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Indianapolis

Page 63

by Lynn Vincent


  Potts, J. R. “IJN I-58—History, Specs and Pictures—Navy Ships.” IJN I-58. http://www.militaryfactory.com/ships/detail.asp?ship_id=IJN-I58. (I-58)

  “Rear Admiral Thomas J. Ryan, Jr.” Ibiblio. Accessed 30 November 2017. https://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/OnlineLibrary/photos/pers-us/uspers-r/t-ryan.htm.

  “Recollections of a Vagabonde (Photos).” The Little White House in Georgia, Part 2. N.p.,n.d. Web. http://avagabonde.blogspot.com/2013/05/the-little-white-house-in-georgia-part-2.html. (WHEREFDRDIED)

  Rehagen, Tony. “On Duty: A Sailor’s Story.” Indianapolis Monthly. 10 January 2013. http://www.indianapolismonthly.com/news-opinion/on-duty-a-sailors-story/. (JO-DUTY)

  “Remembering the USS Squalus 75 Years Later.” Naval History Blog. 22 May 2014. Accessed January 20, 2017. https://www.navalhistory.org/2014/05/23/remembering-the-uss-squalus-75-years-later.

  Ryu, Endo. “Interview with a Zero Pilot.” Rekishi Gunzou, November 2000, translated by Gernot Hassenflug of Kyoto. http://www.warbirdforum.com/komachi.htm (ZERO)

  Second Emergency Rescue Squadron, unknown Member. “Rescued from the Sea.” PBY.org. Accessed 28 March 2017. http://www.pbyrescue.com/Stories/rescue%20story.pdf. This article was critical in helping recreate Lieutenant Adrian Marks’s landing of his PBY-5A Catalina flying boat, or “Dumbo,” and rescuing fifty-three Indianapolis survivors.

  “Science: Big Game.” Time, 13 March 1939. Accessed 29 March 2016. http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,760934,00.html.

  “Secret Weapons.” Time, 24 January 1944. Accessed 29 March 2016. http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0.9171.803047,00.html.

  Slotnik, Daniel E. “Dan Kurzman, Military Historian, Is Dead at 88.” New York Times. 24 December 2010. Accessed 1 June 2016. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/26/arts/26kurzman.html.

  Smitha, Frank E. “Emperor Hirohito Speaks to His Nation about Surrender.” Micro History and World Timeline. http://www.fsmitha.com/h2/ch23ja7.htm. (HIROHITO)

  “Sodium: Too Much of a Good Thing.” Poison.org. Accessed 29 September 2016. https://www.poison.org/articles/2013-sep/sodium-too-much-of-a-good-thing.

  Sudyk, Bob. “Redemption for Sailor Joe.” Hartford Courant. 21 June 1998. Accessed 15 March 2014. http://articles.courant.com/1998-06-21/news/9806180129_1_uss-indianapolis-charles-butler-mcvay-iii-sofa. (JOE)

  “Surrender of Japan—Divisions Within the Japanese Leadership.” http://www.worldlibrary.org/articles/surrender_of_japan. (Division)

  “Task Force Information.” Task Force 50. N.p., n.d. Web. http://pacific.valka.cz/forces/tf50.htm#iceber. (TF)

  Thomas, Gordon, and Max Morgan Witts. “Enola Gay: Mission to Hiroshima.” Articlealso titled “Ruin from the Air.” Web. http://www.rulit.net/programRead.php?program_id=331877&page=1 See also http://www.ourcivilisation.com/smartboard/shop/tomwitts/index.htm. (ENOLA)

  “Thomas John Ryan, Jr.” In The Lucky Bag, 113. Annapolis, MD: United States Naval Academy, 1921. Accessed 30 May 2017. https://archive.org/stream/luckybag1921unse#page/n11/mode/2up/search/Ryan.

  Toti, William J. “The Legacy of USS Indianapolis.” USNI News, 30 July 2014. Accessed 15 February 2015. https://news.usni.org/2014/07/30/legacy-uss-indianapolis.

