Book Read Free

Hellcats

Page 32

by Peter Sasgen


  Chapter Ten: The Minehunters

  1 Lawrence L. Edge to Sarah S. Edge. April (undated) 1945. Edge family.

  2 Ibid. Edge family.

  3 Top-secret war patrol report of the USS Bonefish.

  4 Lawrence L. Edge to Sarah S. Edge. Edge family.

  5 Ibid.

  Chapter Eleven: Probing the Line

  1 Top-secret war patrol report of the USS Seahorse (SS-304).

  2 Ibid.

  3 Ibid.

  4 Ibid.

  5 Lockwood, HOS, p. 88.

  6 Top-secret war patrol report of the USS Seahorse.

  7 Top-secret war patrol report of the USS Bonefish.

  8 Ibid.

  9 Ibid. Endorsement letter by Edge’s division commander, Captain Louis Chappell, USN.

  10 Lawrence L. Edge to Sarah S. Edge. Edge family.

  11 Ibid.

  Chapter Twelve: “Hydeman’s Hellcats”

  1 Letter from Lawrence L. Edge to Jane Tharpe, May 10, 1945. Edge family.

  2 Lawrence L. Edge to Sarah S. Edge. Edge family.

  3 Ibid. Edge family.

  4 Unpublished manuscript by Earl T. Hydeman concerning submarine operations and Operation Barney. Undated. Courtesy of Barbara Hydeman Barnes. (Hereafter, Hydeman Ms.)

  5 Lawrence L. Edge to his parents. Edge family.

  6 Lockwood, HOS, p. 110. Neither Voge nor Lockwood explained how this arrangement was to be worked out with the Russians, as they were supposed to be kept in the dark about U.S. subs in the Sea of Japan. Perhaps they simply hoped that if a U.S. sub showed up at Vladivostok, they’d be welcomed for the twenty-four-hour time limit imposed upon warships seeking refuge in neutral ports. Likely Lockwood just kept his fingers crossed that nothing would happen that would require porting there.

  7 ComSubPac Operation Order No. 112-45, May 26. Declassified. NARA II. Modern Military Records, College Park, MD. RG 313. 5.3 Records of Naval Operating Forces, including those of Operation Barney. (Hereafter, Op ord 112-45.)

  8 Lockwood, HOS, p. 114. The original SORG document defied attempts to locate it at NARA II and the LPLC. Lockwood makes reference to it in both HOS and in his memoir, Sink ’Em All.

  Chapter Thirteen: Running the Gauntlet

  1 Commander Earl T. Hydeman’s Standing Orders Log for the period May 27- July 4, 1945. Courtesy of Robert Barry and Patricia Hydeman Barry.

  2 Top-secret addendum to the war patrol report of the USS Sea Dog.

  3 “War and Remembrance: The Mighty Mine Dodgers; Saga of the Sea Dog, Sea of Japan, June 4-25, 1945.” From SubmarineSailor.com Internet posting, August 1, 1998. www.submarinesailor.com

  4 Top-secret addendum to the war patrol report of the USS Sea Dog.

  5 Ibid.

  6 Top-secret addendum to the war patrol report of the USS Spadefish.

  Chapter Fourteen: Threading the Needle

  1 Top-secret war patrol report of the USS Skate (SS-305).

  2 From a description of the Tinosa’s penetration of the Tsushima Strait told to Lockwood by skipper Latham (HOS, pp. 142-47). The incident is described in a single short paragraph in Latham’s top secret addendum to the Tinosa’s Sea of Japan patrol report. The description gives no details other than the fact that the mine cable made contact with the hull outside the after engine room. In fact, Latham reported to Lockwood that the contact originated outside the hull at about the conning tower, which is slightly forward of the middle of the ship. In his patrol report Latham merely stated the bare fact that “This [noise] is believed to have been a mine cable from the [FMS] contact [of a mine] on the port bow.”

