 15 ] Katsuragi and Aso (built by Kure Naval Arsenal ) were equipped with two sets of the Kagerō -class destroyer machinery, [ 15 ] [ 8 ] because Japanese industry power became scarce.

  7. List of shipbuilders and shipyards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_shipbuilders_and...

    Toggle North America subsection. 4.1 Canada. ... Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (Nagasaki) ... also known as Haliç Tersaneleri is the world's oldest shipyard that is ...

  8. Jingei-class submarine tender - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jingei-class_submarine_tender

    Mitsubishi, Nagasaki Shipyard 16 February 1922 4 May 1923 30 August 1923 Sunk by aircraft at Okinawa on 10 October 1944. Salvaged and scrapped in 1952. Chōgei (長鯨) [3] Mitsubishi, Nagasaki Shipyard 11 March 1922 24 March 1924 2 August 1924 Decommissioned on 15 October 1945. Scrapped on 1 March 1947.

  9. Mitsubishi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitsubishi

    As Mitsubishi built a broadly based conglomerate, it played a central role in the modernization of Japanese industry. [8] In 1894, Hisaya Iwasaki succeeded his uncle Yanosuke as president. During his tenure until 1916, he modernised the Nagasaki Shipyard and developed Marunouchi as a business district. [9]