  Vladic, Sara. “Lost Survivor of the USS Indianapolis (CA-35) Found.” Proceedings. 14 September 2017. Accessed 29 November 2017. https://www.usni.org/magazines/proceedings/2017-09/lost-survivor-uss-indianapolis-ca-35-found.

  “War in the Laboratories.” Time, 26 May 1941. Accessed 29 March 2016. http://content.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,765651,00.html.

  “William “Deak” Parsons.” Atomic Heritage Foundation. Accessed 14 June 2016. www.atomicheritage.com.

  “William R. Purnell.” Atomic Heritage Foundation. Accessed 14 June 2016. www.atomicheritage.com.

  Woodward, Lieutenant Commander C. R., USMC. The U.S.S. Indianapolis—TragedyAmid Triumph. 1988. Web. http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/report/1988/WCR.htm. (TRAGEDY)

  “World War II: Ultra—The Misunderstood Allied Secret Weapon.” 4 August 2016. Accessed 21 February 2017. http://www.historynet.com/world-war-ii-ultra-the-misunderstood-allied-secret-weapon.htm.

  Wukovitz, John F. “Battle of Okinawa: The Bloodiest Battle of the Pacific War.” WorldWar II, May 2000: History Net Where History Comes Alive World US History Online. Web. http://www.historynet.com/battle-of-okinawa-the-bloodiest-battle-of-the-pacific-war.htm. (SLEDGE)

  Yamada, Goro. “Sinking the Indianapolis: A Japanese Perspective.” HistoricalConsulting.com. 30 July 1994. http://www.historicalconsulting.com/vets_jp.html. Dan King, a Japanese translator and World War II historian/collector, interviewed Mr. Yamada, a former chief petty officer aboard the Japanese submarine I-58. The authors, Vincent and Vladic, obtained a print copy of the interview, which is no longer available online. The URL links to a photo of Mssrs. Yamada and King and some additional history.

  Film/Video

  Video Archive—Witnesses to War. Web. http://www.witnesstowar.org/content/search/search.php?zoom_query=uss+indianapolis. (WTW)

  “Video of Truman Being Sworn In.” Web. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oKsUkRIWbbM. (NEWSREEL)

  Day of the Kamikaze, Smithsonian Channel. Traces the origins of kamikaze battle and relives two days of horror in 1945, when the Japanese launched “Operation Heaven” against the Allied fleet in the Pacific. This award-winning documentary details the biggest and bloodiest suicide attack in history, with unforgettable footage and eyewitness accounts. 8 February 2008, United Kingdom. Director: Peter Nicholson.

  Trinity and Beyond: The Atomic Bomb Movie. Profiles the history of the U.S. nuclear weapons program from 1945 to 1963; William Shatner narrates. Director: Peter Kuran. Released 29 September 1995.

  USS Indianapolis: Ship of Doom. Produced by Bill Van Daalen. Chip Taylor Communications.

  Witness to the Sinking of USS Indianapolis. Richard LeFrancis, director of the Pappy Boyington Veterans Museum and son of Army Captain Richard LeFrancis. Video. Accessed online 10 September 2017 at https://www.youtube.com.

  INDEX

  A note about the index: The pages referenced in this index refer to the page numbers in the print edition. Clicking on a page number will take you to the ebook location that corresponds to the beginning of that page in the print edition. For a comprehensive list of locations of any word or phrase, use your reading system’s search function.