  3 Lockwood to Watkins, June 1, 1945. LPLC, Box 15.

  4 Watkins to Lockwood, June 9, 1945. Ibid.

  Chapter Fifteen: The Death of an Empire

  1 Latham’s comment on the sinking of the Wakatama Maru, published in the April 1981 Tinosa Blatt newsletter.

  2 Though Lockwood said that the torpedo problem had been solved by late 1944, it’s clear from reading the patrol reports of the Hellcats (and other subs on patrol late in the war) that it wasn’t. There were still far too many erratic runs (see the Tinosa’s experience with one of her own torpedoes that made a circular run), broachers, and duds. The same problems that had bedeviled the Mk 14 and Mk 18 torpedoes were evident in the newer Mk 23s. Due mainly to these problems the Hellcats sank fewer ships than they could have. That failure can also be traced in part to poorly executed attacks, overeagerness, and faulty judgment on the part of the Hellcat skippers. While the Hellcats took a sizable toll in ships sunk, many got away unscathed.

  3 Top-secret report of the USS Crevalle (SS-291).

  4 Top-secret patrol report of the USS Skate (SS-305).

  5 Ibid.

  6 Top-secret patrol report of the USS Flying Fish (SS-229).

  7 Ibid.

  8 In Silent Victory (p. 839), Clay Blair says that Lockwood radioed the Hellcats, “Did anybody shoot northwest of La Pérouse Strait?” The answer came back from Germershausen, who suspected he’d erred: “Guilty.” When the Hellcats returned after their mission Germershausen received a summons to Nimitz’s office. Questioned by the admiral, the skipper told his side of the story and was told by Nimitz, “Glad you made it back safely, son.” The episode reinforced Lockwood’s determination to keep Soviet warships, especially submarines, from operating in the Sea of Japan. By then Nimitz had dropped the idea altogether.

  Chapter Sixteen: A Dark Silence

  1 Hydeman Ms.

  2 There is no evidence that the Crevalle’s crew killed the Japanese sailor in question. However, the fact that they tried to corresponds to the one issue that, despite Dudley W. Morton’s outstanding war record, has, in some critics’ view, left him tarnished. That issue is the gun attack Morton ordered unleashed on the survivors of a troop transport sunk by the Wahoo on January 26, 1943. In his patrol report Morton described battle surfacing among the hundreds of survivors (some said thousands), many of them in so-called “troop boats,” or lifeboats, of various kinds. When the Wahoo’s gunners started shooting at them, their fire was returned by what Morton described as “[S]mall caliber machineguns. We then opened fire with everything we had” (USS Wahoo (SS-238), third patrol report, p. 58). In Morton’s judgment this apparently made the Japanese survivors fair game, as he went on to mow them down. If submarine command had misgivings about Morton’s actions it’s not apparent in the glowing endorsements to his patrol report, one of which reads, “An outstanding patrol. This patrol speaks for itself, and the judgment and decisions [of the commanding officer] demonstrate what can be done by a submarine that retains the initiative.” It’s interesting to note that the International Military Tribunal for the Far East—the Japanese war crimes trials—brought charges that the Japanese regularly machine-gunned survivors of Allied ships that had been sunk as well as Allied POW survivors of Japanese slave ships sunk by U.S. forces. (See USS Bonefish Sinking of POW ship, footnote p. 49-50.During Operation Barney the Spadefish, Flying Fish, Tinosa, and Bowfin also attacked and sank small craft with their guns, but their patrol reports contain no mention of gun crews shooting at survivors in the water.

  3 Bowfin patrol report.

  4 Top secret patrol report of the USS Tunny (SS-282).

  5 Neither Pierce’s nor Lynch’s patrol report makes any reference to hearing explosions coming from Toyama Wan.

  Chapter Seventeen: Breakout

  1 Lockwood, June 23, 1945. LPLC, Box 15.

  2 Lockwood, HOS, p. 294.

  3 Lockwood to James Fife, June 27, 1945. LPLC, Box 15.

  4 Lockwood to Nimitz, July 18, 1945. Ibid.

  5 Ibid.

  6 Lockwood diary. LPLC, Box 1.

  Chapter Eighteen: The Long Search

  1 Sarah S. Edge to Lawrence L. Edge, July 26, 1945. A handwritten note on the letter says, “Never mailed as Gov’t telegram came three days later.” This is a reference to the missing-in-action telegram Sarah received on July 28, 1945. Edge family.

  2 Beach, Edward L., Sub
marine! New York: Henry Holt, 1946.

  3 Atlanta Journal, August 12, 1945. “Son Born Day After Skipper Announced Lost.”

  4 Ibid.

  5 Los Angeles Times, August 12, 1945, p. 4. “Sub Flotilla Returns After Taking Nip Toll.”

  6 Lockwood to Sarah S. Edge, August 12, 1945. Edge family.

  7 Lucius H. Chappel to Sarah S. Edge, August 12, 1945. Edge family.

  8 Potter, E. B., Nimitz, Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1976, p. 388. In the context of the situation of August 11, King’s message prefix could almost be taken as a rejoinder to the infamous “This is a war warning” message transmitted to the hapless Admiral Kimmel before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

  9 Lockwood to Sarah S. Edge, September 13, 1945. Edge family. Lockwood does not make clear in his reply to Sarah if, in referring to the “Bonefish going on this special mission at her own request,” he meant Operation Barney or entry into Toyama Wan. In the letter, Lockwood makes reference to Edge’s seeking permission from Pierce to enter the bay, which under the circumstances was the proper thing to do. It would make sense that if Lockwood understood that Sarah was seeking clarification of the latter point, he would forward her letter to Pierce, because as force commander the admiral knew that Operation Barney was not organized on a volunteer basis. Because few family members knew anything at all about the Bonefish’s operations in Toyama Wan, it seems likely that any questions they had about volunteering referred to Operation Barney itself.

  10 Ibid.

  Chapter Nineteen: The Hour of Sacrifice

  1 George Pierce to Sarah S. Edge, September 18, 1945. Edge family.

  2 The questions Sarah posed show her extraordinary grasp of the tactical situation as it pertained to Operation Barney. It’s not clear from any of the extant correspondence between her and Lockwood or the Department of the Navy how she acquired this information, as none of Lockwood’s letters nor those from McCann, Chappell, and others go into the tactical details of Operation Barney. One suspects that there may have been other newspaper or magazine articles, which she saw, that did.

  3 Sarah S. Edge to Richard B. Lynch, October 3, 1945. Edge family. The letter as quoted is a rough draft with many excisions. Typically, Sarah produced rough drafts of her correspondence, and this is one of only a few that survive in the Edge family archive.

  4 Richard B. Lynch to Sarah S. Edge, October 16, 1945. Edge family.

  5 The so-called “families” letter is undated. It contains all the information she’d received from Lynch and others as noted. She makes no references to comments made by some family members of the crew that the men had done more than their fair share and that, having been ordered to undertake Operation Barney and not receiving more help when they needed it, the order was akin to murder. For the full text of the letter see Appendix Three. Edge family.

  Chapter Twenty: A Shining Glory

  1 Allen R. McCann to Sarah S. Edge, June 21, 1946. Edge family.

  INDEX

  A-2 submarine

  Aichi E13A “Jake,”

  Akuseki Island

  Alamorgordo, atomic bomb test at

  Allied convoys

  Anjo Maru

  Annapolis Naval Academy

  Apra Harbor, Guam

  Area Nine

  Armed Forces Radio Network

  Asiatic Fleet

  Atlanta Journal

  Atlantic, Battle of the

  Atomic bombs

  B-29s

  Balabac Strait

  Balao-class submarine

  Barbel-class submarine

  Barbers Point, Oahu

  Basilan Strait

  Bass, Raymond H.

  Bathythermograph

  Beach, Edward L.

  Bethlehem Steel Repair Basin, Hunters Point

  Black Stream

  Blair, Clay

  Bokuko Ko, Korea

  Borneo

  British Mine-Detection

  Bureau of Naval Personnel (BuPers)

  Bureau of Ordnance (BuOrd)

  Bushido, culture of

  Cape Bolinao

  Cape Mangkalihat

  Caroline Islands

  Cavite, Philippine Islands

  Celebes Sea

  Chappell, Lucius

  Chapple, Wreford G. “Moon,”

  Ch’ongjin, Korea

  Christie, Ralph W.

  Churchill, Winston

  , Commander, Submarines, Pacific Fleet (ComSubPac)

  Commander, Submarines, Southwest Pacific Fleet (ComSubSoWesPac)

  Commander, Task Force

  Comstock, Merrill

  Coral Sea

  Corregidor

  Cramp Shipbuilding Company

  Danjo Gunto

  Daubin, Mrs. Freeland A.