  Italicized page numbers indicate illustrations

  Abandon Ship (Newcomb), 180, 292, 385, 391

  Abbott, George, 190, 391

  Akines, Bill, 282

  Alberta, Project, 67–68, 200, 299

  Alcorn, R. C., 266, 282, 285

  Aleutian Islands, 55–56, 76

  Allard, Vincent:

  and crew missing in action, 314–15

  Indianapolis’s refresher training and, 136, 141

  in the ocean, 185, 222

  rescue of, 283

  Allen, Donald, 429

  Allen, Paul G., 443, 445–46

  Alsos mission, 47, 50, 66

  Anami, Korechika, 13

  Anthony, Harold R., 223

  Apra Harbor, 43, 112, 115, 116, 119–21

  Armitage, Herb, 314–15

  Associated Press (AP), 180, 292, 360, 362, 364

  atomic bomb, 406

  assembly of, 67, 71, 200

  deployment of, 67, 80, 219–20, 298–301, 304–9

  estimated death toll for dropping of, 66

  Japanese civilians warned about, 300–301

  Nazi development of, 47–50, 65–66

  opposition to use of, 66

  physical appearance of, 68–69, 74–75, 101, 110–11

  radiation from, 68, 110

  testing of, 67–68, 95–96, 200, 220

  transport mission for, 2, 65–76, 80, 90, 93–106, 108–13, 140, 142, 192, 194, 200–201, 219, 237, 293, 299, 301, 307–8, 324, 401, 431, 446

  U.S. development of, 47–50, 64–66, 71–72, 201, 220

  Atteberry, George:


  Indianapolis survivor rescue and, 250–52, 254–57, 259–61, 264, 286

  Marks’s open-sea landing and, 259–60

  Attlee, Clement, 110

  Aylwin, USS, 285

  Baker, Wilder, 344, 346, 355, 361, 370, 380

  Bargsley, James, 256

  Barksdale, Thomas Leon, 326

  Barr, Joseph, 387

  Bassett, USS, 256–57, 272–80, 285

  Bataan Death March, 180, 360

  Bateman, Bernard, 423

  Bauersfeld, Carl, 344, 430–31

  Beach, Edward L., 82

  Belcher, James, 139, 421

  in the ocean, 228, 389–90

  return home of, 389–90

  torpedoing Indianapolis and, 228

  Belcher, Toyoko Inoue, 390

  Bell, Maurice, 404

  Benton, Clarence, 193–94, 208, 211, 216, 223, 280

  Betio, 39–40

  Bibb, USCGS, 331, 428

  Birch, Francis, 200

  Blum, Donald, 70, 316, 330

  atomic bomb transport mission and, 104–5, 194

  McVay’s court-martial and, 357–58

  in the ocean, 193–94, 216, 225–26, 231–32

  rescue of, 280

  Bockscar, 304

  Bolents, Eva Jane, 306

  Boswell, Charles, 387

  Bower, Oliver F., 378

  Bray, Harold, 437

  in the ocean, 249, 279

  torpedoing Indianapolis and, 162

  Bromley, John, 364, 368

  Brophy, Thomas, Jr., 265, 328

  Brophy, Thomas, Sr., 328, 334, 381

  Broser, Jack, 274–75, 277–79

  Brown, Ed, 307

  Brown, Jim, 307

  Bruce, Andrew D., 35

  Brundige, Robert, 191, 215

  Buckett, Victor, 39

  crew casualties and, 326–28

  Iwo Jima and, 7

  rescue of, 282

  torpedoing Indianapolis and, 153

  Buckner, Claude “Uncle Buck,” 312–13

  Bullard, John, 369

  Bunai, Bob, 439

  Bunker Hill, USS, 5–6

  Bush, George H. W., 292

  Bush, George W., 2, 436

  Cady, John Parmelee:

  and crew in the ocean, 355

  enemy sub contact and, 353

  Hashimoto’s testimony and, 361–62, 364–68

  McVay’s court-martial and, 342, 344–46, 351–57, 361–62, 364–74, 376–77

  Campbell, Louis, 390

  Candalino, Paul, 153, 158, 166, 305

  Caroline Islands, 103, 116, 271, 286, 393

  Carter, James, 115, 365, 380

  enemy sub contact and, 92, 372

  and Indianapolis court of inquiry, 317, 322

  Indianapolis’s nonarrival and, 253, 325

  Indianapolis’s refresher training and, 116, 120–21, 129, 141–42, 317, 322, 342, 372–73

  Indianapolis supplementary investigation and, 334, 342, 367

  McVay’s court-martial and, 342–44, 366

  McVay’s exoneration and, 414

  McVay’s relationship with, 113, 317, 322

  and sinking of Underhill, 107, 116

  Cassidy, John “Jack,” 139

  Celaya, Adolfo “Harpo,” 10, 51

  abandoning Indianapolis and, 173–74, 194

  Indianapolis’s refresher training and, 132, 140–41, 145

  injuries of, 30–31, 35

  Iwo Jima and, 57

  Japanese air attacks and, 32, 35

  in the ocean, 174, 188–89, 193–94, 207–8, 226–27

  rescues and, 250, 280, 285

  sharks and, 207, 226, 250

  torpedoing Indianapolis and, 149, 173–74

  Centazzo, Frank, 202–3, 421

  Chase, Russell, 379

  China, 28, 42, 123

  Churchill, Winston, 95–96, 110

  Cincinnati Enquirer, 318, 326

  Clamp, USS, 39–40

  Claytor, William Graham, Jr., 54

  Indianapolis survivor rescue and, 252, 254, 264–65, 268–71, 273–74, 276, 282–83, 408

  McVay’s exoneration and, 408

  Cleveland, USS, 28

  Clinton, Bill, 436

  Alvin C. Cockrell, USS, 285

  Colclough, O. S., 339–41, 358

  Cold War, 180–81

  Cole, USS, 436

  Colwell, Warren, 241–42, 245

  Coney, Charles E.:

  enemy sub contact and, 347–50

  Indianapolis supplementary investigation and, 330–31, 340, 344, 347–50, 365–66, 370–73

  sinking Underhill and, 347–48

  Congress, U.S., 336, 402–4

  McVay’s court-martial and, 292, 379

  McVay’s exoneration and, 293, 405–11, 414–28, 430–32, 435–37

  see also Senate, U.S.

  Conway, Father Thomas, 36, 52, 57, 101, 305

  death of, 231

  Indianapolis’s refresher training and, 132

  in the ocean, 192, 198, 202, 216–18, 230–31

  rescue operations and, 285

  Coolidge, Calvin, 339–40

  Cooper, USS, 169

  Cordea, George, 368–69

  Corregidor, 101

  Corry, John, 310–11

  Covington, George, 312–14

  Cox, Loel Dene, 25–27, 34, 142

  abandoning Indianapolis and, 166

  atomic bomb transport mission and, 93–94

  and casualties of Indianapolis, 38

  Indianapolis’s Kerama anchorage and, 38–39

  Indianapolis survivors’ reunions and, 437–39

  Japanese air attacks and, 26, 32, 34, 38

  McVay’s court-martial and, 292–93

  McVay’s exoneration and, 421

  in the ocean, 187–88, 207, 269, 379

  Okinawa and, 26

  rescues and, 269, 280

  sharks and, 207

  torpedoing Indianapolis and, 154–55, 369

  transfer to navigation of, 38–39, 93

  Crane, Granville, 390

  Crouch, Edwin, 142, 167

  Culver, Jack, 378

  Cunningham, Bill, 337–38

  Dahlgren, USS, 290

  Danzig, Richard, 436

  Davis, Arthur C., 116

  DeBernardi, Louis, 74–75, 237

  Defense Department, U.S., 84, 290, 397

  McVay’s exoneration and, 402, 409, 435, 437

  DeGrave, Glen, 46, 101–2, 139, 307

  Denfeld, Louis, 306, 327

  McVay’s court-martial and, 331, 335

  destroyer escorts, 106–7, 139

  Diebner, Kurt, 47, 50, 65–66

  Dollins, Paul, 326

  Donaho, Glynn Robert, 291, 373–77, 399

  Doyle, Charles, 254, 269

  Cecil J. Doyle, USS, 54

  Indianapolis survivor rescue and, 252, 254, 262, 264–65, 268–71, 273–74, 276, 282–83, 285, 354, 408