  Destination Tokyo (movie)

  Domei (Japanese news agency)

  Doolittle, Jimmy

  Dutch Harbor, Alaska

  Earl’s Eliminators

  East China Sea

  Edge, Lawrence Lott. (see also USS Bonefish)

  award and commendation by Lockwood to

  birth of daughter

  Bronze Star awarded to

  as executive officer of Bluefish

  first patrol as commander of Bonefish

  FMS and

  in Fremantle

  leave in U.S.

  letter from Lockwood to

  letter from wife, Sarah, to

  letter to Jane Tharpe from

  letters to parents from

  letters to wife, Sarah, from

  lifeguarding duties and

  Lockwood and

  loss of Bonefish and

  marriage of

  missing in action

  at Naval Academy

  Navy Crosses awarded to

  in Operation Barney

  at PCO school

  personality of

  physical appearance of

  prisoners and

  seventh patrol of Bonefish and

  sixth patrol of Bonefish and

  Edge, Lawrence Lott, Jr.

  Edge, Sarah “Boo,”

  Edge, Sarah Simms

  birth of daughter

  birth of son

  death of

  letter from Pierce

  letter to Eichelberger from

  letters from husband, Lawrence

  letters to and from Bonefish families

  letters to and from Lynch

  loss of Bonefish and

  marriage of

  second pregnancy of

  Eichelberger, Robert L.

  Eisenhower, Dwight D.

  Electric Boat Corporation, Groton, Connecticut

  English, Robert H.

  Enigma code

  Enola Gay (B-29)

  Exmouth Gulf

  Fathometer

  Fife, James

  Fleet Radio

  FMS (FM sonar)

  in Bonefish

  in Bowfin

  in Crevalle

  crews’ attitude toward

  in Flying Fish

  Lockwood and

  Lockwood’s plan presented to Nimitz

  in Sea Dog

  in Skate

  in Spadefish

  technical problems with

  testing of

  in Tinosa

  in Tunny

  Formosa

  Fox Day

  Fremantle, Australia

  FRUPAC (Fleet Radio Unit Pacific)

  Furer, J. A.

  Fushiki, Japan

  Fushimi Maru

  G-1 submarine

  Gato-class submarine

  German U-boats

  Germershausen, William J.

  in Operation Barney

  GNAT (German Naval Acoustic Torpedo)

  Goto Retto

  Greer, Harry H., Jr.

  Guam Naval Base

  Halsey, William F.

  Harnwell, Gaylord P.

  Hellcats of the Sea (Lockwood)

  Hell’s bells


  Henderson, Charles M.

  Henderson, Malcolm

  Hirohito, Emperor

  surrender address of

  Hiroshima

  Hitler, Adolf

  Hogan, Thomas W.

  Hokkaido, Japan

  Honshu, Japan

  Hunters Point Naval Shipyard

  Hydeman, Earl T.

  in Operation Barney

  Hydeman’s Hepcats (see USS Crevalle ; USS Sea Dog; USS Spadefish)

  I-400 submarine

  I-class submarine

  ICPOA (Intelligence Center, Pacific Ocean Areas)

  Iki Island

  Indochina

  Inland Sea

  Inside the Third Reich (Speer)

  Ishikari Bay

  Iwo Jima

  Jacobs, Randall

  JANAC (Joint Army Navy Assessment Committee)

  Japan Current

  Japan Sea (see Sea of Japan)

  Japan Sea Patrol Group (see Operation Barney)

  Java

  Java Sea

  Jellicoe, John

  JICPOA (Joint Intelligence Center, Pacific Ocean Areas)

  Kennedy, Edward

  King, Ernest J.

  atomic bomb and

  Lockwood’s plan and

  publicity on submarine operations and

  retirement and death of

  Kirk, Oliver G.

  Konron Maru

  Konzan Maru

  Korea

  Kurile Islands

  Kuroshio Current

  Kyushu, Japan

  La Pérouse Strait

  Latham, Richard

  in Operation Barney

  Latta, Frank D.

  LeMay, Curtis

  Leyte, invasion of

  Lifeguarding duties

  Lockwood, Charles A.

  background of

  Bonefish loss and

  as ComSubPac

  death of

  Edge, Lawrence and

  end of war and

  FMS and

  Hellcats of the Sea by

  inspection tour by

  letter to Lawrence Edge from

  letters to Sarah Edge from

  missions into Sea of Japan and (1943)

  modern submarines and

  naval career of

  Nimitz and FMS plan of

  Operation Barney and

  planning for FMS mission into Sea of Japan

  postwar job

 

‹ Prev