  Drayton, William, 226

  Driscoll, David, 138–39, 171

  torpedoing Indianapolis and, 157–58, 165

  Dronet, Joseph, 197

  Dudley, William S., 412, 425, 431

  Dufilho, USS, 282, 284

  Eames, Paul H., Jr., 211, 216, 232, 237–38

  East China Sea, 79, 98

  Eastlake, Francis Royal, 362–64

  Eck, Harold, 421

  Edson, Arthur, 362–64, 367, 369

  Einstein, Albert, 48–50, 66

  Eisenhower, Dwight D., 298, 337, 391

  Emery, Calvin Ball, 20, 36, 38

  Emery, John, 143, 314–15, 326

  Emery, William Friend, 314–15, 326

  Indianapolis’s refresher training and, 136, 142–43

  England, Gordon, 435–37

  Enola Gay, 71, 201, 220, 297–99, 431

  Enterprise, USS, 5, 10, 336

  Erwin, Louis “Kayo,” 388

  atomic bomb transport mission and, 74, 446

  discovering Indianapolis
’s wreckage and, 446–47

  rescue of, 266

  Essex, USS, 5, 21

  Farallon islands, Farallon Light, 51, 72, 76, 102

  Farrell, Thomas, 219–20

  Fatal Voyage (Kurzman), 292, 406

  Fat Man, 304–6

  Flynn, Anna, 327

  Flynn, Anne and Carleen, 135, 327, 381

  Flynn, Joseph, 321

  abandoning Indianapolis and, 164

  abandon-ship drills and, 104

  atomic bomb transport mission and, 99, 101–2, 104, 109–11

  damage control training and, 97

  death of, 243, 305, 327

  firefighting training and, 96, 104

  Indianapolis’s refresher training and, 135, 141

  sinking Indianapolis and, 299

  torpedoing Indianapolis and, 165

  Forrestal, James, 9, 323, 326, 328, 424

  Indianapolis supplementary investigation and, 329, 331

  McVay’s court-martial and, 331, 338–39, 341–43, 360, 378–80

  McVay’s guilty verdict and, 378

  Fortin, Verlin, 27, 33

  in the ocean, 197, 229

  Fouts, Bill, 281

  Franklin, USS, 5, 20–22, 45, 108, 117

  Freeze, Howard:

  death of, 224, 284, 305

  in the ocean, 195–96, 209, 212

  French, Jimmy, 249

  Indianapolis’s refresher training and, 142–43

  torpedoing Indianapolis and, 162

  French, USS, 285, 306

  Furman, Robert, 110, 297–99

  atomic bomb deployment and, 298–99

  atomic bomb test and, 200

  atomic bomb transport mission and, 66–69, 72, 75, 94–97, 100–101, 104–5, 112, 192, 200–201, 237, 299, 307–8

  Indianapolis survivors visited by, 307–8

  and Leslie Groves, 48-50, 65-67, 201

  Nazi atomic bomb program and, 47–50, 65–66

  Pentagon construction and, 48–49

  and sinking of Indianapolis, 299

  Tinian stay of, 200–201

  U.S. atomic bomb program and, 49–50, 64–66, 201

  Gaither, Forest M., 28–29, 168

  Gause, Bob, 266, 302, 389

  Germany, Nazi Germany, 9, 52, 298

  atomic bomb program of, 47–49, 65–66

  defeat of, 56

  postwar aims for, 95–96

  Gibson, Buck:

  atomic bomb transport mission and, 76

  Japanese air attacks and, 32, 76

  in the ocean, 196–97, 201, 206–7, 210–11, 229, 232–33, 421

  rescues and, 284–85

  sharks and, 229, 232

  torpedoing Indianapolis and, 196–97

  Gibson, Stuart, 114, 121

  and Indianapolis court of inquiry, 316–17, 322

 

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